Alleged Hijackers May Have Trained at U.S. Bases
The Pentagon has turned over military records on five men to the FBI

By George Wehrfritz, Catharine Skipp and John Barry
NEWSWEEK
            Sept. 15 ‹  U.S. military sources have given the FBI information
that suggests five of the alleged hijackers of the planes that were used in
Tuesday¹s terror attacks received training at secure U.S. military
installations in the 1990s.     

        THREE OF THE alleged hijackers listed their address on drivers
licenses and car registrations as the Naval Air Station in Pensacola,
Fla.‹known as the ³Cradle of U.S. Navy Aviation,² according to a
high-ranking U.S. Navy source.
        Another of the alleged hijackers may have been trained in strategy
and tactics at the Air War College in Montgomery, Ala., said another
high-ranking Pentagon official. The fifth man may have received language
instruction at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Tex. Both were former
Saudi Air Force pilots who had come to the United States, according to the
Pentagon source.
        But there are slight discrepancies between the military training
records and the official FBI list of suspected hijackers‹either in the
spellings of their names or with their birthdates. One military source said
it is possible that the hijackers may have stolen the identities of the
foreign nationals who studied at the U.S. installations.
 

€    MSNBC coverage
€    MSNBC: photos, video         The five men were on a list of 19 people
identified as hijackers by the FBI on Friday. The three foreign nationals
training in Pensacola appear to be Saeed Alghamdi and Ahmad Alnami, who were
among the four men who allegedly commandeered United Airlines Flight 93.
That flight crashed into rural Pennsylvania. The third man who may have
trained in Pensacola, Ahmed Alghamdi, allegedly helped highjack United
Airlines Flight 75, which hit the south tower of the World Trade Center.
        Military records show that the three used as their address 10
Radford Boulevard, a base roadway on which residences for foreign-military
flight trainees are located. In March 1997, Saeed Alghamdi listed the
address to register a 1998 Oldsmobile; five months later he used it again to
register a second vehicle, a late model Buick. Drivers licenses thought to
have been issued to the other two suspects in 1996 and 1998 list the
barracks as their residences.
        NEWSWEEK visited the base early Saturday morning, where military
police confirmed that the address housed foreign military flight trainees
but denied access past front barricades. Officials at the base confirmed
that the FBI is investigating the three students.
    
            It is not unusual for foreign nationals to train at U.S.
military facilities. A former Navy pilot told NEWSWEEK that during his years
on the base, ³we always, always, always trained other countries¹ pilots.
When I was there two decades ago, it was Iranians. The shah was in power.
Whoever the country du jour is, that¹s whose pilots we train.²
        Candidates begin with ³an officer¹s equivalent of boot camp,² he
said. ³Then they would put them through flight training.² The U.S. has a
long-standing agreement with Saudi Arabia‹a key ally in the 1990-91 gulf
war‹to train pilots for its National Guard. Candidates are trained in air
combat on several Army and Navy bases. Training is paid for by Saudi Arabia. 



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