NORAD falsehoods John Farmer Jr., senior counsel to the 9/11 Commission, stated that the 9/11 Commission, "discovered that... what government and military officials had told Congress, the Commission, the media, and the public about who knew what when— was almost entirely, and inexplicably, untrue." Farmer said, "At some level of the government, at some point in time, a decision was made not to tell the truth about the national response to the attacks on the morning of 9/11... The
[NORAD] tapes told a radically different story from what had been told to us and the public."
Thomas Kean, the head of the 9/11 Commission, concurred, saying, "We to this day don't know why NORAD told us what they told us, it was just so far from the truth."
CIA withheld information Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) director
George Tenet misled the commission and was "obviously not forthcoming" in his testimony to the commission, according to commission chair
Thomas Kean. An
FBI agent named Doug Miller had been working inside
Bin Laden Issue Station, a unit of the CIA dedicated to tracking the activities of
Osama bin Laden and his associates. By the spring of 2000, the Bin Laden Issue Station learned that
Khalid al-Mihdhar, a
Saudi national who was an
al-Qaeda member, and
Nawaf al-Hazmi, another Saudi who at that time was a suspected al-Qaeda operative, had entered the U.S. and were living under their own names in
Southern California. Miller wanted to inform the FBI of their entry and presence in the U.S., but the CIA blocked Miller's efforts to do so. Miller's contemporaneous draft cable to the FBI reporting on this, which the CIA prevented Miller from sending at the time, was found much later. Al-Mihdhar and al-Hazmi were both hijackers of
American Airlines Flight 77. The CIA then failed to reveal to the commission that over a year before the attack, it had been tracking the two hijackers' entry into and whereabouts inside the United States. Co-chair Kean believes the CIA's failure to be forthcoming with this information to the commission was deliberate, not a mistake, saying: "Oh, it wasn't careless oversight. It was purposeful. No question about that in my mind... In the DNA of these organizations was secrecy." ==Criticism==