Mohamed Atta ( ,
Muḥammad ‘Aṭṭa as-Sayyid) (September 1,
1968 – September 11, 2001) was an Egyptian
student who
studied in Germany
in the late
1990s and soon became friends with Ziad
Jarrah, Marwan al-Shehhi and
Ramzi Binalshibh who together
formed what is now known as The Hamburg
Cell. In the late 1990s, the four friends became known
associates of
al-Qaeda, and the ringleaders
of the 19 hijackers in the
September 11 attacks.
Atta was the hijacker
in control of American
Airlines Flight 11 which was the first plane to strike the
World Trade
Center
.
Born in a
small town in the Nile
Delta
, Egypt
in 1968,
Atta moved with his family to the Abdeen section of Cairo
at the age
of 10. Atta studied architecture at Cairo
University
, and went to
Hamburg
, Germany in 1992 to continue his studies at the
Technical
University of Hamburg
, where he remained a student until fall
1999. In Hamburg, Atta became involved with the
Al-Quds
Mosque
. At some point, he met
Marwan al-Shehhi,
Ramzi Binalshibh, and
Ziad Jarrah who all became part of the
Hamburg cell.
Atta disappeared from Germany for periods
of time, spending some time in Afghanistan
, including several months in late 1999 and early
2000 when he met Osama bin Laden and
other top Al-Qaeda leaders. Atta and
the other Hamburg Cell members were recruited by Bin Laden and
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed for
the "planes operation" in the United States. Atta returned to
Hamburg in February 2000, reported his passport stolen and obtained
a clean passport.
In late March 2000, Atta began contacting flight schools in the
United States, inquiring about training. Atta arrived together with
Marwan al-Shehhi in June 2000.
Both ended up in south Florida
at Huffman Aviation where they entered the
Accelerated Pilot Program. Atta and al-Shehhi obtained
instrument ratings in November
2000, and continued training on simulators and flight training.
Beginning in May 2001, Atta assisted with the arrival of the muscle
hijackers. In July 2001, Atta traveled to Spain where he met with
Binalshibh to exchange information and finalize the plot. In
August, Atta traveled on surveillance flights to determine details
on how the attacks could be carried out.
In early
September 2001, Atta traveled to Maryland
, where Hani Hanjour was
at the time. Atta then traveled to Boston
, and on
September 10, he traveled with Abdulaziz al-Omari to Portland,
Maine
. On the morning of September 11, Atta and
al-Omari flew on
Colgan Air back to
Boston, where they boarded
American Airlines Flight 11.
Fifteen minutes into the flight, the team of hijackers attacked and
Atta took over control of the aircraft. At 8:46 a.m., Atta crashed
the
Boeing 767 into the North Tower of
the World Trade Center.
Aliases
Mohamed Atta varied his name on documents, also using "Mehan Atta",
"Mohammad El Amir", "Muhammad Atta", "Mohamed El Sayed", "Mohamed
Elsayed", "Muhammad al-Amir", "Awag Al Sayyid Atta", "Muhammad
al-Amir", and "Awad Al Sayad".
In Germany, he registered his name as
"Mohamed el-Amir Awad el-Sayed Atta", and went by the name,
"Mohamed el-Amir" at the Technical University of
Hamburg
. In his will written in 1996, Atta gives his
name as "Mohamed the son of Mohamed Elamir awad Elsayed." When he
came to the United States, he used the name "Mohamed Atta."
Atta also
claimed different nationalities, sometimes Egyptian and other times
told people that he was from the United Arab Emirates
.
Early life
Atta was
born on September 1, 1968 in Kafr el-Sheikh, located in
Egypt
's Nile delta region. His
father, Mohamed el-Amir Awad el-Sayed Atta, was a lawyer, educated
in both
sharia and
civil law. His mother, Bouthayna
Mohamed Mustapha Sheraqi, came from a wealthy farming and trading
family and was also educated. Bouthayna and Mohamed married when
she was 14, via an arranged marriage. The family had few relatives
on the father's side and kept a distance from Bouthayna's family.
In-laws characterized Atta's father "austere, strict, and private",
and neighbors considered the family reclusive. Atta was the only
son, but he had two older sisters who were both well-educated and
successful in their careers—one as a medical doctor and the other
as a professor.
When Atta was ten, his family moved to the Cairo neighborhood of
Abdeen, located near the center of the city. Atta's father
continued to keep the family private, restricting Atta from
socializing with other kids in the neighborhood. Instead, he spent
most of his time at home studying, and performed well in his
studies.
In 1985, Atta entered Cairo
University
, where he
studied engineering. As one of the highest-scoring students,
Atta was admitted into the very selective architecture program
during his senior year. In addition to his regular courses, Atta
studied English at the
American University in Cairo.
In 1990, Atta graduated with a degree in
architecture. For several months after
graduating, Atta worked at the Urban Development Center in Cairo,
where he worked on architectural, planning, and building design.
After he graduated, Atta also studied German at the
Goethe-Institut in Cairo.
In 1990, Atta's
family moved into an 11th floor apartment in Giza
.
Germany
In 1992, Atta's father invited a German couple over for dinner
while they were visiting Cairo. The German couple ran an exchange
program between Germany and Egypt, and suggested that Atta should
continue his studies in Germany. They offered him a temporary place
to live at their house in the city. Mohamed Atta travelled to
Germany two weeks later, in July 1992.
There, he enrolled in
the urban planning graduate program at the Technical
University of Hamburg-Harburg
. Atta initially stayed with the two high
school teachers. When he arrived in Germany, Atta began adhering to
a strict Islamic diet, frequented the mosque, and seldom
socialized. His hosts found Atta frustrating due to his
closed-mindedness and intensely introverted personality. After six
months, they asked him to move out.
By spring 1993, Atta moved into Centrumshaus, a university
apartment building, where he shared an apartment with two
roommates. Atta continued living in the apartment at Centrumshaus
until 1998. During that time, he had two roommates who in the end
were "so aggravated" with Atta, who almost never cleaned, seldom
washed dishes, and such behavior. Atta would walk in and out of a
room "without acknowledging anyone else in it". His roommates
described Atta's personality as "complete, almost aggressive
insularity".
At the Technical University of Hamburg-Harburg, Atta studied under
guidance of the department chair, Dittmar Machule, who himself
specialized in the Middle East. Atta was concerned about modern
development and construction of high-rise buildings in Cairo and
other ancient cities in the
Middle East.
He believed that the large, impersonal, and often ugly
apartment blocks built in the 1960s and 1970s
had ruined old neighborhoods, and took away privacy and dignity
from people. Atta's own family moved into such an apartment block
in 1990, which to him was "a shabby symbol of Egypt's haphazard
attempts to modernize and its shameless embrace of the West."
For his
thesis, Atta focused his studies on the ancient city of Aleppo
in Syria
. He
explored the history of Aleppo's urban landscapes and the general
themes of the conflict between Arab civilization and modernity.
Atta criticized how the modern
skyscrapers and development projects in Aleppo
were disrupting the fabric of that city by blocking community
streets and altering the
skyline.
In 1994,
Atta was invited to Aleppo
by his
professor Dittmar Machule for a three-day archaeological
visit. Atta ended up spending several weeks in Aleppo during
August 1994, and visited again that December. While in Syria, he
met Amal, a young
Palestinian
woman, who worked there in the planning bureau. Volker Hauth, who
was traveling with Atta, described Amal as "attractive and
self-confident. She observed the Muslim niceties, taking taxis to
and from the office so as not to come into close physical contact
with men on the buses. But, she was 'emancipated' and
'challenging'." They both appeared to be attracted to one another,
but Atta regretfully explained to Hauth that, "she had a quite
different orientation and that the emancipation of the young lady
did not fit." This was the closest thing to romance for Atta.
During the summer of 1995, Atta spent three months with co-students
Volker Hauth and Ralph Bodenstein in Cairo, on a grant from the
Carl Duisberg Society.
They looked at the effects of redevelopment
in the Islamic
Cairo
old quarter which the government wanted to develop
for tourism. Atta remained in Cairo to stay with his family,
after Hauth and Bodenstein returned to Germany.
While in Hamburg, Atta also held a number of jobs. Beginning in
1992, he worked part-time at Plankontor, an urban planning firm.
Atta remained with the firm through the summer of 1997, when he was
laid off. The firm's business had declined, and having bought a
CAD system, "his
draughtsmanship was not needed." Atta also worked at a cleaning
firm, and buying and selling cars to earn extra money. After
studying in Hamburg, Atta wanted to return to Cairo to work, but
there were few job prospects, as his family did not have the "right
connections." Atta was also concerned about actions of the Egyptian
government in arresting
political
activists, and feared that he too would be a target due to his
social and political beliefs.
After leaving Plankontor in the summer of 1997, he disappeared
again and did not return until 1998. Atta phoned his graduate
advisor in 1998, after a year of doing nothing for his thesis. Atta
told Machule that he had family problems at home and said, “Please
understand, I don’t want to talk about this.” By spring 1999, Atta
had completed his thesis, and formally defended it in August
1999.
Islamic extremism
After coming to Hamburg, Atta became more religious, frequently
attending the
mosque. Atta's friends in
Germany described him as an intelligent man with religious beliefs
who grew angry over the Western policy toward the Middle East,
including the
Oslo Accords and the
Gulf War.
MSNBC, in
its special "The Making of the Death Pilots," interviewed German
friend Ralph Bodenstein who traveled, worked and talked a lot with
Mohamed Atta. Bodenstein said, "He was most imbued [sic] actually
about Israeli politics in the region and about U.S. protection of
these Israeli politics in the region. And he was to a degree
personally suffering from that."
After spending the summer of 1995 in
Egypt, he joined the Hajj in Mecca
that
fall. Before going to Egypt, he grew a beard, which is a
sign of a devout Muslim, but was also seen as a political gesture.
When Atta returned from Egypt in the winter of 1996, he had become
more religious.
In
Hamburg, Atta was drawn to Al-Quds Mosque
, which adheres to a "harsh, uncompromisingly
fundamentalist, and resoundingly militant" version of Sunni
Islam. He developed acquaintances at Al Quds, some who came
over to visit him at Centrumshaus. Atta also began teaching classes
at Al Quds, as well as at a Turkish mosque near Harburg. Atta also
formed a prayer group, which Ahmed Maklat and
Mounir El Motassadeq joined.
Ramzi Binalshibh was also there teaching
occasional classes, and became a good friend of Atta's.
Mohammed Haydar Zammar, a German
terrorist of Syrian
origin,
claims he met Atta at this time and recruited him into al-Qaeda.
On April 11, 1996, Atta signed his
last will
and testament at the mosque, officially declaring his Muslim
beliefs and giving 18 instructions regarding his burial.
This was
the day that Israel
attacked
Lebanon
in Operation Grapes of
Wrath, which outraged Atta. Signing the will, "offering
his life" was Atta's response. The instructions in his last will
and testament reflect both
Sunni funeral
practices, along with some more puritanical demands from
Wahhabism, including asking people not "to weep
and cry" or show emotion. The will was signed by el-Motassadeq and
a second individual at the mosque.
While in the urban planning program at Hamburg, Atta disappeared
from time to time, frequently for long periods.
He told his adviser
that he needed to attend to family problems in Cairo
. At
the winter break in 1997, Atta left and did not return to Hamburg
for three months. He said that he went on Hajj again, just 18
months after his first
Hajj.
Terry McDermott explained in
Perfect Soldiers that it is highly unusual and unlikely
for someone, especially a young student, to go on Hajj again that
soon. Also, three months is an exceptionally long time, much longer
than what Hajj requires.
When Atta returned, he claimed that his
passport was lost and got a new one, which
is a common tactic to erase evidence of travel to places such as
Afghanistan
. When he returned in spring 1998, after
disappearing for several months, he had grown a thick long beard,
and "seemed more serious and aloof" to those who knew him.
By the summer of 1998, Atta was no longer eligible for university
housing in Centrumshaus. He left that summer and moved into a
nearby apartment in Wilhelmsburg, where he lived with
Said Bahaji and
Ramzi Binalshibh. During the summer of
1998, Atta worked alongside al-Shehhi, Binalshibh, and Belfas, at a
warehouse, packing computers in crates for shipping. The Hamburg
group did not stay in Wilhelmsburg for long. The next winter, they
moved into an apartment at Marienstrasse 54, near the university in
Harburg. It was here that the
Hamburg
cell developed and acted more as a group. They met three or
four times a week to discuss their anti-American feelings and to
plot possible attacks. Many
al-Qaeda
members lived in this apartment at various times, including
hijacker
Marwan al-Shehhi,
Zakariya Essabar, and others. In all, over
a dozen men listed the apartment as their home address.
In late
1999, Atta, al-Shehhi, Jarrah, Bahaji, and Binalshibh decided to
travel to Chechnya
to fight against the Russians, but were convinced
by Khalid al-Masri and Mohamedou Ould Slahi at the last minute
to change their plans. They instead traveled to Afghanistan
over a two-week period in late November.
On
November 29, 1999, Mohamed Atta boarded Turkish Airlines Flight TK1662 from
Hamburg
to Istanbul
, where he changed to flight TK1056 to Karachi, Pakistan
. When they arrived, they were spotted by Al
Qaeda leader
Abu Hafs as suitable
candidates for the "planes operation" plot. They were all
well-educated, had experience living in western society, along with
some English skills, and would be able to obtain visas.
Even
before Binalshibh had arrived, Atta, al-Shehhi, and Jarrah were
sent to the House of Ghamdi near Bin Laden’s home in Kandahar
, where he was waiting to meet them. Bin
Laden asked them to pledge loyalty and commit to suicide missions,
which Atta and the other three Hamburg men all accepted. Bin Laden
sent them to see
Mohammed Atef to get
a general overview of the mission, then they were sent to Karachi
to see
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed
to go over specifics.
A video surfaced in October 2006, which showed Bin Laden at Tarnak
Farms on January 8, 2000, and showing Atta together with
Ziad Jarrah reading their wills ten days later
on January 18, 2000.
On his return journey, Atta left Karachi
on February 24, 2000 by flight TK1057 to Istanbul
where he changed to flight TK1661 to Hamburg
.
Immediately after returning to Germany, Atta, al-Shehhi, and Jarrah
reported their passports stolen, possibly to erase travel visas to
Afghanistan.
German investigators said that they had evidence that Mohamed Atta
trained at al-Qaeda camps in Afghanistan from late 1999 to early
2000. The timing of the Afghanistan training was outlined on August
23, 2002 by a senior investigator. The investigator, Klaus Ulrich
Kersten, director of Germany's federal anticrime agency, the
Bundeskriminalamt,
provided the first official confirmation that Atta and two other
pilots had been in Afghanistan and the first dates of the training.
Kersten
said in an interview at the agency's headquarters in Wiesbaden, Germany
, that Atta was in Afghanistan from late 1999 until
early 2000.
In the United States

2000 Visa
On March 22, 2000, while still in Germany, Mohamed Atta sent an
e-mail to the Academy of Lakeland in Florida, inquiring about
flight training, "Dear sir, we are a small group of young men from
different Arab countries. Now we are living in Germany since a
while for study purposes. We would like to start training for the
career of airline professional pilots. In this field we haven't yet
any knowledge but we are ready to undergo an intensive training
program (up to ATP and eventually higher)." Atta sent 50-60 similar
e-mails to other flight training schools in the United
States.
On May 17, Mohamed Atta applied for a United States visa, receiving
a five-year B-1/B-2 (tourist/business) visa the next day from the
United States embassy in Berlin. Because Atta had lived in Germany
for approximately five years, along with his "strong record as a
student", he was treated more leniently and not scrutinized.
After
obtaining his visa, Atta took a bus on June 2 from Germany to
Prague
where he
stayed overnight before traveling on to the United States the next
day. Binalshibh later explained that they believed it would
contribute to operational security for Atta to fly out of Prague
instead of Hamburg, where he traveled from previously.
Likewise, al-Shehhi
traveled from a different location, in his case via Brussels
.
Atta
arrived on June 3, 2000 at Newark
International Airport
from Prague. That month, Atta and al-Shehhi stayed in
hotels and rented rooms in New York City
on a short-term basis. They continued to
inquire about flight schools and personally visited some, including
Airman Flight School in Norman, Oklahoma
, which they visited on July 3, 2000.
Days
later, al-Shehhi and Atta ended up in south Florida
. Atta and al-Shehhi established accounts at
SunTrust Bank and received wire
transfers from Ali Abdul Aziz Ali,
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed's nephew in the United Arab
Emirates
. On July 6, 2000, Atta and al-Shehhi enrolled
at Huffman Aviation in Venice,
Florida
, where they entered the Accelerated Pilot Program,
while Ziad Jarrah took flight training from a different school also
based out of Venice. When Atta and al-Shehhi arrived in
Florida, they initially stayed with Huffman's bookkeeper and his
wife in a spare room of their house. After a week, they were asked
to leave because they were rude.
Atta and Shehhi then moved into a small
house nearby in Nokomis
where they stayed for six months.
Flight record of Atta at Huffman
Atta began flight training on July 7, 2000 and continued training
nearly every day. By the end of July 2000, both Atta and al-Shehhi
did solo flights. Atta earned his private pilot certificate in
September, and then he and Shehhi decided to switch flight schools.
Both
enrolled at Jones Aviation in Sarasota
, however took training there only for a brief
time. They had problems following instructions and were both
very upset when they failed their Stage 1 exam at Jones Aviation.
They inquired about multi-engine planes and told the instructor
that "they wanted to move quickly, because they had a job waiting
in their country upon completion of their training in the U.S." In
mid-October, Atta and al-Shehhi returned to Huffman Aviation to
continue training. In November 2000, Atta earned his instrument
rating, and then a commercial pilot's license in December from the
Federal Aviation
Administration.
Atta continued with flight training, including solo flights and
simulator time. On December 22, Atta and al-Shehhi applied to Eagle
International for large jet and simulator training for
McDonnell Douglas DC-9 and
Boeing 737-300 models.
On December 26, Atta
and al-Shehhi abandoned a Piper
Cherokee that had stalled on the runway of Miami
International Airport
. On December 29 and 30, Atta and Marwan went
to the Opa-locka
Airport
where they practiced on a Boeing 727 simulator, and they obtained Boeing 767 simulator training from Pan Am
International on December 31. As well, Atta
purchased flight deck videos for
Boeing 747-200, Boeing 757-200, Airbus A320 and Boeing 767-300ER models via mail-order from
Sporty's Pilot Shop in Batavia, Ohio
in November and December 2000.
Atta's
cellphone was recorded phoning the Moroccan
embassy in Washington on January 2, just before
al-Shehhi flew to the country. Atta flew to Spain on January
4, 2001 to coordinate with Binalshibh and returned to the United
States on January 10.
While in the United States he traveled to
Lawrenceville, Georgia
, where he and al-Shehhi attended a Gold's Health
Club. During that time Atta flew out of Briscoe Field in
Lawrenceville with a pilot, and Atta and either the pilot or
al-Shehhi flew around the Atlanta area. They lived in the area for
several months.
On April 3, Atta and al-Shehhi rented a
postal box in Virginia Beach, Virginia
.
On April 11, Atta and al-Shehhi rented an apartment at 10001
Atlantic Blvd, Apt.
122 in Coral Springs, Florida
for $840 per month, and assisted with the arrival
of the muscle hijackers. On April 16 Atta was given a
citation for not having a valid driver's
license, and began steps to get one.
On May 2, Atta
received his driver's license in Lauderdale
Lakes, Florida
. While in the United States, Atta owned a
red 1989 Pontiac.
On June
27, Atta flew from Fort Lauderdale
to Boston,
Massachusetts
, where he spent a day, and then continued on to
San
Francisco
for a short
time, and from there to Las
Vegas. On June 28, Atta arrived at McCarran
International Airport
in Las Vegas to meet with the three other
pilots. He rented a
Chevrolet
Malibu from an
Alamo Rent A Car
agency. It is not known where he stayed that night, but on the 29th
he registered at the EconoLodge at 1150 South
Las Vegas Boulevard. Here he presented
an
AAA membership
for a discount, and paid cash for the $49.50/night room.
During
his trip to Las Vegas, he is thought to have used a video camera that he had rented from a Select
Photo outlet back in Delray Beach, Florida
.
Summer 2001 summit in Spain
Atta left again in July 2001 for Spain to meet with Binalshibh for
the last time.
On July 7, 2001, Atta flew on Swissair Flight 117 from Miami
to Zürich
, where he had a stopover. On July 8, Atta
was recorded withdrawing 1700
Swiss
francs from an
ATM, and
using his credit card to purchase two
Swiss Army knifes and some
chocolate in an airport shop in Zurich. After the
stopover in Zurich, he arrived in Madrid at 4:45 pm on
Swissair Flight 656, and spent several hours at the
airport.
Then at 8:50 pm, he checked into the Hotel
Diana Cazadora in Barajas
, a town near the airport. That night and
twice the next morning, he called
Bashar Ahmad Ali Musleh, a Jordanian
student in Hamburg who served as a liaison for Binalshibh.
On the morning of July 9, Mohamed Atta rented a silver
Hyundai Accent, which he booked from SIXT
Rent-A-Car for July 9 to 16, and later extended to the 19th.
He drove
east out of Madrid towards the Mediterranean beach area of Tarragona
. On the way, Atta stopped in Reus
to pick up Ramzi Binalshibh at the airport.
They
drove to Cambrils
, where they spent a night at the Hotel
Monica. They checked out the next morning, and spent
the next few days at an unknown location in Tarragona
. The absence of other hotel stays, signed
receipts or credit card stubs has led investigators to believe that
the men may have met in a safe house provided by other al-Qaeda
operatives in Spain. There, Atta and Binalshibh held a meeting to
complete the planning of the attacks.
Several clues have
been found to link their stay in Spain to Syrian
-born
Imad Eddin Barakat Yarkas (Abu Dahdah),
and Amer el Azizi, a Moroccan in
Spain. They may have helped arrange and host the meeting in
Tarragona.
Yosri Fouda, who interviewed
Binalshibh and
Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed (KSM) before the arrest, believes that
Said Bahaji and KSM may have also been present
at the meeting. Spanish investigators have said that Marwan
al-Shehhi and two others later joined the meeting. Binalshibh would
not discuss this meeting with Fouda.
During the Spain meetings, Atta and Binalshibh had coordinated the
details of the attacks. The
9/11
Commission obtained details about the meeting, based on
interrogations of Binalshibh in the weeks after his arrest in
September 2002. Binalshibh explained that he passed along
instructions from Osama bin Laden, including his desire for the
attacks to be carried out as soon as possible. Bin Laden was
concerned about having so many operatives in the United States.
Atta confirmed that all the muscle hijackers had arrived in the
United States, without any problems, but said that he needed five
to six more weeks to work out details. Bin Laden also asked that
other operatives not be informed of the specific data until the
last minute. During the meeting, Atta and Binalshibh also decided
on the targets to be hit, ruling out a strike on a
nuclear plant. Binalshibh passed along Bin
Laden's list of targets; Bin Laden wanted the U.S. Congress, the
Pentagon, and the World Trade Center to be attacked, as they were
deemed "symbols of America." They also discussed the personal
difficulties Atta was having with fellow hijacker
Ziad Jarrah. Binalshibh was worried that Jarrah
might even abandon the plan. The
9/11 Commission Report speculated
that the now-convicted terrorist conspirator
Zacarias Moussaoui was being trained as a
possible replacement for Jarrah.
From July 13 to 16, Atta stayed at the Hotel Sant Jordi in
Tarragona. After Binalshibh returned to Germany on July 16, 2001,
Atta had three more days in Spain.
He spent two nights in Salou
at the
beachside Casablanca Playa Hotel, then spent the last two nights at
the Hotel Residencia Montsant. On July 19, Atta
returned to the United States, flying on Delta Air Lines from Madrid to Fort
Lauderdale, via Atlanta
.
August 2001 final plans in U.S.
On July 22, 2001, Mohamed Atta rented a
Mitsubishi Galant from
Alamo Rent A Car, putting 3,836 miles on
the vehicle before returning it on July 26.
On July 25, Atta
dropped Ziad Jarrah off at Miami International Airport
for a flight he had back to Germany.
On July
26, Atta traveled via Continental
Airlines to Newark, New Jersey
and checked into the Kings Inn Hotel in Wayne, New
Jersey
and stayed there until July 30 when he took a
flight from Newark back to Fort Lauderdale.
On August
4, Atta is believed to have been at Orlando
International Airport
waiting to pick up suspected "20th Hijacker"
Mohamed al-Kahtani from Dubai
, who ended
up being held by immigration as "suspicious." This person
(assuming it was Atta) used a payphone at the airport to phone a
number "linked to al-Qaeda" after Kahtani was denied entry..
On August 6, Atta and al-Shehhi rented a 1995 white, four door Ford
Escort from Warrick's Rent-A-Car, which was returned on August 13.
On August 6, Atta booked a flight on Spirit Airlines from Fort
Lauderdale to Newark, leaving on August 7 and returning on August
9. The reservation was not used and canceled on August 9 with the
reason "Family Medical Emergency". Instead, he went to Central
Office & Travel in Pompano Beach to purchase a ticket for a
flight to Newark, leaving on the evening of August 7 and schedule
to return in the evening on August 9. Atta did not take the return
flight. On August 7, Atta checked into the Wayne Inn in Wayne, New
Jersey and checked out on August 9.
The same day, he booked a one-way first
class ticket via the Internet on America West Flight 244 from
Washington
's Ronald
Reagan Washington National Airport
to Las Vegas, Nevada
. Atta traveled twice to Las
Vegas
on "surveillance flights" rehearsing how the 9/11
attacks would be carried out. Other hijackers traveled to
Las Vegas at different times in the summer of 2001.
Throughout the summer , Atta met with
Nawaf al-Hazmi to discuss the status of the
operation on a monthly basis.
On August 23, Atta's driver license was revoked
in absentia after he failed to show up in
traffic court to answer the earlier
citation for driving without a license. On the same day, Israeli
Mossad reportedly gave his name to the
CIA as part of a list of
19 names they said were planning an attack in the near future. Only
four of the names are known for certain - Atta, al-Shehhi,
al-Mihdar and al-Hazmi. On August 30 he was recorded purchasing a
utility knife from a Wal-Mart store near the hotel where he stayed
prior to 9/11.
U.S.
investigators say that Atta sent a package via FedEx to one Mustafa
Muhammad Ahmad in the United Arab Emirates
on September 4, and it was received four days
later. On the 8th, Atta was also recorded sending Ahmed two
wire payments, first for $2,860, and
then for $5000. Over the next two days,
Waleed al-Shehri and
Marwan al-Shehhi would also both wire Ahmed
several thousand dollars.
Attacks
On
September 10, Atta picked up al-Omari from the Milner Hotel in
Boston,
Massachusetts
, and the two drove their rented Nissan Maxima to a Comfort Inn in Portland, Maine
, on the way they were seen getting gasoline at a
Exxon Gas Station. They arrived at 5:43
p.m. and spent the night in room 232.
While in Portland,
they were seen making two ATM withdrawals, and stopping at Wal-Mart
. FBI also reported that "two middle-eastern
men" were seen in the parking lot of a
Pizza
Hut.
Atta and
Omari arrived early the next morning, at 5:40 a.m., at the Portland
International Jetport
, where they left their rental car in the parking
lot and boarded a 6:00 a.m. Colgan Air
(US Airways Express) BE-1900C
flight to Boston
's Logan
International Airport
. In Portland, Mohamed Atta was selected by
the
Computer
Assisted Passenger Prescreening System (CAPPS), which required
his checked bags to undergo extra screening for explosives but
involved no extra screening at the passenger security
checkpoint.
The
connection between the two flights at Logan
International Airport
was within Terminal B, but the two gates were not
connected within security. One must cross a parking garage
before going through security once again. There are two separate
concourses in Terminal B; the south concourse is mainly used by US
Airways and the north one is mostly used by
American Airlines. It was overlooked that
there would still be security in Boston because of this distinct
detail of the terminal's arrangement. At 6:45 a.m., while at the
Boston airport, Atta took a call from
Marwan al-Shehhi, another hijacker. This
call was apparently to confirm that the attacks were ready to
begin. Atta checked in for
American Airlines Flight 11,
passed through security again, and boarded the flight. Atta was
seated in first class, in seat 8D. At 7:59 a.m., the plane departed
from Boston, carrying 81 passengers.
The hijacking began at 8:14 a.m.—15 minutes after the flight
departed—when beverage service would be starting. At this time, the
pilots stopped responding to air traffic control, and the aircraft
began deviating from the planned route. At 8:18 a.m., flight
attendants
Betty Ong and
Madeline Amy Sweeney began making phone
calls to American Airlines to report what was happening. Ong
provided information about lack of communication with the cockpit,
lack of access to the cockpit, and passenger injuries. At 8:24:38
a.m., a voice believed to be Atta's was heard by air traffic
controllers, saying: "We have some planes. Just stay quiet and you
will be OK. We are returning to the airport. Nobody move,
everything will be OK. If you try to make any moves you'll endanger
yourself and the airplane. Just stay quiet... Nobody move please.
We are returning to the airport. Don't try to make any stupid
moves." The plane's
transponder was
turned off at 8:28 a.m.
At 8:46 a.m., Atta crashed the Boeing 767 into the North Tower of the World Trade
Center
. This was the first aircraft to hit the
towers.
Because the flight from Portland to Boston had been delayed, his
bags did not make it onto Flight 11. Atta's bags were later
recovered in Logan International Airport, and they contained
airline uniforms, flight manuals, and other items. The luggage
included a copy of Atta's will, written in
Arabic, as well as a list of instructions,
also in arabic, such as "make an oath to die and renew your
intentions", "you should feel complete tranquility, because the
time between you and your marriage in heaven is very short", and
"check your weapon before you leave and long before you leave. You
must make your knife sharp and you must not discomfort your animal
during the slaughter".
Martyrdom video
On
October 1, 2006, The Sunday
Times released a video it had obtained showing Mohamed
Atta and Ziad Jarrah at a training camp
in Afghanistan
. The video is of high quality resolution and
is unedited. However the video is apparently a
martyrdom message from the two
9/11 hijackers that was filmed on
January 18, 2000.
The video also shows Osama bin Laden addressing his followers at
a complex near Kandahar
. Ramzi
Binalshibh is also identified in the video. According to
The Sunday Times, "American and German investigators have
struggled to find evidence of Atta’s whereabouts in January 2000
after he disappeared from Hamburg. The hour-long tape places him in
Afghanistan at a decisive moment in the development of the
conspiracy when he was given operational command. Months later both
he and Jarrah enrolled at flying schools in America."
Mistaken identity
In the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attacks, names of the
hijackers were released. There was some confusion regarding who
Mohamed Atta was, and cases of mistaken identity.
Initially, Mohamed
Atta's identity was confused with that of a native Jordanian
, Mahmoud Mahmoud
Atta, who bombed a bus in 1986 on the Israeli-occupied West Bank
, killing one and severely injuring three.
Mahmoud Atta was 14 years older than Atta.
Mahmoud Atta, a
naturalized U.S. citizen, was subsequently deported from Venezuela
to the United States, extradited to Israel, tried
and sentenced to life in prison. The Israeli Supreme Court
later overturned his extradition and set him free.
After 9/11, there
also were reports stating that Mohamed Atta had attended
International Officers School at Maxwell Air Force Base
in Montgomery, Alabama
. The
Washington Post quoted an
United States Air Force official who
explained, "discrepancies in their biographical data, such as birth
dates 20 years off, indicate we are probably not talking about the
same people."
There
were numerous reports in the media of Atta and al-Shehhi going to
Shuckum's Oyster Pub and Seafood
Grill, a sports bar in
Hollywood,
Florida
, on September 8, 2001. Atta, al-Shehhi, and
a third unidentified man reportedly drank heavily and played the
Golden Tee '97 arcade game there. The bartender said "Atta
drank vodka and orange juice, while Al-Shehhi preferred rum and
cokes, five drinks apiece. They were wasted [visibly intoxicated]."
Manager Tony Amos described, "The guy Mohamed was drunk, his voice
was slurred and he had a thick accent." Bartender Patricia Idrissi
said the men argued over the bill, and when she asked if there was
a problem, "Mohamed said he worked for American Airlines and he
could pay his bill." Atta said, "I have plenty of money. I'm a
pilot." And he hauled a wad of $50 and $100 bills from his pocket,
eventually leaving a $3 tip. However, Atta flew on
US Airways Flight 2719 to Baltimore on September
7 from Fort Lauderdale.
On September 8, Atta was in Laurel,
Maryland
, where he went to a Safeway grocery store to wire $2850 to Mustafa Muhammad Ahmad in Dubai
, and sent
another $5000 to Ahmed from a Giant
Food store in Laurel on the same day. On September 9,
Atta flew on to Boston.
Prague controversy
In the
months following the September 11th attacks, officials at the Czech
Interior Ministry asserted that Atta made a trip to Prague
on April 8,
2001 to meet with an Iraqi
intelligence agent named Ahmed Khalil Ibrahim Samir al-Ani.
This
piece of information was passed on to the FBI
as "unevaluated raw intelligence"..
Intelligence officials have concluded that such a meeting did not
occur. A Pakistani businessman named Mohammed had come to Prague
from Saudi Arabia on May 31, 2000, with this second Atta possibly
contributing to confusion. The Egyptian Mohamed Atta came arrived
at the Florenc bus terminal in Prague, from Germany, on June 2,
2000.
He
left Prague the next day, flying on Czech
Airlines to Newark, New Jersey
. In the Czech Republic
, some intelligence officials say the source of the
purported meeting was an Arab informant who approached the Czech
intelligence service with his sighting of Atta only after Atta's
photograph had appeared in newspapers all over the world.
U.S. and Czech intelligence officials have since concluded that the
person seen with al-Ani, was mistakenly identified as Atta, and the
consensus of investigators has concluded that Atta never attended a
meeting in Prague.
Able Danger
In 2005, Army Lt.
Col. Anthony Shaffer and
Congressman Curt Weldon alleged that the
Defense Department data mining project Able
Danger produced a chart that identified Atta, along with
Nawaf al-Hazmi, Khalid al-Mihdhar, and Marwan al-Shehhi, as members of a Brooklyn
-based al-Qaeda cell in
early 2000. Shaffer largely based his allegations on the
recollections of Navy Captain Scott Phillpott, who later recanted
his recollection, telling investigators that he was "convinced that
Atta was not on the chart that we had." Phillpott said that Shaffer
was "relying on my recollection 100 percent," and the Defense
Department Inspector General's report indicated that Philpott "may
have exaggerated knowing Atta's identity because he supported using
Able Danger's techniques to fight terrorism."
Family reaction
Atta's
father, Mohamed el-Amir Awad el-Sayed Atta, a retired lawyer in
Egypt
rejected allegations his son was involved in the
September 11 attacks and instead accuses Mossad of having a hand in framing his son.
Atta Sr. rejected media reports his son was drinking wildly, and
instead described his son as a quiet boy uninvolved in politics,
shy and devoted to studying architecture. The elder Mr. Atta also
claims to have spoken with Mohamed by phone two days after the air
crashes of the September 11th. He held interviews with the German
news magazine
Bild am Sonntag in late 2002 claiming his
son is alive, and in hiding. Critics have suggested Mr. Atta
fabricated his claims of speaking with his son after September 11,
2001 and saying his son is alive, in denial of his son's role in
the 9/11 attacks.
Notes
References
- Four Corners, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, broadcast
November 12, 2001
- The 9/11 Commission Report, (W.W. Norton &
Company) ISBN 0-393-32671-3
- "Inside 9/11" on The History Channel
External links