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<text id=93TT1115>
<link 93TO0128>
<title>
Mar. 08, 1993: Tower Terror
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Mar. 08, 1993 The Search for the Tower Bomber
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER STORY, Page 24
Tower Terror
</hdr>
<body>
<p>A murderous explosion in the heart of New York City raises the
specter of terrorism in America and sets off a feverish hunt
for the bomber
</p>
<p>By RICHARD LACAYO--With reporting by Edward Barnes, Sophfronia Scott Gregory/New York
and Michael Duffy, Jay Peterzell/Washington
</p>
<p> Americans were not accustomed to what so much of the world had
already grown weary of: the sudden, deafening explosion of a
car bomb, a hail of glass and debris, the screams of innocent
victims followed by the wailing sirens of ambulances. Terrorism
seemed like something that happened somewhere else--and somewhere
else a safe distance over the horizon.
</p>
<p> And then last week, in an instant, the World Trade Center in
New York City became ground zero.
</p>
<p> At 12:18 on a snowy Friday afternoon, a massive explosion rocked
the foundation of the Twin Towers of the Trade Center in lower
Manhattan--the second tallest buildings in the world and a
magnet for 100,000 workers and visitors each day. The bomb was
positioned to wreak maximum damage to the infrastructure of
the building and the commuter networks below. And the landmark
target near Wall Street seemed chosen with a fine sense for
the symbols of the late 20th century. If the explosion, which
killed five people and injured more than 1,000, turns out to
be the work of terrorists, it will be a sharp reminder that
the world is still a dangerous place. And that the dangers can
come home.
</p>
<p> Against that threat, the relevant intelligence agencies mobilized
quickly. The news from New York sent the FBI and other federal
agencies to Code Red, their highest state of readiness. The
FBI activated its Joint Terrorist Task Force, and the CIA turned
up the heat at its Counterterrorist Center in Langley, Virginia,
a conglomerate of psychiatrists, explosives experts and hostage
negotiators. Meanwhile, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms,
the agency responsible for investigating the loss and theft
of explosives, mobilized its 13-member National Response Team
held on 24-hour call in the New York area. They were joined
by bureau chemists from headquarters in Rockville, Maryland.
</p>
<p> Until it is firmly concluded that a terrorist was responsible,
the New York City police department is in charge, and it was
the N.Y.P.D. that took the lead in sifting through the 19 telephoned
claims of "credit" that were received in the first 24 hours.
Though none came in before the blast--the earliest followed
it by an hour, well after the first news reports--a few were
intriguing. Many of the calls were made by people claiming to
be affiliated with Balkan groups, including one made by a caller
in Europe who said he represented the Black Hand, a Serbian
extremist organization last active about 10 years ago. According
to terrorism expert Xavier Raufer, Serbian nationalists have
threatened terrorist reprisals against West European countries
for interference in the region.
</p>
<p> There were immediate suspicions that Bill Clinton's decision
last week to air-drop relief supplies over Bosnia--a step
that had seemed like a low-risk humanitarian gesture--might
have been answered in thunder by the Serbs. Still, the Bosnian
hypothesis was by no means the only one. A caller from the West
Coast credited the Iranian Revolutionary Guard; an anonymous
tipster blamed Jewish extremist groups.
</p>
<p> Because of their trouble getting to the "blast seat" in the
dangerously crumbling underground garage, investigators could
not even confirm to their complete satisfaction what had caused
the explosion. But its size and intense heat suggested a bomb,
as did traces of nitrate found at the edges of the blast crater.
Until they could determine otherwise, informed experts assumed
that hundreds of pounds of high explosives had been packed into
a car or van that was left at a four-level underground parking
garage. The garage is situated below the Trade Center plaza
and near a station of the PATH commuter subway line that links
Manhattan and New Jersey.
</p>
<p> The Trade Center is not a surprising target. In the early 1970s
CIA agents compiled a list of potentially vulnerable sites that
they believed might make high-value terrorist strike points.
Near the top of that list, former deputy CIA director Bobby
Inman told TIME, was the World Trade Center. "When the people
responsible for anticipating terrorist attacks began to run
scenarios on this kind of thing, this was one of the places."
Why? "Because of the number of victims who would be involved,"
said Inman. The information raises questions about what kind
of extra precaution the Port Authority might have taken in light
of the building's tantalizing vulnerability.
</p>
<p> The bomb blew out a crater 200 ft. by 100 ft. wide and five
stories deep. Floors collapsed onto one another with an impact
that caused the ceiling of the PATH station nearby to come crashing
down, showering chunks of concrete onto commuters waiting on
the platform. In the same moment, the 110-story Twin Towers
swayed visibly as the force of the blast shuddered upward. Lobby
windows exploded onto the plaza and marble slabs fell from the
walls. As fractured steam pipes launched jets of hot mist into
the air, the first victims stumbled out of the buildings, bloodied
and in shock.
</p>
<p> Fires quickly broke out, launching thick, acrid smoke up hundreds
of stairwells and elevator banks. In both towers the electricity
went out, including emergency backup systems. Even on the highest
floors, workers were stunned by the speed at which smoke flew
upward. David Deshane, 25, was on the 105th floor when he felt
the explosion. "All the computers shut down, then all the phones
shut down," he said. "Then all of a sudden we saw smoke everywhere."
He ran to hit the fire-emergency button. "Nothing happened."
In a panic, some people broke windows to admit air, sending
daggers of glass raining onto the crowds below and creating
a chimney effect that drew smoke upward even more quickly.
</p>
<p> Four of the dead were Port Authority workers, whose offices
and locker rooms were located on the lower levels that sustained
the worst damage. More than 24 hours after the blast, two other
workers were still missing. But the toll was less severe than
first feared. Though some suffered major injuries, most of the
victims were treated for smoke inhalation or minor burns.
</p>
<p> In a meeting late Friday evening, the state and federal agencies
involved in the case hammered out a protocol to govern the inquiry.
The first priority was to stabilize the pillars that hold up
the Vista Hotel on the Trade Center plaza and which were supported
in turn by the garage floors that were ripped away in the blast.
Before investigators can safely enter the blast site, workers
must buttress the dangerous sagging remnants of the garage and
lay a web of tubular steel beams across the crater left by the
bomb. It may be days before investigators can begin to sift
through the tons of debris for clues to the bomber.
</p>
<p> Then the hard work begins. Once they enter the damaged area,
investigators will face the tedious process of finding chemical
traces and fragments of the vehicle to help identify the type
of bomb. Most well-known terrorist groups have their own "signatures"--characteristic explosive compounds, detonators and even device
designs. If investigators find enough clues, "they can detect
who made this particular bomb," says Professor Robert Phillips,
an expert in terrorism at the University of Connecticut. "They're
able to detect even individual bombmakers' ways of doing things,
of placing wires, of placing fuses, how they put the whole thing
together. There aren't lots of people in the world who do this
well." At the top of Phillips' suspect list are Middle Eastern
and Balkan terrorists. Says Phillips: "The car bomb is very
much the signature of these groups."
</p>
<p> According to Inman, the sheer difficulty of constructing bombs
of this nature almost rules out an American-made device. "There
hasn't been a domestic development of the kind of skills that
are needed for this, as there has been in Northern Ireland or
the Middle East," says Inman.
</p>
<p> Outside experts liken the task of identifying the Trade Center
bomb to the inquiry into the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103, in
which debris was scattered for miles. Investigators in that
case drew a life-size diagram of the plane on a warehouse floor,
then set about reconstructing it piece by piece like a jigsaw
puzzle. From that they could determine where in the plane's
body the blast occurred, because "the metal would be bent to
follow the contours of the vectors of the explosion," says Phillips.
</p>
<p> Though the FBI does not yet know whether enough evidence is
left to piece together the car bomb it believes was there, its
experts plan to move large quantities of debris to a secure
location and examine it with microscopic care. They will search
for tiny remnants that don't really belong at the scene--that
are not, say, part of a car's headlights or dashboard. Items
as small as a bit of wire can point to whether a timing device
was used.
</p>
<p> The whole area will also be examined for chemical residue, which
will help in determining what kind of explosive was used. In
car bombings, bits of explosive matter are often found in the
nooks and crannies of what is left of the auto's trunk lid.
Nitrate, traces of which were found in the Trade Center crater,
is the most basic component of most explosive mixtures. The
next step is to find traces of chemicals that may be unique
to a certain compound, like potassium or ammonium, which would
identify the explosive far more precisely.
</p>
<p> Experts will also try to determine the velocity of the shock
waves emanating from the blast. "Different compounds explode
at different speeds," says Brian Jenkins, senior managing director
for Kroll Associates, an international investigating firm. "You
can tell by examining the metal that was torn apart. Was it
a big explosion that moved a lot of things, or was it a high-velocity
explosion that rent metal?" Sophisticated plastic explosives
tend to shred metal and pulverize concrete, while common substances
like dynamite tend to knock walls over and push vehicles around.
Once investigators identify the substance, they will try to
determine whether it was a homemade explosive, one made from
commercially available material or a product of limited availability,
like a military-grade explosive. If the material is common,
the trail may be colder than if it is a closely monitored substance.
</p>
<p> Initial speculation in this case centers upon plastic explosives
like Semtex, the lethal weapon of choice for many terrorists
because it is safe to handle and undetectable by sniffer dogs
or X-ray inspection. A small amount hidden in a portable radio
blew Pan Am Flight 103 out of the sky in 1988. Semtex was produced
in quantity under the communist government of Czechoslovakia;
while the postcommunist Czech Republic has discontinued production,
large quantities remain in the hands of terrorist gangs that
obtained them illicitly. Three years ago, Czechoslovak President
Vaclav Havel estimated that "world terrorism has supplies of
Semtex to last 150 years."
</p>
<p> Until last week, federal agents were confident that terrorist
groups contemplating action on American soil would have considerable
difficulty smuggling in enough high explosives to manufacture
a sizable car bomb. Could they have obtained them in the U.S.?
Although high explosives are widely used in the construction
industry, they are monitored. The FBI maintains close contacts
with manufacturers and dealers, while sales are tightly regulated
by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. Though the Pentagon
possesses its own plastic explosive, a Semtex relative called
C-4, a would-be terrorist would have to steal it from a military
facility--a theft that would probably be detected. Other explosives
might be simpler to accumulate, however, like ammonium nitrate,
an ordinary component of fertilizer that has been a favorite
of the Irish Republican Army.
</p>
<p> Experts speculate that the bomb may have consisted of several
hundred pounds of high explosives. The bomber may have known
that because the device would be detonated in the reinforced
enclosure of a garage, it would deliver more bang for the buck.
An enclosed area can double the "shock wave" value of an explosion.
"When you have a contained explosion, the blast doesn't vent,"
says Phil Hough, president of International Explosives Disposal
(USA). "Effectively the building becomes part of the bomb."
Says Phillips: "The garage was the perfect location because
of both the damage to the upper floors [with smoke] and structural
damage the bomb would cause at the base."
</p>
<p> Once more is known about the methods and materials of the bomber,
federal agencies can compare them with the details of past bombings
that are stored on its computer data base. There is also a massive
job ahead of identifying and interviewing witnesses who may
have seen something in the parking garage or the building. And
the FBI is intensifying surveillance of possible terrorist groups
and foreign agents suspected of involvement in the bombing.
The bureau has also infiltrated potential terrorist groups in
this country, as the CIA has done overseas. Those contacts can
now be used to gather leads. "You're going to have to depend
on informants," says former CIA official David Whipple. "And
you almost always have informants."
</p>
<p> Investigators will look at every possible motive, from Balkan
nationalism to employee dissatisfaction at the Trade Center.
"You can't take just one track, because you come to dead ends
and you've lost time," says an FBI official. "You have to investigate
multiple tracks at the same time." Eventually, with luck, the
pieces start coming together. "Some of it is misinformation,
some of it is disinformation," says Jenkins, "and some small
portion is information. You have to sort all that out. In the
ideal situation, these paths begin to converge. You get a chain
of physical evidence that takes you all the way from the debris
back to the perpetrator."
</p>
<p> Will the perpetrator be carrying a flag? Says former CIA Director
Robert Gates: "It's always been a possibility that, as ethnic
conflicts spread, the losers might try to exact some sort of
price, to attract attention to their cause." But it was by no
means certain last week that the Trade Center bombing was an
act of political terrorism. During the Gulf War, a bomb found
on a chemical storage tank in Virginia instantly raised an alarm.
The culprit turned out to be a businessman who hoped to make
an insurance-fraud fire look like the work of Iraqis.
</p>
<p> Yet even before the answers were in as to who had planted the
bomb, a new question--whether a season of terrorism might
begin in the U.S.--had been raised. In the wake of the explosion,
bomb threats forced the evacuation of the Empire State Building
and Newark airport. Both threats were false, but no one was
ready to dismiss the likelihood of another assault. Around the
country, airports and other public facilities stepped up security.
The blast was a reminder of the vulnerability of most American
office buildings, shopping malls, airports and railway stations.
Even the U.S. government has let its guard down since the mid-1980s,
when American installations were on constant alert and concrete
barriers were set up around many government buildings in Washington.
</p>
<p> "International terrorism in the '80s was fundamentally fueled
by the cold war," says Phillips, "and you can almost date the
diminution of that terrorism with Gorbachev's ascension to power."
But the end of communism has helped ignite the fires of nationalism
in regions like the Balkans, emboldening other fanatical groups
to sow the kind of trouble once created by Soviet and East bloc
terrorists.
</p>
<p> As the only remaining superpower, the U.S. can find itself the
target of resentments of players on all sides who are seeking
American involvement or trying to fend it off. Massive car bombs
have become familiar as political weapons in the Middle East
and Europe. But it would represent a quantum leap in terrorist
capabilities--and brazenness--to assemble one in the U.S.
Middle East terror networks, for one, have never shown themselves
to be capable of that or interested in doing so, preferring
to concentrate their attacks on Westerners in Europe, where
they have found it easier to operate.
</p>
<p> Whoever the bomber was, he made an indelible statement. On top
of the deaths and injuries, the bomb's damage to the heart of
New York City's financial district will bring heavy costs. Repairs
and restoration alone will cost the Port Authority as much as
$100 million, according to one estimate. But the disruption
to business will be even worse, because the Port Authority will
have to close the giant complex for at least several days for
structural and safety work. The towers, which represent about
10% of all the office space in Manhattan's financial district,
are so large that they have two ZIP codes.
</p>
<p> Perhaps the most unsettling possibility is that the hand behind
the blast will never reveal itself and never be discovered by
anyone else. Though two Libyan intelligence agents were indicted
in the downing of Pan Am 103, they have never been brought to
trial, and no nation or group ever came forward to take responsibility.
Just blocks from the World Trade Center, the walls of the Morgan
Guaranty Trust Co. are still scarred from the effects of a bomb
that was hidden in a horse-drawn wagon on Sept. 16, 1920. When
it exploded into a lunchtime crowd, 40 people died and 200 were
injured. The mystery of the blast was never cleared up. The
investigators who have begun scratching through the rubble of
the Trade Center are determined that this flash of terror will
not go unsolved.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>