For most Americans the true origin of the 9/11 attacks remains a mystery. But as the two jetliners hit the Twin Towers, three strangers knew exactly what had happened. FBI agent Nancy Floyd, FDNY fire marshal Ronnie Bucca, and Ramzi Yousef, the bomb-making terrorist an American judge once called "an apostle of evil," had been on a collision course for years-- soldiers on opposing sides of a terror war raging since the late 1980s. Now, in "1000 Years for Revenge -- a groundbreaking investigative work that reads like an international thriller -- award-winning journalist Peter Lance reveals how the FBI missed dozens of opportunities to stop the attacks of September 11, dating back to 1989. Drawing on interviews with scores of central figures in the story, as well as hundreds of pages of declassified documents, Lance uncovers startling evidence of FBI negligence that even a joint congressional committee missed. Among his revelations: From the early 1990s, Osama bin Laden was running an active al Qaeda terror cell in New York City -- with blind sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman as its leader and Ramzi Yousef as its master bomb maker. The FBI had sufficient intelligence to capture Yousef before he built the first World Trade Center bomb in 1993. In 1995, they learned that he had already set the 9/11 suicide-hijacking plot in motion from Manila -- that he was planning "to return to the U.S. to attack the World Trade Center a second time." Yet each time the FBI missed the opportunity to stop him. FBI agent Nancy Floyd used a key informant to penetrate the cell of Sheikh Rahman -- only to have the operation sandbagged by her FBI supervisor. Most alarming, in 1992, a confidant ofSheikh Rahman removed the plans for the World Trade Center from FDNY headquarters. Ronnie Bucca brought the information to the FBI in 1999 but he was ignored.
This is a story of heroes: Nancy Floyd, who tried to bring down the New York terror cell but paid for her efforts with damage to her career, and Ronnie Bucca, who tried to alert the FBI to the security threat to New York City from al Qaeda but paid for the agency's negligence with his life on 9/11. It is also a story of the power of evil: Lance offers a chilling chronicle of how one man -- the elusive mastermind Yousef -- managed to defeat the entire American security system in what Lance calls "the greatest failure of intelligence since the Trojan Horse."
An unparalleled work of investigative reporting and masterful storytelling, "1000 Years for Revenge will change forever the way we look at the FBI and the war on terrorism in the twenty-first century.
Wonderful coffee table book. This over sized book was loan to by a friend after we had a long reminisces of our old Navy days. I really didn't intend to 'read' it, just look through the pictures. But after just reading a few pages, I got hooked. The pictures and illustrations are first rate, but the narrative interesting and informative. It is a combination of the overall history of the Navy sprinkled with stories of individual actions.
One piece of information caught me. Years ago, I read an article about Josephus Daniels, Secretary of the Navy under Woodrow Wilson. Daniels had much to do with modernizing the Navy and bring it into the 20th century. The article mentioned that during the 1890s, the Government wanted to go to war with Chile. But we had to back down when the Navy informed the Government they were unprepared to confront Chile's larger and more modern Navy.
For years I hoped to come across more information, without any luck. This books explained clearly how in 1891, Chile was in the middle of a civil war, and Washington sent the Navy cruiser USS Baltimore to Valparaiso, Chile, to protect American citizens. The civil war finished with the side favored by Washington losing. When the American sailors were given liberty, they went to a local bar, words were exchanged between locals who supported the new government, and American sailors. Push came to shove, and two American sailors were killed and seventeen wounded.
The new Chilean government rejected American protests. President Benjamin Harrison considered asking Congress for a declamation of war against Chile, but in the end, settled for $75,000 in gold.
A must look-at if you're interested in the USN. It's a beast of a book - a true doorstopper full of pictures and a fair amount of text, most of which I have skipped so far.. Why no account of the Battle of Valcour Island??? I did four years in the Navy(1965-69) and saw a fair amount of the world. I think better of that time and the Navy now than I did at the time.