Czechs quiet on Atta
The bipartisan U.S. commission investigating the Sept.
11 terrorist attacks came to the conclusion that the so-
called Czech meeting between terrorist Mohamed Atta
and a senior Iraqi intelligence officer in Prague in April
2001 never took place. The commission found
"unshakeable" evidence that Atta was in Florida at the
time. The Iraqi official has since been taken into
custody. The Czech side, and esp. Interior Minister
Stanislav Gross, claimed repeatedly that the meeting
occurred. With the issuance of the commission's interim
report last week, the credibility of the Czech
government and its intelligence services was seriously
called into question. The commission's findings have
been examined from all angles in the international
media. In the CR, though, it's a non-story. The Czech
government is making no effort to explain itself or to
defend its reputation. Mohammed Muhammad
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