©September11News.com
Oct. 1: U.S. President George W. Bush says $6 million in assets
are blocked and 50 bank
accounts frozen as countries join the U.S. effort to stop the flow of money to terrorist networks.
The anti-Taliban
alliance in northern Afghanistan and the former Afghan king agree to convene
an emergency council as a first step
toward forming a new government. The Taliban say the
effort will fail. |
North Afghanistan |
Oct. 2: U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld heads to Saudi Arabia, Oman, Egypt and
Uzbekistan to
talk with leaders about war on terrorism. British Prime Minister Tony Blair says
Taliban regime must
surrender the terrorists or "surrender power." Taliban again reject calls to
turn over Osama bin Laden. NATO
secretary-general says United States has provided its 18
NATO allies with "clear and compelling"
evidence of Osama bin Laden's involvement in the
attacks. Fires continue to burn at the World Trade Center site. |
WTC Fires Oct. 2 |
Oct. 3: Rumsfeld arrives in Saudi Arabia for meetings with defense
minister and other leaders.
The anti-Taliban Northern Alliance in Afghanistan says it is coordinating
an offensive with the U.S.
and expects to receive fresh supplies of weapons soon from Iran and Russia.
U.S. administration
officials say some of the terrorists involved in the attacks also took part in the attack on the USS
Cole in Yemen a
year ago and the 1998 U.S. Embassy bombings in Africa. |
Northern Alliance |
Oct. 4: Britain becomes first government to outline alleged evidence
against bin Laden, saying
he spoke of a "major attack on America" before the hijackings. Pakistan
becomes first Muslim
nation to say U.S. evidence links bin Laden to the attacks and is enough to warrant an
indictment.
NATO allies grant United States access to airfields and seaports, agree to deploy
ships and radar planes in war on
terrorism. Anthrax strikes a Florida man who is hospitalized
according to U.S. Secretary of Health and Human
Services Tommy Thompson making the
announcement to reporters at the White House. He said it appears to be
an isolated case and
that sporadic instances of anthrax do occur in nature, it is not contagious, and that
this is not in
any way terrorist-related. Read the entire
text of the Osama bin Laden evidence released by U.K. |
Anthrax Strikes
U.S. |
Oct. 5:
the U.S. Army dispatches 1,000 soldiers to former Soviet republic
of Uzbekistan, which
borders Afghanistan. Colin Powell extends sanctions on bin Laden's al-Qaida group and 24 other
foreign organizations considered terrorist. Armed National Guard patrols begin work at dozens
of U.S. airports. Bob Stevens, a 63-year-old Florida man dies after failing to
respond to
antibiotics for inhalation anthrax. Stevens is the first anthrax death in the
U.S. in 25 years.
Oct. 6: Bush warns Taliban that "time is running out" to
surrender terrorists and close their
operations. Taliban leaders offer to release eight imprisoned foreign aid workers if United
States
halts "massive propaganda campaign" and ensures Afghan people will not be the target of any
attack. White House dismisses offer. Blair and Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee call
for a stable government
in Afghanistan that represents a "broad base of all ethnic groupings." |
First Anthrax Victim
Bob Stevens, Fla. |
Oct. 7: American and British forces unleash missile attacks against
Taliban military targets and
bin Laden's training camps inside Afghanistan. Speaking from White House, Bush says,
"We will
not waver, we will not tire, we will not falter, and we will not fail." Bin Laden, in a videotaped
message, praises God for the Sept. 11 attacks and swears America will never "dream of
security" until "the
infidels' armies leave the land of Muhammad." A spokesman says both bin
Laden and the leader of the Taliban ruling
council survived the missile attacks. The Afghan
opposition also launches an attack. Go to October
7 Archives. Go to bin Laden Oct 7
Broadcast. |
Tomahawk Missile |
Oct. 8: Environmental tests detect the anthrax bacteria at the
American Media building in Boca
Raton, Florida. A co-worker of Bob Stevens who died October 5 from anthrax also tests
positive
for the disease and the building where both worked is closed after the bacterium was detected
there. The
FBI takes over the investigation into the Florida anthrax death after the germ was
found in the nose of a
co-worker and on a computer keyboard in their office. American air
strikes on Taliban positions continue for the
second day. |
Al-Jazeera TV |
Oct. 9: FBI agents wearing bio hazard suits swarm over the American
Media Inc. building in
Boca Raton, Florida. FBI and local law enforcement closed the building which houses the
offices
of several supermarket tabloids. All 300 people who work in the building and anyone who spent
more than an
hour inside since Aug. 1 were advised to visit health officials. American air strikes
on Taliban positions
continue for the third straight day.
Oct. 10: FBI investigators spent their third day collecting evidence in
the newspaper offices of
the two men whose exposure to anthrax has prompted heightened fear of bioterrorism across
America. American forces continue to strike military targets in Afghanistan, but the focus for
Americans is
quickly turning to the anthrax scare.
Oct. 11: A third person employed by American Media tests positive for
anthrax in Florida and
officials say the probe into the source of the disease is now a criminal investigation.
President
George W. Bush speaks at a memorial service at the Pentagon. Bush vowed to destroy
terror
with
'every weapon' in the U.S. arsenal as he marked one month since the Sept. 11
attacks at a
Pentagon speech. Air strikes continue for
the fifth day. View Ground Zero images on
Oct. 11th. |
Anthrax in Florida |
Bush at Pentagon |
Oct. 12: New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani speaks at a news conference and
announces that an
NBC News employee in New York has tested positive for anthrax in tests done after
the network
received suspicious mail addressed to NBC news anchor Tom Brokaw. CNN said the employee
was
exposed to the bacteria after opening a suspicious package at the NBC's Rockefeller Center
headquarters 10
days ago. U.S. President George W. Bush, at the White House celebrating
National Hispanic Heritage Month, speaks
about the anthrax scare sweeping the nation. In the
latest of threats upon the U.S., Bush tries to reassure
Americans that they are safe. U.S.
Attorney General John Ashcroft holds a news conference at the Department of
Health and
Human Services in Washington to discuss anthrax threats. Ashcroft said that people should be
cautious
when opening suspicious items they receive in the mail. American forces continue
bombing strategic Taliban
positions in Afghanistan.
Oct. 13: Afghanistan assesses the damage after a seventh straight night
of U.S. bombing raids,
as the ruling Taliban defiantly snub U.S. demands to surrender Osama bin Laden. In a
statement broadcast on Qatar's al-Jazeera television network Al Qaeda spokesman Sulaiman
Bu Ghaith,
warns Americans and Britons, especially Muslims, children and 'all those who oppose
U.S. policy, not to ride
planes or live in high buildings.'
Oct. 14: Jalalabad, long surrounded by militant training camps including
some for bin Laden's
al Qaeda network, sees particularly heavy bombardment since the United States launched its
first strikes one week ago. U.S. warplanes again pounded Afghanistan, beginning a second
week of strikes
against Islamic Taliban rulers and loyalists of Osama bin Laden. |
Anthrax at NBC NY |
Al-Qaeda's Ghaith |
Oct. 15: U.S. Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle talks to reporters on
Capitol Hill after an
envelope containing a suspicious powder, believed to be anthrax was opened in his office.
Daschle staffers exposed to the substance are treated with antibiotics, a Capitol Hill physician
tells a news
conference attended by Daschle and Capitol Hill police. Health and postal officials
said a small amount of anthrax
spores had been found in a Postal Service mail sorting facility in
Boca Raton. Suspicious letters and powder are
reported at Microsoft offices in Reno, Nevada,
and in several countries including Canada, Australia, France, and
Germany. |
Anthrax Int'l Alerts |
Oct. 16: A 7-month-old son of an ABC producer tests positive for anthrax
exposure after
visiting the building three weeks prior. Microsoft's Bill Gates said the software giant
was
boosting security measures after six employees were exposed to a letter that tested positive for
anthrax. In
the United States, the number of people exposed to the potentially deadly germ
rises to at least 12. Secretary
of State Colin Powell and Pakistan President General Pervez
Musharraf meet in Islamabad. Powell arrived in the Muslim
country amid protests by Islamic
groups that back Afghanistan's ruling Taliban and that are furious
Musharraf is backing the
military action in neighboring Afghanistan. The U.S. military, which first dropped bombs,
then
food, on Afghanistan, launches a paper propaganda assault by dropping nearly half a million
leaflets to
convey a message that the United States is not the enemy, the Pentagon said. The
leaflet shows a photo of an Afghan
man shaking hands with a Western soldier. American forces
strike Taliban positions for the ninth straight
day. |
Anthrax at ABC NY |
Oct. 17: Palestinian gunmen assassinate far-right Israeli cabinet
minister Rehavam Zeevi in
revenge for the killing of a militant leader, throwing U.S.-led peace efforts into
turmoil. The
radical Palestinian Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) claimed responsibility for
shooting
Zeevi, a 75-year-old former general who advocated the 'transfer' of Arabs from land
claimed by Jews. Israeli
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said the killing marked a major change in
Israeli-Palestinian relations. "The
situation is different today, and will not again be like it was
yesterday," he said.
Thirty-one staffers at Tom
Daschle's office test positive for anthrax. New York Governor George
Pataki speaks to the media at a news conference in New
York, and says his offices showed the
presence of anthrax in a test and has been closed for further testing and decontamination work.
Germany's Bayer company promises it will be able to deliver 200 million Cipro
tablets in the
next three months. Ciprobay is used to treat anthrax. U.S. President Bush and Vice President
Dick
Cheney meet with Congressional leaders prior to Bush's departure for a trip to the
21-nation gathering of
Asian-Pacific leaders in Shanghai. The trip will take Bush out of the
country for five days. |
Anthrax at Capitol |
U.S. Anthrax Cases |
Oct. 18: Two new cases of the skin form of anthrax are reported - one
involving an assistant to
CBS anchorman Dan Rather and the other a postal worker in New Jersey. That brings to
six the
total number of confirmed cases of anthrax infection. U.S. aircraft rain more bombs from the
skies above
Afghanistan but a Taliban minister said Osama bin Laden and his hardline Islamic
protectors were all alive and
well even as the toll rose. Victory in Afghanistan will require putting
troops on the ground in addition to
bombing terrorist and Taliban targets from the air, Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said at a Pentagon press
conference. |
Anthrax at CBS NY |
Oct. 19: U.S. ground forces battle in Afghanistan, opening a new
phase of the war on terrorism
after nearly two weeks of fierce air strikes, a defense official said. President Bush
meets with
Chinese President Zemin and Asian Pacific leaders in Shanghai. The
anthrax strains surfacing
with terrifying impact in Florida, New York and Washington are all
similar, said Bush officials,
likely indicating a single source. " We
obviously are preparing for more," said homeland
security chief Tom Ridge. A second New Jersey mail carrier is confirmed
to have skin anthrax. |
Bush & Zemin Meet |
Oct. 20: Elite U.S. Rangers launch raids into Afghanistan in the
dark of night. Two U.S. soldiers
are killed when their helicopter crashes in Pakistan near the
Afghanistan border. In China, Bush
says the soldiers "did not die in vain." Later Bush meets with
Russian President Putin and
Chinese President Zemin. Anthrax is confirmed
at the Ford building on Capitol Hill. The FBI
locates the mailbox in New Jersey where
anthrax letters dropped. Paul McCartney and dozens
of stars perform at a benefit concert
in New York City. Israeli tanks move into Palestinian cities. |
U.S. in Afghanistan |
Oct. 21: The 21-member APEC countries, meeting in Shanghai China,
end their conference and
issue a joint statement denouncing terrorism. Israeli tanks enter
several Palestinian cities in the
West Bank in response to the assassination of cabinet minister Zeevi.
Israel insists that Arafat
hand over the killers. Several Palestinians are killed in street battles
with Israeli troops. Mayor
Anthony Williams of Washington announces at a press conference that two
postal workers at the
Brentwood postal facility in Washington D.C. are confirmed with anthrax
and are hospitalized.
Tests begin on hundreds of Washington postal workers. |
Bush & Putin Meet |
Oct. 22: Israeli tanks continue to roll into Palestinian controlled
areas and engage in street
battles with Palestinians. President Bush returns to Washington from
China. Bush administration
tells Israel to immediately leave the West Bank as Middle East tensions
build. U.S. Defense
Secretary Rumsfeld scolds the press for troop movement leaks that may
jeopardize lives or
missions. Air strikes in Afghanistan continue with a focus on Taliban
troops in Northern
Afghanistan. Two Washington postal workers die mysteriously. Anthrax is
the suspected cause. |
Israel in Bethlehem |
Oct. 23: Two postal workers from the Brentwood postal facility in
Washington are confirmed to
have died from inhalation anthrax. Many postal employees ask why they
were not treated and
tested earlier, and why Capitol Hill staffers apparently received
priority attention. Another New
Jersey postal worker is confirmed with anthrax. Anthrax is confirmed in
a Washington facility
that sorts White House mail. Later President Bush emphatically tells
reporters, "I don't have
anthrax." The FBI releases photographs of the letters, confirmed to
carry anthrax spores, that
were sent to Tom Daschle, Tom Brokaw, and the Editor of the NY Post.
U.S. Secretary of State
Colin Powell meets Israeli Minister Shimon Peres and asks Israel to
withdraw from Palestinian
controlled areas. Earlier Israel tells US that withdrawal demands are
"out of line." The IRA
promises to disarm "to save the peace process" in Northern
Ireland. |
Tom Daschle
Letter |
Oct. 24: Israel continues to raid Palestinian controlled areas, and
claims to have captured two
of the Zeevi assassins. U.S. Postmaster General John Potter tells
Americans "There are no
guarantees that mail is safe." He also advises Americans to wash
hands after handling mail. An
air strike in Kabul kills 22 Pakistani militants linked to Osama bin
Laden. The U.S. House of
representatives overwhelmingly approves a domestic anti-terrorism bill
giving police new
powers. Pentagon says they are "surprised at how doggedly" the
Taliban are clinging to power. |
USS Carl Vinson |
Oct. 25: Under extreme pressure from the U.S. and other countries,
Israel agrees to begin
withdrawal from occupied Palestinian territory. U.S. Vice President Dick
Cheney said homeland
security is not temporary, and "will become permanent in American
life." Opposition Afghan
leaders indicate frustration that the 19-day bombing campaign has failed
to weaken Taliban
troops. USA Today headline reads: "Rumsfeld: bin Laden may get
away." Defense Secretary
Rumsfeld later clarifies statement and says finding bin Laden "is
like finding a needle in a
haystack." Anthrax at Capitol Hill is described as very high
quality. |
Bethlehem
Attacked |
Oct. 26: U.S. President George W. Bush signs the anti-terrorism bill
into law. Britain announces
that 200 elite commandos were ready for action in the U.S.-led
coalition. A small amount of
anthrax spores are found in a CIA mailroom. The CIA mail goes through
the Brentwood mail
facility. A state department mail handler is hospitalized with
inhalation anthrax, and anthrax is
found at a New York postal facility. Anthrax is confirmed in an off-site
U.S. Supreme Court mail
facility. Taliban officials say that Afghan
opposition figure Abdul Haq was captured after slipping
into Afghanistan and was executed by the
Taliban for treason. |
Terrorism Bill Signing |
Oct. 27: Abdul Haq's execution is confirmed. Taliban officials said
"anyone who assists the U.S.
is liable to be killed." Haq attempted to escape after radioing for
U.S. military assistance.
Between 5,000 and 10,000 Pakistani warriors join a convoy of trucks and
busses heading to the
northern Afghanistan frontier. The Pakistani "jihad brigade"
vowed to fight a holy war against
United States. American warplanes strike Taliban targets with increased
ferocity. Civilian deaths
in Afghanistan continue to mount, with the errant bombing of a village
north of Kabul killing ten.
Israeli troops delay withdrawal from Palestinian areas citing ongoing
battles with gunmen. |
Kabul Bomb Crater |
Oct. 28: For the second straight day civilians are killed in heavy
U.S. air strikes in Kabul.
Gunmen stormed into a Christian church in Behawalpur Pakistan, during
Sunday services, and
sprayed the congregation with gunfire, killing the minister and 15
others. Israeli tanks leave
Bethlehem after Prime Minister Ariel Sharon gave the green light for
withdrawal despite attacks
by Palestinians that killed five people in Israel. A New Jersey
postal worker is diagnosed with
inhalation anthrax. A WTC memorial service, attended by victim's
families, is held in New York
City at "Ground Zero", amidst the still smoldering ruins. |
NYC Ground Zero |
Oct. 29: U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft and FBI Director Robert
Mueller hold a press
conference and tell Americans to be on the alert for a "credible
threat" within the next week
against the United States. U.S. aircraft intensify their strikes around
the strategic northern
Afghanistan city of Mazar-e-Sharif. Taliban Ambassador Abdul Salam Zaeef
tells armed
Pakistani volunteers "we already have plenty of mujahedeen on the
front line." Traces of
anthrax are found in mailrooms of the Supreme Court, the State
Department, and the Health
Department. Two new cases of anthrax are reported in New Jersey,
bringing the number of
confirmed cases to 15. The Skydeck at the Sears Tower in Chicago is
re-opened. |
Mueller & Ashcroft |
Oct. 30: The Federal Aviation Administration imposes flight
restrictions around U.S. nuclear
plants and advises 103 nuclear facilities to fortify security. Alert
warnings issued on Oct. 29 are
based on information from Canadian intelligence officials. British PM
Tony Blair arrives in Syria
to help in Middle East peace efforts. U.S. jets pounded several areas
held by the Taliban. A
huge explosion north of Kabul creates a massive mushroom cloud. The
Pentagon says it has
small amounts of ground troops in Afghanistan to coordinate air strikes
and to open lines of
communication. A Manhattan hospital worker with inhalation anthrax is
"struggling for survival." |
Blast Near Kabul |
Oct. 31: The French newspaper Le Figaro claims that Osama bin Laden
stayed for 10 days in a
Dubai hospital in July, 2001 for treatment of a serious kidney ailment.
Under heavy security,
two armored vehicles transported $200 million in gold from a Bank of
Nova Scotia vault located
in the ruins of the World Trade Center. Taliban forces in northern
Afghanistan are hit with heavy
bombardment from B-52 bombers, indicating possible preparedness for
Northern Alliance troop
movements on Taliban positions. A NY hospital worker dies from inhaled
anthrax, becoming the
first anthrax death not linked to the postal service or the news media. |
FA18 - Full Moon |