LONDON - A new videotape shows two of the September 11 hijackers smiling for
a camera and reportedly reading a will in footage taken more than 18 months
before they carried out the worst terrorist attack on US soil.
Mohamed Atta and Ziad Jarrah look much different in the tape than they do in
photographs made famous after the attacks in New York and Washington.
September 11, 2001 suicide pilots
identified as Ziad al-Jarrah, left, and Mohamed Atta, appear together
joking about making their will in a video dated January 18, 2000, more
than a year before the 9/11 attacks in the United States. The Sunday Times
said Sunday, Oct. 1, 2006, that the video, which is dated Jan. 18, 2000,
was made in Afghanistan for release after the men's deaths. The newspaper
said it had obtained the video 'through a previously tested channel' but
gave no further details, saying that sources from al-Qaida and the United
States had confirmed the video's authenticity on condition of anonymity.
[AP]
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Both seem younger, are bearded, and the infamously bleak gaze of Atta, the
ringleader of the attacks five years ago, is replaced by a somewhat softer
expression. Osama bin Laden also appears on the tape, speaking to a large group
of people in January 2000.
The Sunday Times, which originally reported on the video and posted it on its
Web site, said the footage was taken in Afghanistan and was meant to be released
after the men's deaths.
The soundless video appears to be a departure from previous releases by
al-Qaida, which is "normally, very professional in their media," said Paul
Beaver, an independent defense and security expert.
It did not appear on Web sites commonly used by the group. The newspaper
quoted an unidentified American source who said that lip readers had been unable
to decipher what the men were saying.
The Sunday Times said it had obtained the video "through a previously tested
channel" but gave no further details. It said sources from al-Qaida and the
United States had confirmed the video's authenticity on condition of anonymity.
A U.S. intelligence official, who declined to be identified, citing
government protocol, told The Associated Press, "We're aware of the tape and
we're reviewing it." The official declined to answer further questions.
The newspaper said the hourlong video was made at an al-Qaida training camp
in Afghanistan, is dated Jan. 18, 2000, and contains the only known footage of
Atta and Jarrah together.
Ben Venzke, head of the Virginia-based IntelCenter, which monitors terrorism
communications, said the video was probably raw footage that al-Qaida had
intended to edit into a package similar to one released last month showing the
last testament of two of the Sept. 11 hijackers, Wail al-Shehri and Hamza
al-Ghamdi.
For more than 30 minutes, the video shows Atta, who flew one of the planes
that brought down the World Trade Center, and Jarrah, who piloted United
Airlines flight 93, which crashed into a Pennsylvania field, sitting in front of
a white wall, alternately alone and together.
The Egyptian-born Atta is wearing a dark sweater and pats his hair into place
after trying on a hat for the camera. At one point, the camera pans out to show
a machine gun leaning against the wall next to him.
Atta appears to be the more reticent of the two hijackers. During a portion
of the tape showing them together, the Lebanese-born Jarrah laughs and smiles
broadly as Atta shakes his head slightly. The conversation then seems to turn
serious, and the tape shows the two sitting on the floor, hunched over papers,
which The Sunday Times reported was Jarrah's will.
Bin Laden said a few years ago that he was saving Atta's last testament to
release for a special occasion, Venzke said.
"It is highly unlikely that al-Qaida wanted the material to be released in
this manner, and it is not consistent with any previous release," he said.
Diaa Rashwan, an Egyptian expert on militant groups, said he found it strange
that the cameraman focused not only on bin Laden but also on his audience. He
said normally al-Qaida videos of bin Laden just focus on him.
"Was this a video by al-Qaida or by a security agency?" Rashwan asked. "I
have never seen such a video."
Although the video has no sound, it could contain valuable information,
Beaver said.
"It helps build up a profile, so you can ID people in the future," he said.
But Robert Ayers, an international security expert, said the tape was more
curiosity than valuable resource.
"The fact that these guys changed their facial appearance? Any actor on any
stage in the world knows how to change their appearance, so why are we so
surprised these guys changed their appearance?" Ayers said.
Previous mug shots released of the two men show them clean-shaven and with
closely cropped hair.
The video also includes images of a man who appears to be bin Laden speaking
to an audience outdoors. A time stamp indicated that footage was shot on Jan. 8,
2000, and The Sunday Times said it appeared to have been made at Tarnak Farm,
once the base for bin Laden's family in the Afghan desert near Kandahar's
airport.
It shows about 75 men, many in turbans or caps, sitting on the ground as bin
Laden arrives to address them. A few children are in the crowd. The man who
appears to be bin Laden stands in front of an expanse of bare dirt dotted with a
few trees and windowless, one-story mud-colored buildings, some of them partly
in ruins.
He appears calm, with a long beard and a tan cloak over a white robe that
covers his head. He speaks for more than 10 minutes, although the camera
frequently cuts away from him and onto the audience.
The Sunday Times said those shown listening to bin Laden included Ramzi
Binalshibh, who allegedly helped plan the Sept. 11 attacks and is now being held
in the US prison camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Also reportedly present was Nasir Ahmad Nasir al Bahri, a security guard who
The Sunday Times said has claimed he was authorized to shoot bin Laden in the
head if the leader was in danger of being captured.