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PUBLISHED MONDAY, SEPTEMBER
17, 2001
Pensacola NAS link faces more scrutiny
Senator seeks answers on hijackers ties to Navy base
Larry Wheeler
New Journal Washington Bureau
Scott
Streater
@PensacolaNewsJournal.com
Ginny Graybiel
@PensacolaNewsJournal.com
U.S. Sen. Bob Graham is requesting information on published reports of a
possible Pensacola Naval Air Station tie-in to last week's terrorist
attacks in New York and Washington, D.C.
As many as four of 19 suspected hijackers may have participated during
the 1990s in the base's flight training program for foreign military
trainees, according to reports in The Washington Post and Newsweek
magazine.
In addition, The New York Times reported that one of the four also may
have lived at the Fountains apartment complex near the University of West
Florida, leaving about a year ago.
Graham, D-Miami Lakes, who is chairman of the Senate Intelligence
Committee, was briefed early Sunday on the latest intelligence information,
but there was no mention of suspected hijackers having been enrolled as
pilot trainees in Pensacola, said his spokesman, Paul Anderson.
Since then, Anderson said, Graham has requested more information on the
possible Pensacola tie-in as well as updates on suspected hijackers who may
have been receiving civilian flying lessons at commercial training
academies elsewhere in Florida.
Graham and a number of state lawmakers returned to Florida aboard a
Florida Air National Guard flight Saturday. He could receive the requested
information today, Anderson said.
It's not unusual for foreign nationals to train at Pensacola-area bases.
Pensacola NAS and Whiting Field train many of the more than 6,000
foreign military students who receive flight training each year at U.S.
military institutions.
The students are instructed in everything from warfare specialty
training to air navigation meteorology and land/water survival, according
to the NaPentagon and local military officials refused to comment on the
media reports on Sunday. They referred calls on the subject to the FBI,
which also refused comment.
The news articles caution that there are slight discrepancies between
the FBI list of suspected highjackers and the military training records,
either in the spellings of their names or in their birth dates. They also
raise the possibility that the hijackers stole the identities of military
trainees.
Tracking names
The Newsweek article says U.S. military officials gave the FBI information
suggesting that five of the alleged hijackers received training in the
1990s at secure U.S. military installations.
It says three of them listed their address on driver licenses and car
registrations as 10 Radford Blvd. on Pensacola NAS, a base road on which
residences for foreign- military flight trainees are located.
Those suspects are:
Saeed Alghamdi, believed to have helped hijack United Airlines Flight 93
that crashed in rural Pennsylvania.
Ahmad Alnami, who also was aboard Flight 93.
Ahmed Alghamdi, who is suspected of helping commandeer United Airlines
Flight 75, which hit the south tower of the World Trade Center.
Saeed Alghamdi listed the address in March 1997 to register a 1998
Oldsmobile; five months later, he used the same address to register a
late-model Buick.
The other two used the address on driver licenses issued in 1996 and
1998.
The Newsweek article cites two other suspects with possible U.S.
military training: One may have been trained in strategy and tactics at the
Air War College in Montgomery, Ala., and one may have received language
training at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio.
A Washington Post article adds a fourth suspect who may have trained in
Pensacola:
Hamza Alghamdi, who also is believed to have been aboard Flight 75.
A New York Times article, using an alternative spelling, says that Ahmed
A. al-Ghamdi lived in the Fountains near UWF. The article says he moved out
about August 2000 and does not specify how long he may have lived there.
The Fountains, off University Parkway, caters to UWF students and also
has a number of military personnel, according to several residents. The
apartment manager could not be reached on Sunday.
The FBI's official list of suspected hijackers gives the most recent
addresses of the four with possible Pensacola links as possibly Delray
Beach.
Complicating the effort to learn if the suspects ever trained in
Pensacola is the fact that Alghamdi is an extremely common name. Scores of
people with that name live throughout Florida.
Foreign trainees
Naval Education and Training Security Assistance Field Activity, which
administers training of foreign aviation students for the Navy, is
headquartered in Pensacola.
Robert Pemberton, the technical director, declined to comment Sunday.
But the group has estimated that 15 percent of aviation students on any
given day are foreign nationals.
They come from as far away as Egypt, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Norway.
Locally, foreign pilots contribute to the Pensacola-area economy,
spending an estimated $10 million a year in local malls, restaurants and
shops, the Security Assistance group has estimated.
A consulting firm that conducted an international business opportunities
study for the Pensacola Area Chamber of Commerce four years ago said the
local economy would receive a boost by increasing the number of foreign
flight and aircraft maintenance students training at area bases.
News Journal reporter Amie Streater contributed to this story.
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