Two Weeks in Karachi
The course in Karachi apparently lasted about one or two weeks. According to
KSM, he taught the three operatives basic English words and phrases. He showed
them how to read phone books, interpret airline timetables, use the Internet,
use code words in communications, make travel reservations, and rent an
apartment. Khallad adds that the training involved using flight simulator
computer games, viewing movies that featured hijackings, and reading flight
schedules to determine which flights would be in the air at the same time in
different parts of the world. They used the game software to increase their
familiarity with aircraft models and functions, and to highlight gaps in cabin
security. While in Karachi, they also discussed how to case flights in Southeast
Asia. KSM told them to watch the cabin doors at takeoff and landing, to observe
whether the captain went to the lavatory during the flight, and to note whether
the flight attendants brought food into the cockpit. KSM, Khallad, and Hazmi
also visited travel agencies to learn the visa requirements for Asian countries.54
The four trainees traveled to Kuala Lumpur: Khallad, Abu Bara, and Hazmi came
from Karachi; Mihdhar traveled from Yemen. As discussed in chapter 6, U.S.
intelligence would analyze communications associated with Mihdhar, whom they
identified during this travel, and Hazmi, whom they could have identified but
did not.55
According to KSM, the four operatives were aware that they had volunteered
for a suicide operation, either in the United States or in Asia. With different
roles, they had different tasks. Hazmi and Mihdhar were sent to Kuala Lumpur
before proceeding to their final destination-the United States. According to KSM,
they were to use Yemeni documents to fly to Malaysia, then proceed to the United
States using their Saudi passports to conceal their prior travels to and from
Pakistan. KSM had doctored Hazmi's Saudi passport so it would appear as if Hazmi
had traveled to Kuala Lumpur from Saudi Arabia via Dubai. Khallad and Abu Bara
went to Kuala Lumpur to study airport security and conduct casing flights.
According to Khallad, he and Abu Bara departed for Malaysia in mid-December
1999. Hazmi joined them about ten days later after briefly returning to
Afghanistan to attend to some passport issues.56
Khallad had originally scheduled his trip in order to receive a new
prosthesis at a Kuala Lumpur clinic called Endolite, and Bin Ladin suggested
that he use the opportunity to case flights as well. According to Khallad,
Malaysia was an ideal destination because its government did not require
citizens of Saudi Arabia or other Gulf states to have a visa. Malaysian security
was reputed to be lax when it came to Islamist jihadists. Also, other mujahideen
wounded in combat had reportedly received treatment at the Endolite clinic and
successfully concealed the origins of their injuries. Khallad said he got the
money for the prosthesis from his father, Bin Ladin, and another al Qaeda
colleague.57
According to Khallad, when he and Abu Bara arrived in Kuala Lumpur they
contacted Hambali to let him know where they were staying, since he was to be
kept informed of al Qaeda activities in Southeast Asia. Hambali picked up
Khallad and Abu Bara and brought them to his home, enlisting the help of a
colleague who spoke better Arabic. Hambali then took them to the clinic.58
On December 31, Khallad flew from Kuala Lumpur to Bangkok; the next day, he
flew to Hong Kong aboard a U.S. airliner. He flew in first class, which he
realized was a mistake because this seating assignment on that flight did not
afford him a view of the cockpit. He claims to have done what he could to case
the flight, testing security by carrying a box cutter in his toiletries kit onto
the flight to Hong Kong. Khallad returned to Bangkok the following day. At the
airport, the security officials searched his carry-on bag and even opened the
toiletries kit, but just glanced at the contents and let him pass. On this
flight, Khallad waited until most of the first-class passengers were dozing,
then got up and removed the kit from his carry-on. None of the flight attendants
took notice.59
After completing his casing mission, Khallad returned to Kuala Lumpur. Hazmi
arrived in Kuala Lumpur soon thereafter and may even have stayed briefly with
Khallad and Abu Bara at Endolite. Mihdhar arrived on January 5, probably one day
after Hazmi. All four operatives stayed at the apartment of Yazid Sufaat, the
Malaysian JI member who made his home available at Hambali's request. According
to Khallad, he and Hazmi spoke about the possibility of hijacking planes and
crashing them or holding passengers as hostages, but only speculatively. Khallad
admits being aware at the time that Hazmi and Mihdhar were involved in an
operation involving planes in the United States but denies knowing details of
the plan.60
While in Kuala Lumpur, Khallad wanted to go to Singapore to meet Nibras and
Fahd al Quso, two of the operatives in Nashiri's ship-bombing operation. An
attempt to execute that plan by attacking the USS The Sullivans had
failed just a few days earlier. Nibras and Quso were bringing Khallad money from
Yemen, but were stopped in Bangkok because they lacked visas to continue on to
Singapore. Also unable to enter Singapore, Khallad moved the meeting to Bangkok.
Hazmi and Mihdhar decided to go there as well, reportedly because they thought
it would enhance their cover as tourists to have passport stamps from a popular
tourist destination such as Thailand. With Hambali's help, the three obtained
tickets for a flight to Bangkok and left Kuala Lumpur together. Abu Bara did not
have a visa permitting him to return to Pakistan, so he traveled to Yemen
instead.61
In Bangkok, Khallad took Hazmi and Mihdhar to one hotel, then went to another
hotel for his meeting on the maritime attack plan. Hazmi and Mihdhar soon moved
to that same hotel, but Khallad insists that the two sets of operatives never
met with each other or anyone else. After conferring with the ship-bombing
operatives, Khallad returned to Karachi and then to Kandahar, where he reported
on his casing mission to Bin Ladin.62
Bin Ladin canceled the East Asia part of the planes operation in the spring
of 2000. He evidently decided it would be too difficult to coordinate this
attack with the operation in the United States. As for Hazmi and Mihdhar, they
had left Bangkok a few days before Khallad and arrived in Los Angeles on January
15, 2000.63
Meanwhile, the next group of al Qaeda operatives destined for the planes
operation had just surfaced in Afghanistan. As Hazmi and Mihdhar were deploying
from Asia to the United States, al Qaeda's leadership was recruiting and
training four Western-educated men who had recently arrived in Kanda-har. Though
they hailed from four different countries-Egypt, the United Arab Emirates,
Lebanon, and Yemen-they had formed a close-knit group as students in Hamburg,
Germany. The new recruits had come to Afghanistan aspiring to wage jihad in
Chechnya. But al Qaeda quickly recognized their potential and enlisted them in
its anti-U.S. jihad.