Spies on the square
2005-11-25
Edward Jay Epstein, who wrote an exposé on Hollywood, is
working on a book about the 9/11 Commission. For more than
two years he's been looking into the alleged meeting in Prague
between 9/11 hijacker Mohamed Atta and an Iraqi intelligence
officer. Epstein has suggested repeatedly that there's more to
the story than the CIA and FBI are telling. He criticized the New
York Times this week for claiming that the Atta Prague
connection was based on nothing more than a false tale from an
"unreliable drunk." Pity Epstein didn't explore the possibility that
the NYT meant Miloš Zeman. Epstein mentioned in passing that
U.S. countersurveillance began photographing "suspicious"
people on Wenceslas Square because of a threat to Radio Free
Europe. The U.S. might or might not be able to pick spies or
bombers out of the crowd, but it must have a better database
now of Prague pimps, hussies, dealers and cabbies than even
city hall.
[Czech Republic Wall Street Journal Mohammed Atta prostitution
Sept. 11, 2001 The Big Picture]
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