[iwar] [fc:Link.Now.Seen.In.Anthrax.And.Hijackings]

From: Fred Cohen (fc@all.net)
Date: 2001-10-19 07:14:08


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Subject: [iwar] [fc:Link.Now.Seen.In.Anthrax.And.Hijackings]
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New York Times
October 19, 2001
Link Now Seen In Anthrax And Hijackings
By David Johnston with William J. Broad
WASHINGTON, Oct. 18 - Investigators pursuing the anthrax exposure cases in
New York, Washington and Florida say they suspect that the rash of
contaminated letters is related to the Sept. 11 attacks and are
investigating the possibility that Al Qaeda confederates of the hijackers
are behind the incidents.
Law enforcement and intelligence officials said they lacked concrete
evidence or intelligence to explain who sent the anthrax-contaminated
letters to news organizations in New York and to the Senate majority leader,
Tom Daschle, in Washington, and whether they all contained the same type of
anthrax.
The letter sent to Senator Daschle and another to NBC were postmarked from
Trenton, and officials have said the letters were written by the same
person. Several hijackers lived in New Jersey before taking over the United
Airlines flight from Newark that slammed into a field in rural Pennsylvania.
Federal investigators said last night that they believed that the letter
sent to Tom Brokaw was mailed from West Trenton, a neighborhood in the
Trenton suburb of Ewing, and they have narrowed their search for the
specific mailbox to a one-square- mile section of that neighborhood.
A letter carrier who officials said yesterday was infected with anthrax was
assigned to deliver and collect mail on a route in West Trenton that covered
250 to 500 homes and businesses, and it is that route that investigators now
believe was the source of the letter. That belief was deepened because the
bar coding on the letter to Mr. Brokaw showed that the letter was taken to
the main post office at a time that matched the carrier's shift.
Last night, investigators were testing for anthrax at several mail
collection spots in the neighborhood.
Senior government officials said investigators were focusing on the ability
of the hijackers or their accomplices to obtain highly refined anthrax from
a foreign or domestic supplier. While they have not ruled out the
possibility that another criminal could be behind the anthrax attacks,
investigators are looking intensely at evidentiary threads linking the
letters to the hijackers.
Investigators are focusing on Mohamed Atta, a hijacking ringleader, who was
interested in crop-dusting aircraft and once lived near the offices in Boca
Raton, Fla., of American Media Inc., where the first victims worked.
Crop-dusting airplanes could be used to spread anthrax or other toxins.
Today, F.B.I. agents also searched the Jersey City home of three men who
have been in custody since last month because of a possible connection to
the hijackings, after learning that they kept an assortment of magazines and
news articles about biological warfare in their apartment. Investigators may
have overlooked them in an earlier search.
Two of the men who lived there, Ayub Ali Khan and Mohammed Azmath, boarded a
flight from Newark Airport to San Antonio the morning of Sept. 11, but the
plane was forced to land in St. Louis after hijackings of four other flights
forced all air traffic in the country to a halt. They were arrested the next
day on an Amtrak train in Texas, carrying $5,000 in cash and box-cutting
knives similar to those used by the terrorists who hijacked the four
flights.
Federal scientists examining the anthrax used in the Florida and New York
attacks have tentatively concluded that the type is a domestic strain
similar to a highly virulent type known as the Ames strain, which was
discovered in Iowa in 1980. Reputedly, it is even more dangerous than the
anthrax the American military used for anthrax weapons before President
Richard M. Nixon renounced them in 1969. The Ames strain is now used in labs
around the world.
In Boca Raton, investigators have not determined how anthrax was delivered
to the building occupied by American Media, a tabloid newspaper publisher.
But some hijackers lived nearby in the months before the attacks, among them
Mr. Atta.
An additional line of inquiry undercuts a competing theory, that a
disgruntled employee of a domestic laboratory that uses anthrax carried out
the attacks. F.B.I. agents checked every American laboratory that uses
anthrax and found that none were missing inventory. In addition, none
reported suspicious activity.
The investigation has linked F.B.I. agents and scientists in a race to find
who sent the letters. Federal scientists examining the anthrax used in the
Florida and New York attacks have tentatively concluded that it is a
domestic strain that bears no resemblance to the strains Russia and Iraq
turned into biological weapons.
The scientists said the emerging evidence decreased the likelihood that
those countries were connected to the anthrax letters. But they emphasized
that the clues in no way ruled out foreign sponsorship because the
identified strain was available overseas.
They said it was conceivable that a foreign government or terrorist
organization deliberately chose a domestic strain to throw off federal
investigators. The clues are merely suggestive, they said.
"There's no indication that it came from the Russian or Iraqi programs, but
you can't rule that out," said a federal scientist familiar with the
investigation.
Complicating things, all Ames strains, the type of anthrax scientists
believe was used in the NBC letter, are not identical because random
mutations in the genetic codes of anthrax bacteria can cause individual
cultures to become increasingly different in character from their original
seed stock.
Even so, federal and private experts said that, to the best of their
knowledge, Baghdad was unable to obtain the Ames strain.
"The Iraqis tried to get it but didn't succeed," Richard Spertzel, a
microbiologist and former head of biological inspection teams in Iraq for
the United Nations, said in an interview. "It's a nasty bug."
A federal scientist familiar with the investigation agreed but said the
emerging evidence, including detailed genetic analyses of the strains to
tease out even deeper clues, was helping narrow the possibilities of who
launched the anthrax attacks.
One senior government official said that some investigators were skeptical
of a connection between Al Qaeda and the anthrax. The official said the
evidence amassed so far, like records of credit card transactions, e-mail
messages or cellphone calls, did not tie the hijackers to any activity
clearly related to anthrax.

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