Description
The Wall Before the Fire: Ali Soufan, the CIA–FBI Divide, and the Intelligence Failures That Enabled 9/11 is a rigorous nonfiction investigation into one of the most critical intelligence breakdowns in modern history. Centered on the real-world field experience of FBI Special Agent Ali Soufan, this book reconstructs the documented failures that prevented key intelligence from being shared before the September 11 attacks.
Drawing exclusively from verified public records, including the 9/11 Commission Report, Joint Inquiry findings, and declassified CIA and FBI materials, the book reveals how two known al-Qaeda operatives—Nawaf al-Hazmi and Khalid al-Mihdhar—were identified by intelligence agencies long before 9/11, yet were not tracked or stopped after entering the United States.
At the core of this investigation is the pre-9/11 “Wall” between intelligence and law enforcement, a structural barrier that limited information sharing between the CIA and FBI. Through a detailed, chronological analysis, the book exposes how missed signals, delayed communication, and institutional constraints allowed a preventable threat to evolve into a national tragedy.
This is not speculation. It is a reconstruction of documented events—what was known, when it was known, and why it did not move.
Key Topics Covered
- The 1998 U.S. Embassy bombings and early al-Qaeda signals
- The January 2000 Malaysia summit and CIA surveillance
- The entry of Hazmi and Mihdhar into the United States
- The USS Cole bombing and Soufan’s field investigation
- The legal and institutional “Wall” between CIA and FBI
- The August 2001 intelligence breakdown
- The final search for the hijackers before 9/11
- The attacks of September 11, 2001
- The 9/11 Commission findings and intelligence failures
- Post-9/11 reforms, including the Patriot Act
Table of Contents
- The Early Signals: East Africa to Yemen (1998–2000)
- The Malaysia Summit: Surveillance Without Transmission
- Entry into the United States: Known but Untracked
- The USS Cole Investigation: Soufan’s Expanding Map
- The Wall in Practice: Legal and Institutional Separation
- The Withheld Cable: August 2001 Breakdown
- The Search That Came Too Late
- September 11, 2001: Convergence of Failures
- The Investigations: Accountability and Findings
- After the Wall: Structural Reform and Legacy
Appendix: Continuing the Record
Number of Pages
Approx. 61 pages
Who This Book Is For
- Readers interested in 9/11 history and intelligence failures
- Professionals in national security, law enforcement, or policy
- Anyone seeking a factual, evidence-based account of what went wrong
Why This Book Matters
This book provides a clear, structured explanation of how critical intelligence existed but failed to converge. By focusing on real individuals, exact timelines, and verified events, it delivers a powerful, factual narrative that reveals how systems—not just people—can fail under pressure.



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