9-11 conspiracy theories. A five-year-old story from our archive has   been the subject of some recent editorial discussion here. The story,   written in the immediate aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, was about   confusion at the time surrounding the names and identities of some of   the hijackers. This confusion was widely reported and was also   acknowledged by the FBI.
 The story has been cited ever since by some as evidence that the 9/11 attacks were part of a US government conspiracy. 
We  later reported on the list of hijackers, thereby superseding the   earlier report. In the intervening years we have also reported in detail   on the investigation into the attacks, the 9/11 commission and its   report.
We’ve carried the full report, executive  summary and main findings and,  as part of the recent fifth anniversary  coverage, a detailed guide to  what’s known about what happened on the  day. But conspiracy theories  have persisted. The confusion over names  and identities we reported  back in 2001 may have arisen because these  were common Arabic and  Islamic names.
In an effort to  make this clearer, we have made one small change to the  original story.  Under the FBI picture of Waleed al Shehri we have  added the words "A man  called Waleed Al Shehri..." to make it as clear  as possible that there  was confusion over the identity. The rest of the  story remains as it was  in the archive as a record of the situation at  the time.
We  recently asked the FBI for a statement, and this is, as things  stand,  the closest thing we have to a definitive view: The FBI is  confident  that it has positively identified the nineteen hijackers  responsible for  the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Also, the 9/11  investigation was thoroughly  reviewed by the National Commission on  Terrorist Attacks Upon the  United States and the House and Senate Joint  Inquiry. Neither of these  reviews ever raised the issue of doubt about  the identity of the  nineteen hijackers.
Source: bbc
 
