The Rest Is Classified - 54. Bin Laden vs the CIA: 9/11 (Ep 4)
Episode Date: June 10, 2025On a clear September morning, the American homeland was shattered, revealing a vulnerability unforeseen for nearly two centuries. But, how did Osama bin Laden, soon to become the world's most wanted t...errorist, orchestrate the largest mass murder in American history? What was the "chatter" among Al Qaeda members that something was imminent, and why couldn't the intelligence community piece together the puzzle? This episode plunges into the meticulous planning and devastating execution of the 9/11 attacks. From Khalid Sheikh Mohammed's initial "insane ideas" to Osama bin Laden's personal selection of suicide operatives, we explore the journey from whispers of "something big was coming" to the collapse of the Twin Towers. Discover the strategic warnings received by the U.S. intelligence community and the crucial missed opportunities that allowed the plot to succeed. Listen as Gordon and David recount the horrifying events of 9/11, the immediate response of the U.S. government, and the first frantic steps in the decade-long hunt for the mastermind. ------------------- To sign up to The Declassified Club, go to www.therestisclassified.com or click this link. To sign up to the free newsletter, go to: https://mailchi.mp/goalhanger.com/tric-free-newsletter-sign-up ------------------- Get our exclusive NordVPN deal here ➼ nordvpn.com/restisclassified It's risk-free with Nord's 30 day money back guarantee Exclusive INCOGNI Deal: To get an exclusive 60% off an annual Incogni plan, go to https://incogni.com/restisclassified ------------------- Pre-order a signed edition of Gordon's latest book, The Spy in the Archive, via this link. Order a signed edition of David's latest book, The Seventh Floor, via this link. ------------------- Email: classified@goalhanger.com Twitter: @triclassified Assistant Producer: Becki Hills Producer: Callum Hill Senior Producer: Dom Johnson Exec Producer: Tony Pastor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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The subtlest change in New York is something people don't speak much about, but that is in everyone's mind. The city, for the first time in its long history, is destructible.
A single flight of planes, no bigger than a wedge of geese, can quickly end this island
fantasy. Burn the towers, crumble the bridges,
turn the underground passages into lethal chambers, cremate the millions. The intimation
of mortality is part of New York now, in the sound of jets overhead in the black headlines
of the latest edition. Well, welcome to The Rest is Classified. I'm Gordon Carrera.
And I'm David McCloskey. And that was not Osama bin Laden, the subject of this series. It was rather American novelist
E.B. White, who was writing in 1949 in an essay entitled Here Is New York. But David,
it's kind of an uncanny kind of foretelling of those terrible events of 9-11, which we're
going to be looking at 9-11 itself as well as its aftermath in this episode, is part of our story of Osama bin
Laden, al-Qaeda, and the struggle between him and the CIA.
We left the story last time with Osama bin Laden having attacked America, the CIA having
come up with plans to try and stop him, but never having been able to execute them.
Then, of course, the looming tower, as Lawrence Wright famously calls it in his book of 9-11, just ahead of us. We're going to have a deeper dive this time, I think, into the attack,
but particularly into the aftermath. That's right. It's the summer of 2001.
Salma bin Laden is working feverishly on plans for the 9-11 attacks.
But interestingly, Gordon, the seeds for those attacks are planted almost from the moment
that he arrives in Afghanistan in May of 1996.
We talked about his Afghan sojourn in our last episode.
There's a man in May of 1996 named Khalid Sheikh Mohammed,
KSM, who comes to Osama bin Laden's house in Tora Bora
up in that kind of craggy cave complex.
They have a meeting in Osama bin Laden's study.
KSM is short, squat, pious,
but very poorly trained in religion.
He had a past as an actor.
He will be well known, perhaps to many, for the picture taken of him after he is captured
by American and Pakistani forces in 2002.
And Khalid Sheikh Mohammed's nephew is a man named Ramzi Yousef, who had masterminded the
first World Trade Center bombing in 1993.
KSM and his nephew, Ramzi Yousef,
have come up with a bunch of what I would describe
as insane ideas for operations.
Bombing American planes, flying to Asia.
KSM actually says that they've smuggled a bomb
onto a passenger jet and detonated
it and killed a Japanese businessman.
They have an idea to fly a plane into CIA headquarters.
And in Tora Bora, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who by the way, at this point is not actually
a member of Al-Qaeda, he is kind of a freelance terrorist who is showing up in part, I think, because of this propaganda blitz that bin Laden is starting to benefit from
in 1996. He's kind of showing up on bin Laden's doorstep, hoping, I think, for some funding
and some bureaucratic support for this idea. But KSM pitches Osama on a plot to crash planes into buildings. And Osama's apparently kind of meh on this idea initially,
but later one of Osama's trusted military aides
will suggest that he reconsider this idea.
And Khalid Sheikh Mohammed comes back to Kandahar in 1999.
He formally joins Al-Qaeda, swears by an oilty loath
to Al-Qaeda and to Bin Laden,
and regurgitates this proposal for Al-Qaeda members
to fly small planes packed with explosives
into the World Trade Center.
Now, I find the obsession with the World Trade Center
to be very bizarre.
I don't quite understand it,
but he wants those buildings to fall. I don't exactly know why, but he's obsessed
with them.
I guess maybe it's a combination of being the tallest buildings and therefore a symbol
of American power and the World Trade Center, a symbol of American capitalism. I don't
know. I agree. It's strange, but it's clearly an obsession. He's now got an idea of
how to do it using explosives and planes. Some of it Laden is the one who apparently suggests
the idea that they use passenger jets. He says to KSM, why use an axe if you can use a bulldozer?
Don't fly a small Cessna into these packed with explosives, just fly the passenger plane right
into them. Now, KSM's idea is initially reminiscent to me of a B-grade 1990s action movie
plot. And the initial idea is to hijack 10 planes. KSM will be on the 10th. Nine will be flown into
targets on the East and West Coast. And then on KSM's plane, after he has killed all of the adult
male passengers, of course, KSM will emerge from the aircraft and give a big speech,
taking the US to task for supporting Israel. This is the
idea. Now, Osama bin Laden at this meeting in Kandahar, tells
him, why don't you scale things back a bit, and maybe don't make
yourself the main the main character.
Little bit of competition there. He doesn't like that.
Yeah, I think so. I don't think he wants KSM taking responsibility
for this. So they pair back the number of planes they plan to
hijack, and they select the targets, the US Capitol, the
Pentagon, and the World Trade Center. And I think Bin Laden
also does give some leeway for additional targets to be added.
But those are the big three that they're after. Now, we are not
Gordon in this episode going to go into excruciating detail about the 9-11
plot.
I think we'll probably do that at a later series, kind of give the real nitty gritty
of how it worked.
And I think that question of whether there were intelligence failures, whether it could
have been stopped, I mean, I think it is a really important question, but the detail
is for another time. What we will say though is that Osama bin Laden does take a personal role in selecting some
of the suicide operatives, including this four, this kind of Hamburg cell who had lived in Germany,
and they arrive in Afghanistan in November of 99. They train at some of these al-Qaeda camps
in Afghanistan. The concept for the plan evolves to the point
where they know that they need trained pilots.
And so this group from Hamburg are gonna fill that gap.
They know how to live in the West, they speak English,
they can get visas, and they are gonna go in and out
of these Afghan training camps under sort of Osama bin Laden
and al-Qaeda's tutelage in the late 1990s.
Now, by May of 2001,
all 19 of the hijackers are settled in the US.
And though the plans are technically,
obviously quite secret,
Osama bin Laden really seems to have been unable
to resist dropping hints that something big was coming.
And by the summer of 2001, there
are rumors that are flying around this kind of jihadist community in Afghanistan, which,
by the way, at this point is hundreds, if not thousands of people who are in these kind
of circles. There's a buzz that a major operation is coming. Right. And Al Qaeda military commander
even tells journalists, in the next few weeks, we will carry out a big surprise and we will strike or attack American and Israeli interests.
Osama bin Laden at one point told some Al Qaeda members that the coffin business will increase in the United States, right?
So that's the summer, kind of June of 2001.
In late August of 2001, Osama bin Laden tells AlQaeda leaders that there is a big operation coming
soon and two weeks before the attacks he orders al-Qaeda's training camp shut down because
of an imminent martyrdom operation.
So as you can see from some of those rumors, not a lot of specifics in there about when
it's coming, where, how it will happen. But there is
definitely something in the water. And this is where this
story intersects with the CIA and the US.
Yeah, because it's fair to say, you know, this is what's often
called chatter, isn't it? Low level rather than specific
intelligence, that sense that something's coming, and it is
going to be picked up in the US. I mean, the US are going to be aware that something is coming. But, you know, one of the issues is it's
come at a time when you've got a new administration in the US. President Clinton has left, George W.
Bush has taken over in January 2001. And I remember as a journalist covering this period,
the focus was on different kinds of threats, I think. They were talking about missile defense, I remember.
That was the kind of thing they wanted to talk about and to focus on.
You get a sense that those kind of senior figures were about state power, not about
kind of terrorist threats in terms of the way they saw the dangers to the United States.
You definitely sense that something is lost in that shift of administrations.
Not saying that the Clinton administration was actually that aggressive in going after
Bin Laden, but just a sheer fact of a change of administration means it takes months to get
everyone into place and they've got different priorities and they've got their own priorities.
And you do sense that even though you get threat reporting at this time and it's building up
as we get through to the summer, it's not
quite getting through. Well, I think, I mean, the Bush kind of national security team, the most
senior people like Cheney or Rumsfeld, they're tried and true Cold Warriors. And I think probably
come into the office with the standpoint that the biggest threats to the United States are from
states, right? The Russians, the Chinese, the Iraqis, right? Not necessarily Al-Qaeda.
And it will be the case that in the first months of the Bush administration, there are
33 principals committee policy meetings, cabinet level policy meetings held before the 9-11
attacks. Only one is about Al-Qaeda. And George Tennant in his memoir will write that at the
top tier, there was a loss of urgency.
Right?
So I think you do have holdovers from the Clinton team.
Tennant stays on as CIA director.
Richard Clark is the head of counterterrorism policy at the National Security Council.
He stays on for a while.
So you do have this sort of institutional connection and memory to the missed opportunities
of the late 1990s
But at the same time, I think the Bush team is just frankly not as focused on it. So in March
George Tenet will send a request for greater authorities
Which is essentially CIA asking for authorization to go run an operation to kill Osama bin Laden and the White House
Basically says this is the spring of 2001, they don't want to actually
run the process on that at that point in time. And the authorities get sent back. It's not that the
Bush administration wasn't open to this idea. I think, again, it's this sense of early days of
administration, there's a lot going on. They don't want to go halfway into a process and then stop
it. And so they basically tell tenant and the CIA team, let's do this later. And yet at the same time,
the intelligence community is getting absolute loads of credible information, intelligence coming
out of Afghanistan, coming out of these al Qaeda camps and people connected to them and feeding it
into the president's daily brief and to memos
that go down to the White House.
It's actually really interesting now to look back
at this Gordon years later and see how much strategic
warning there was.
In April, there's a report titled
Bin Laden planning multiple operations
that gets circulated by the CIA.
On May 3rd, Bin Laden public profile may presage attack.
On May 23rd, the CIA raised the possibility
that al-Qaeda might hijack an aircraft
to secure the release of another terrorist
from a US prison.
In June, a PDB, Bin Laden attacks may be imminent.
On July 3rd, the CIA reports that, quote,
planning for Bin Laden attacks continues despite delay.
So there's a sense that something is coming.
And yet, Gordon, I think we both agree that all of this information is,
I guess, what I would call strategic warning.
Details of the plot.
It's not giving details of the plot.
So you kind of read all this and you say, well, what do I do with it?
Yeah, but also people would go, well, we know he wants to attack the United States. He's
already attacked the United States. We know he's trying to plan stuff. And surely there's
loads of threat reporting, which is coming in all the time. So I also wonder a bit whether
would you really pay attention to this? You know, this guy Bin Laden, he's done all these attacks.
We know he's plotting. We know he's going to do more. If you don't have specific intelligence
about 9-11, about something on that
scale, if you don't have the insight into it, it's hard to know what to do. But I agree, there is a
lot of intelligence, but not really a sense of urgency and of trying to do anything about it.
It's kind of pushed down the list, if you like, at this point in the summer, isn't it? You've got
the people in the CIA, Kofor Black at the Counterterrorist Center, who are kind of trying to
literally bang their fists on the table, I think, at times with Kofor Black at the counterterrorist center, who are kind of trying to
literally bang their fists on the table, I think, at times with Kofor Black saying,
we need to do something, but it's not quite cutting through.
Well, and on July 10th, after all of this run of reporting, George Tenet takes the very unusual
step of calling Condoleezza Rice, who is the national security advisor, and asks for a meeting
that day. Again, this is uncommon. He goes down to the White House, believe he takes Kofor Black with him,
the head of the counterterrorism center,
and Tennant basically briefs that,
look, there are gonna be multiple spectacular attacks,
likely without any warning.
And the opening line of the briefing that he gives
is apparently, quote,
"'There will be a significant terrorist attack
in the coming weeks or months.'"
And Kofor Black piles on and says,
"'We need to go on a war footing now.'"
Now, this does seem to get that process going to
give the CIA authorities to go after and kill Bin Laden, the
one that had kind of been shelved in the spring. It gets
that going. But it's the summer in DC, right before a time when
I mean, in August, when a lot of this stuff is going to shut
down, people will not be there.
The authorities, unfortunately, won't be granted until after 9-11.
I think frankly, even if they had been granted that day, it's unclear that history would
have turned out any different.
But that drumbeat of reporting keeps coming.
And on August 3rd, the CIA circulates a warning titled, Threat of Impending Al-Qaeda Attack
to Continue Ind indefinitely.
And then on August 6th, there's the very famous,
now maybe infamous PDB item that's been declassified
with the title Bin Laden determined to strike in US.
And what is fascinating though,
is that as the US is getting all of this warning
in classified channels,
Al-Qaeda is providing kind of strategic warning just via
propaganda videos that are being released on internet chat rooms talking about how something
big is coming. And I will say there's an entire chapter in George Tennant's memoir, which I would
highly encourage everyone to read because it's a very interesting and detailed portrait of this
time in American history. And he has an entire chapter devoted
to all of the threat reporting that's coming in
during this period.
It's just a staggering quantity
of intelligence that's coming in.
We've highlighted a lot of the very specific bin Laden
and kind of US stuff,
but there is a massive laundry list in his book
about global attack plotting.
There's a fantastic line where he says,
if you were getting confused,
frustrated or exhausted reading this litany, then imagine how we felt at the time living through it.
I think there is this sense that there's just a fire hose they're drinking from and almost helpless
to stop the big one from coming. True. The CIA is clearly getting intelligence reporting,
and they're getting the chatter. They've got some sources, maybe some assets in the camps in Afghanistan.
We know they've got people on the outer fringes of al-Qaeda.
They've got lots of sources and they're getting some of this, I think, from Middle
East Gulf allied intelligence agencies also, I think, providing warnings.
All are saying something big is coming, but what they've never done is penetrate the
core of al-Qaeda.
They've never got inside the top level planning, either in terms of intercepting their communications or
actually having an agent in there. And without that, you know something big is coming because
that's the chatter in the camps and elsewhere that the spies are picking up and the agents are
picking up. But you don't have the details of what it is. And I think, as I said, we're not going to go
deep into the intelligence failure and what was missed and whether clues weren't put together.
But there is that sense in which there is another question about an intelligence failure, which is
to not have the insight right into the planning itself. Because then you're relying on putting
together fragments and clues about who these hijackers are, where they might be moving. And
there's lots of detail on that,
which is interesting in itself,
but there is a kind of failure to collect
that really core intelligence about the plot itself.
That's right.
And I think we should think,
and listeners should think about the intelligence failure
on 9-11 as being a true national failure in many respects.
It's a failure of the CIA, the FBI, the NSA. It's a broader policy failure.
It's not one thing. Again, we won't go into massive details on
any of this stuff. But the CIA fails to watch list two
suspected al Qaeda members who'd settled in San Diego under
their true names, right? The CIA doesn't tell the FBI about
that. And both of those guys end up being hijackers on American Airlines Flight 77, which crashes
into the Pentagon.
I mean, you can get deep into the detail of it, but there were like really interesting
questions about why the CIA didn't alert the FBI and institutional rivalries, where they're
going to try to recruit them, you know, all kinds of interesting things.
But there's a lot of these little indicators, aren't there, about people doing flight training, which just mean they
never quite put the pieces together or collect the pieces
to be able to kind of understand the plot.
And you note that CIA and the NSA effectively did fail to
penetrate the upper echelons of al-Qaeda in that Afghan
sanctuary. And I mean, even this is a bit tedious, but there were
underfunding of the IC, the intelligence community throughout the 1990s.
And then even things like there had been a massive plane crash, TWA flight 800 in the US, and there were these recommendations on aviation security that the Gore Commission had proposed that were not really implemented, that may have made it much harder to hijack planes. So it's a bunch of different things and we'll deal
with that story in a really detailed way when we do a 9-11 series at some point down the line.
Now, Gordon, Gordon, Gordon, Gordon, I'm going back to the Bin Laden wives here for a second,
because it's in September of 2001. Bin Laden is obviously having a massive week because they are getting
ready for 9-11. He is also getting another divorce. His first wife, Najwa, who has been with him since
the mid-70s, says she wants out. She's had enough of this jihadi club med in Afghanistan, wants to
return to her family in Syria. He permits this.
He allows her to take only three of their children.
They have 11 children together and she will depart Afghanistan prior to 9-11
and never see Osama bin Laden again.
Now, that same week on the 4th of September 2001,
the Bush National Security Team meets for the first time to discuss
al-Qaeda. And Richard Clark, who is the senior counterterrorism advisor at the White House,
has sent Condoleezza Rice a personal note before the meeting, writing, quote,
decision-makers should imagine themselves on a future day when hundreds of Americans lay
dead in several countries, including the US.
What would those decision makers wish that they had done earlier? That future day could happen at any time. It's a chilling thing to say, isn't it? Just one week away. So maybe at that moment,
let's take a break and when we come back, we'll see how Bin Laden's triumph is and becomes America's Darkest Hour.
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It's September the 11th, 2001.
Gorgeous fall morning, autumn morning, if you're British, in New
York and Washington, DC.
Those skies were very blue and very clear, weren't they, David?
That's right, Gordon.
The New York Yankees are going to play the Chicago White Sox that evening in the Bronx.
The Yankees are having really a phenomenal season in 2001. They'll go on to play and lose in the World Series
in seven games, but it is 8.46 a.m.
And through that brilliant blue sky
comes American Airlines Flight 11
carrying 9,000 gallons of jet fuel
traveling 490 miles an hour,
and it crashes into the North Tower
of the World Trade Center.
Now, people on some of the floors
were not particularly panicked initially.
They're confused, you know, is it a bomb?
Is it an earthquake?
In Afghanistan, members of Al-Qaeda
are trying to get a satellite signal.
Finally, someone tunes in a radio
to the BBC Arabic Language Service,
which is one of Osama Bin
Laden's preferred outlets.
And there's breaking news that a plane has struck the World Trade Center in New York.
The al-Qaeda members are thinking, okay, this maybe is the big attack that we've all been
hearing about all summer.
Cry out in joy and Bin Laden sort of says, you know, wait, Bin Laden, I think really
takes this first strike
He's a religious zealot. He sees this as a sign of God's favor
But of course, he knows there's more to come and he holds up three fingers indicating that there will be three more attacks
the second plane United Airlines flight 175 hits the South Tower at
903 a.m. It's traveling 600 miles per hour. And I think at this point,
Gordon, you could have assumed that the first one's an accident, terrible accident, something
has happened. When the second plane hits, everyone knows that it is an attack. And George
Tennant, the CIA director is at Langley. He begins assembling his staff in his conference room by about 9.15. So just
10 minutes or so after that second plane hits. And there's of course a feeling at this point
that it is al-Qaeda, right? There'll be no information, but a sense, I mean, given all
of this threat reporting that we've been reading, that this is Osama bin Laden. At 9.38 a.m.,
the third plane crashes into the Pentagon.
And when news hits Afghanistan of the Pentagon strike, Bin Laden will hold up four fingers to his odd followers suggesting that there is another attack coming.
But that final strike intended for the U.S. Capitol is not going to materialize.
At 10 a.m., Tenet gives the order to evacuate CIA headquarters, and his
staff, his senior staff, sets up shop out on the printing plant, which is on the compound but not
in either of the main sort of buildings, just presumed to be safer from plane strike. Counterterrorism
Center, which has a group up on the sixth floor, is exempted from this evacuation. And Tennant
in his memoir wrote, you know, Kofor Black had basically said, we can't evacuate the
Counterterrorism Center fully. And Tennant says, well, you know, they could die. And
Kofor Black apparently says, well, sir, then they're just going to have to die. And Tennant
apparently pauses and says, you're absolutely right. And so there's a contingent of CIA counterterrorism officers who stay the entire day at Langley. In New York, of course, it is
absolute pandemonium. There's actually a former FBI detailey to Alex Station, who is in New York
on 9-11 and will describe that he saw what looked like a tornado rushing up Broadway.
He tries to drive in the smoke, he almost rolls into a subway entrance. He eventually ends up
abandoning the car and trying to go out and find the rest of his squad. He walks inside and this
is Lawrence Wright in his book, The Looming Tower, wrote, quote, the cloud against the stream of
fleeing people who were like ash covered ghouls as if they had been exhumed.
The dust was a compound of concrete as best as lead, fiberglass, paper, cotton, jet fuel,
and the pulverized organic remains of 2,977 people who died.
The World Trade Center is going to burn for 100 days.
And all during that time, there is going to be this incredibly accurate stench that penetrates the FBI field office
in New York, this kind of awful reminder of our collective
failure to stop the attack.
Yeah, I mean, it's unforgettable for anyone, you know, who was
there who witnessed it. I was a journalist at the time. I
remember seeing actually the second plane go in live and
thinking it at first, it was a replay of the first plane going
in, not really understanding it. And then I was trying to get out and it took a few days to get
out there. But I remember driving and seeing still the smoke two or three days later when I finally
got to the US, still coming up from the remains of the World Trade Center and then going down and
seeing the Pentagon. And so it was shocking shocking the idea that the American homeland could be attacked in that way and at that scale, but it was also clear to a lot
of people very quickly that it was al-Qaeda, wasn't it? That was almost instant, particularly
within the CIA, I think. They started looking through those flight manifests. They could see
names, in some cases names of people that they knew were Al-Qaeda operatives. I mean, that's what's shocking on some of these planes. And so very quickly, there is an understanding
that it is Al-Qaeda and Osama bin Laden who's behind this absolutely kind of devastating,
world changing event.
And bin Laden is going to leave Kandahar, Afghanistan for the mountains, to think understanding that some response is coming.
Although we should note that I think Bin Laden thought
he would get more cruise missile strikes.
And obviously, I mean, we should also say that
he never thought that these attacks
would kill this many people.
I think in his wildest dreams, they did not think
that the towers would fully collapse.
And I think it just exceeded what they had hoped for by a wide margin.
And it is interesting, isn't it, Gordon, that Bin Laden's stated strategic goal for conducting
these kind of attacks in this kind of pattern that I think he has believes that he has seen throughout
much of the 1990s is I attacked the United States and they pull back. I attacked them
in Yemen. I attacked them in East Africa and they don't do anything and they sort of back
off. Yeah, they fire a few missiles. Right. They fire missiles and that's it. I think
maybe at worse, he
thought he was going to get a rehash of the air war over
Kosovo, right? I mean, he's gonna get bombed, but the US
isn't going to put a whole bunch of troops on the ground. And it
is interesting, because later when when asked to explain 911,
one of the Afghan Arabs who actually served with bin Laden
said, the tactics took over the strategy because exactly the
opposite is going to happen.
The US, the CIA, they're coming for Bin Laden.
And I mean, really right off the bat, Gordon Tennant,
George Tennant will tell Bush, look,
this look smells and tastes like Bin Laden.
But once the CIA knows that al-Qaeda members are
on those plane manifests, we know it's been lauded in al-Qaeda.
Yeah, and it's very interesting, I think, what's going on also in Washington here, because I think there's a famous meeting and Kofi Black sitting at the back of the meeting with the presidents there.
And Kofi Black kind of says, we've got a plan, we can do this, we'll have flies walking over their eyeballs, I think is the famous quote. Bush loves this language. And the CIA, I
think, takes the lead in responding to 9-11 and is very keen to do so. I think partly it's a
reaction to the sense of failure. The people who I've spoken to who are part of this will
acknowledge they felt this sense that they'd let America down, that their job was to provide
the intelligence and warning. And so they are desperate to go on the offensive now was to provide the intelligence and warning. So they are desperate to go on the
offensive now, to take the lead. It's interesting, isn't it? Because they do take the lead, rather
than, for instance, the Pentagon and it just being some missiles being flown or an air campaign and
things being dropped. It's the CIA which is showing the desire and the willingness to take the lead in
going after Bin Laden as a reaction, I think, emotionally to that
sense of having failed to stop the attacks.
And of course, I mean, we covered some of what happens next in our early episodes we
did about the horsemen who were sent there, the early CIA jawbreaker teams who go on the
ground.
And that's a symbol of it's the CIA who take the lead now to finally go after Bin Laden
and to be led off the leash, as Kofi Blackwood put it.
Also just the reality that I think at that point,
in the first weeks of September, 2001,
among all of the different bureaucratic components
in the intelligence community and the defense establishment,
it is probably the CIA that knows Afghanistan the best.
I mean, the Pentagon didn't really have a plan
for a war in Afghanistan, really.
And the CIA has, although certainly in the 90s,
a lot of that access has kind of diminished relative
to the jihad in the 80s.
The new memo is going to authorize lethal action
against al-Qaeda or any affiliated group.
On September the 17th, Bush is gonna sign that finding.
It's gonna give the CIA authority
to go after bin Laden, to kill him. And it is one of
the most aggressive findings ever signed. So the CIA is going to have kind of full authority to do
what it wants at this point. Now, the first attempts to sort of deal with bin Laden after
9-11 are more threatening of the Taliban to hand him over, right? This obviously doesn't pan out. I think at this point, the Taliban
thinks the Americans are not actually going to invade. That
turns out to be terribly wrong. When the invasion begins, bin
Laden will cut some deals with Afghan warlords and tribal
elders out in eastern Afghanistan near Jalalabad, pay
them off, give them some money, give them
horses in some cases. And Osama bin Laden and his associates basically creep out of the settled areas
of Afghanistan just ahead of the US invasion. Now, Kabul is going to fall on November 12th.
There's kind of, I think, a sense of elation in Washington
over how quickly the Taliban is overthrown,
but where is Osama bin Laden, right?
The perpetrator of the attack.
He sends his three remaining wives
and a bunch of his young children
across the border into Pakistan.
And at this point, now everybody thinks
that he is hiding out in this particularly steep and treacherous mountainous area near the Afghan border with Pakistan, a place which listeners to the series should know well by now called Tora Bora.
And this is a particularly kind of jagged mountainous area. It's a place he knows from his days in the Soviet jihad in the 80s. I think the assumption
is that this might be his last stand in these famous caves that have been built here by him.
I remember there were some crazy images pretending there were huge cave complexes,
like a Bonvillain layer built into the mountains, which of course
wasn't true. But it was a very remote area and it was an obvious place to hide. But quite
quickly they actually start to get a sense that he might be there, don't they? I mean,
the CIA and the special forces are on the ground. And I think they realize he's there
pretty soon as he's holding up in the caves.
The CIA and NSA are monitoring radios that they think belong to him and other al-Qaeda
members.
I think there's even a prediction made that this is kind of a last stand in Tora Bora.
It's almost suicidal.
The US begins to bomb these cave complexes, fly predator drones overhead.
Al-Qaeda is sustaining significant losses.
They're running out of medicine, running out of cash.
Some of the line is actually forced to borrow some money
from a local and sympathetic cleric.
And although there is a massive bombing campaign
from the air on the ground,
and this is I think hard to imagine today,
but on the ground there are maybe less than 100 American and God help me Gordon British Special Forces, is that
right? And a small CIA contingent.
I've spoken to some of the people who were there actually. I
interviewed some years later, including some British SBS
people.
Special Boat Service to Americans.
Special Boat Service. Yeah, that's right. One of the themes
of this series has been people angry at missed opportunities.
And actually this is a group which is also angry at missed opportunities.
I mean, they picked up some radios, I think, that Bin Laden's people were using.
At one point, I think they hear what they think is Bin Laden on the radio.
There are some possible sightings of him by these special forces teams.
And the crucial thing is that there's a question, well, what do you do about it?
There's small special forces teams there. The question is, do you carpet bomb the area, which might
kill them but more likely to flush them out, but the risk is that you're on the border
with Pakistan. What they want is for US troops to be deployed to seal off the border. You
kind of flush them out with the bombing, then you seal off the border with enough troops
that you can hopefully capture him if he isn't killed.
And what's so interesting is right at the top level in the US administration, they decide
to do the bombing part, but not the troops part to seal off the border.
So there is these huge bombs which are dropped, I think.
I mean, someone said they literally changed the geography
of the mountains there with the size of these bombs
which are being dropped on Tora Bora
because they're convinced Bin Laden is somewhere there
in that cave complex, but they don't seal that border
and they don't put the troops there.
And people are angry about that.
When I've asked US military commanders about it,
they say, well, it's taken a while to get them there.
You know, they come up with lots of reasons, but it does seem like
another one of those missed opportunities, doesn't it?
I mean, I've seen accounts that suggest that there were more
journalists at Tora Bora than Western soldiers.
So it was a very light on the ground footprint.
And we should say that up to this point in the war in Afghanistan, which is maybe a little over a month old,
the US has largely relied on local allies
and warlords for troops, right?
I mean, it's a very advisory kind of light footprint, right?
And that worked really well for capturing Kabul.
And so I think there is a bit here
of like a don't fix what ain't broken
approach of like we have made massive gains really quickly against the Taliban with this strategy,
why change it up? And of course, I mean, even here we can see, you know, this is a whole separate
conversation, but you can already see some of this confusion around what the objective of this war is,
because taking Kabul, you've overthrown the Taliban,
Bin Laden's still running around, right?
And the focus is maybe already starting to lag a little bit.
So on the night of the 11th of December,
Osama Bin Laden is going to get away.
So he and al-Qaeda, they cut a ceasefire deal
with a warlord on the US payroll.
And a group of Osama bin Laden's bodyguards
actually hike out of Tora Bora into Pakistan
and they're arrested.
Osama bin Laden and his number two, Aiman al-Zawahiri
are not with them.
Those two have split up.
Osama bin Laden rides to the home of a trusted
ally. He's entrusted some cash, maybe up to $100,000 to this person. He collects that. He then rides
by horse. Remember, he is a quite accomplished horseman to the northeast into a place called
Kunar province. It's a very remote mountainous, heavily forested region. And some
bin Laden there releases a video in which he says, you know, I am just a poor slave of God, if I live
or die, the war will continue. There's this whole thing is dripping with Wild West analogs, horses,
escapes, wanted dead or alive kind of stuff. And he essentially disappears.
By the 4th of January 2002, Michael Morell, who at this point is George Bush's PDB briefer,
and Mike Morell, remember that name because he will rise to become the deputy director
of the CIA a decade later when we are still hunting bin Laden. But he's briefing President Bush, I think,
out at his ranch in Crawford, Texas, in January of 2002.
And he briefs a report, an article,
in which the CIA says, we think that Osama bin Laden was
at Tora Bora, and we think that he escaped.
And apparently, George Bush goes nuts. And Morel in his book writes that
he quote, shot the messenger, me.
Yeah. I mean, what is astonishing is to think how close some of those special forces were
to Bin Laden, you know, potentially even seeing him able to kind of listen to him on the radio
just after 9-11, and then he's gone. And if you were to say to people, it would take another decade to get him,
people would have been astonished at that moment.
They would have been astonished
that having come so close to him,
and yet he gets away, he escapes,
and then how long it's going to take,
I think this is a really painful moment.
But there with Osama bin Laden on the run,
having escaped to Uraborah,
let's end. Next time we'll come back and we'll see how the CIA's war with Osama bin Laden
really shifts away from this moment of opportunity towards a decade-long manhunt with the trail
initially going cold.
But Gordon, if our dear listeners do not want
to wait any longer, you don't have to. You can join our declassified club and get immediate access
to this entire series right now. In this next episode, as Gordon mentioned, we are going to
go deep into the hunt for Bin Laden to explain exactly how he was found.
But also, David, on Friday, club members will also get an extra treat because they'll get
our kind of look at the film Zero Dark Thirty, which is the filmic treatment of this amazing
episode of looking for Bin Laden and then finally killing him.
And we'll be talking through, you know, our impressions of the film and what it tells
us.
So that's for club members on Friday.
You're going to do an impression of James Gandolfini, right?
I am not going to do that.
Who plays CIA director Leon Panetta in the film.
You'll get Gordon's Gandolfini impression too.
For everyone else, next week we'll continue the story on the trail of Sam Vinlade.
See you then.
See you then.