Template:September 11, 2001: FAA’s ‘Heighted State of Alert’

September 11, 2001: FAA’s ‘Heighted State of Alert’ Only Reported in Canadian Newspaper
On the morning of September 11, 2001, just hours before the 9/11 attacks begin, the Globe and Mail, reports a front page story entitled “Air-Travel Ban Keeps Rushdie Out of Canada.” The story notes that author Salman Rushdie was not allowed on an  flight into Canada on September 7, 2001, and he canceled a planned Canadian trip as a result.

The article notes that on September 6, the FAA “issued an emergency directive banning Mr. Rushdie from all flights in and out of the United States, reflecting a heightened state of alert”. Rushdie is also having trouble flying inside the US because of the restrictions and one US flight he had recently scheduled had been canceled.

The article says the FAA will not explain why the directive about Rushdie had been issued. But the Daily Mail will later report that the CIA gave the FAA warning of a spectacular and imminent Muslim fundamentalist attack and the FAA incorrectly guessed this had to do with Rushdie traveling on a book tour

Rushdie had been the subject of an Iranian until it was lifted in 1998. He was in Houston, Texas, for a book reading as part of a North American book tour and planned to fly to Minneapolis on 9/11. This news report about the FAA’s heightened state of alert is only reported in the Globe and Mail before the 9/11 attacks begin. Articles about it appear in six news sources in the weeks after the attacks.