Was America Attacked by Muslims on 9/11?
This article by award winning author Professor David Ray Griffin
was first published on September 10, 2008. We are reposting this article
in the context of the 15 years commemoration of the 9/11. This
carefully researched article is of particular relevance in relation to
the rising tide of Islamophobia in Europe and North America
Much of America’s foreign policy since 9/11 has been based on the
assumption that it was attacked by Muslims on that day. This assumption
was used, most prominently, to justify the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
It is now widely agreed that the use of 9/11 as a basis for attacking
Iraq was illegitimate: none of the hijackers were Iraqis, there was no
working relation between Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden, and Iraq
was not behind the anthrax attacks. But it is still widely believed that
the US attack on Afghanistan was justified. For example, the New York
Times, while referring to the US attack on Iraq as a “war of choice,”
calls the battle in Afghanistan a “war of necessity.” Time magazine has
dubbed it “the right war.” And Barack Obama says that one reason to wind
down our involvement in Iraq is to have the troops and resources to “go
after the people in Afghanistan who actually attacked us on 9/11.”
The assumption that America was attacked by Muslims on 9/11 also lies
behind the widespread perception of Islam as an inherently violent
religion and therefore of Muslims as guilty until proven innocent. This
perception surely contributed to attempts to portray Obama as a Muslim,
which was lampooned by a controversial cartoon on the July 21, 2008,
cover of The New Yorker.
As could be illustrated by reference to many other post-9/11
developments, including as spying, torture, extraordinary rendition,
military tribunals, America’s new doctrine of preemptive war, and its
enormous increase in military spending, the assumption that the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon were attacked by Muslim hijackers has had
enormous negative consequences for both international and domestic
issues.1
Is it conceivable that this assumption might be false? Insofar as
Americans and Canadians would say “No,” they would express their belief
that this assumption is not merely an “assumption” but is instead based
on strong evidence. When actually examined, however, the proffered
evidence turns out to be remarkably weak. I will illustrate this point
by means of 16 questions.
1. Were Mohamed Atta and the Other Hijackers Devout Muslims?
The picture of the hijackers conveyed by the 9/11 Commission is that
they were devout Muslims. Mohamed Atta, considered the ringleader, was
said to have become very religious, even “fanatically so.”2 Being devout
Muslims, they could be portrayed as ready to meet their Maker—as a
“cadre of trained operatives willing to die.”3
But this portrayal is contradicted by various newspaper stories. The
San Francisco Chronicle reported that Atta and other hijackers had made
“at least six trips” to Las Vegas, where they had “engaged in some
decidedly un-Islamic sampling of prohibited pleasures.” These activities
were “un-Islamic” because, as the head of the Islamic Foundation of
Nevada pointed out: “True Muslims don’t drink, don’t gamble, don’t go to
strip clubs.”4
One might, to be sure, rationalize this behavior by supposing that
these were momentary lapses and that, as 9/11 approached, these young
Muslims had repented and prepared for heaven. But in the days just
before 9/11, Atta and others were reported to be drinking heavily,
cavorting with lap dancers, and bringing call girls to their rooms.
Temple University Professor Mahmoud Ayoub said: “It is incomprehensible
that a person could drink and go to a strip bar one night, then kill
themselves the next day in the name of Islam. . . . Something here does
not add up.”5
In spite of the fact that these activities were reported by
mainstream newspapers and even the Wall Street Journal editorial page,6
the 9/11 Commission wrote as if these reports did not exist, saying: “we
have seen no credible evidence explaining why, on [some occasions], the
operatives flew to or met in Las Vegas.”7
2. Do Authorities Have Hard Evidence of Osama bin Laden’s Responsibility for 9/11?
Whatever be the truth about the devoutness of the hijackers, one might
reply, there is certainly no doubt about the fact that they were acting
under the guidance of Osama bin Laden. The attack on Afghanistan was
based on the claim that bin Laden was behind the attacks, and the 9/11
Commission’s report was written as if there were no question about this
claim. But neither the Bush administration nor the Commission provided
any proof for it.
Two weeks after 9/11, Secretary of State Colin Powell, speaking to
Tim Russert on “Meet the Press,” said he expected “in the near future . .
. to put out . . . a document that will describe quite clearly the
evidence that we have linking [bin Laden] to this attack.”8 But at a
press conference with President Bush the next morning, Powell reversed
himself, saying that although the government had information that left
no question of bin Laden’s responsibility, “most of it is classified.”9
According to Seymour Hersh, citing officials from both the CIA and the
Department of Justice, the real reason for the reversal was a “lack of
solid information.”10
That same week, Bush had demanded that the Taliban turn over bin
Laden. But the Taliban, reported CNN, “refus[ed] to hand over bin Laden
without proof or evidence that he was involved in last week’s attacks on
the United States.” The Bush administration, saying “[t]here is already
an indictment of Osama bin Laden” [for the attacks in Tanzania, Kenya,
and elsewhere],” rejected the demand for evidence with regard to 9/11.11
The task of providing such evidence was taken up by British Prime
Minister Tony Blair, who on October 4 made public a document entitled
“Responsibility for the Terrorist Atrocities in the United States.”
Listing “clear conclusions reached by the government,” it stated: “Osama
Bin Laden and al-Qaeda, the terrorist network which he heads, planned
and carried out the atrocities on 11 September 2001.”12
Blair’s report, however, began by saying: “This document does not
purport to provide a prosecutable case against Osama Bin Laden in a
court of law.” This weakness was noted the next day by the BBC, which
said: “There is no direct evidence in the public domain linking Osama
Bin Laden to the 11 September attacks. At best the evidence is
circumstantial.”13
After the US had attacked Afghanistan, a senior Taliban official
said: “We have asked for proof of Osama’s involvement, but they have
refused. Why?”14 The answer to this question may be suggested by the
fact that, to this day, the FBI’s “Most Wanted Terrorist” webpage on bin
Laden, while listing him as wanted for bombings in Dar es Salaam,
Tanzania, and Nairobi, makes no mention of 9/11.15
When the FBI’s chief of investigative publicity was asked why not, he
replied: “The reason why 9/11 is not mentioned on Usama Bin Laden’s
Most Wanted page is because the FBI has no hard evidence connecting Bin
Laden to 9/11.”16
It is often claimed that bin Laden’s guilt is proved by a video,
reportedly found by US intelligence officers in Afghanistan in November
2001, in which bin Laden appears to report having planned the attacks.
But critics, pointing out various problems with this “confession video,”
have called it a fake.17 General Hamid Gul, a former head of Pakistan’s
ISI, said: “I think there is an Osama Bin Laden look-alike.”18
Actually, the man in the video is not even much of a look-alike, being
heavier and darker than bin Laden, having a broader nose, wearing
jewelry, and writing with his right hand.19 The FBI, in any case,
obviously does not consider this video hard evidence of bin Laden’s
responsibility for 9/11.
What about the 9/11 Commission? I mentioned earlier that it gave the
impression of having had solid evidence of bin Laden’s guilt. But Thomas
Kean and Lee Hamilton, the Commission’s co-chairs, undermined this
impression in their follow-up book subtitled “the inside story of the
9/11 Commission.”20
Whenever the Commission had cited evidence for bin Ladin’s
responsibility, the note in the back of the book always referred to
CIA-provided information that had (presumably) been elicited during
interrogations of al-Qaeda operatives. By far the most important of
these operatives was Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (KSM), described as the
“mastermind” of the 9/11 attacks. The Commission, for example, wrote:
Bin Ladin . . . finally decided to give the green light
for the 9/11 operation sometime in late 1998 or early 1999. . . . Bin
Ladin also soon selected four individuals to serve as suicide
operatives. . . . Atta—whom Bin Ladin chose to lead the group—met with
Bin Ladin several times to receive additional instructions, including a
preliminary list of approved targets: the World Trade Center, the
Pentagon, and the U.S. Capitol.21
The note for each of these statements says “interrogation of KSM.”22
Kean and Hamilton, however, reported that they had no
success in “obtaining access to star witnesses in custody . . . , most
notably Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.”23 Besides not being allowed to
interview these witnesses, they were not permitted to observe the
interrogations through one-way glass or even to talk to the
interrogators.24 Therefore, they complained: “We . . . had no way of
evaluating the credibility of detainee information. How could we tell if
someone such as Khalid Sheikh Mohammed . . . was telling us the
truth?”25
An NBC “deep background” report in 2008 pointed out an additional
problem: KSM and the other al-Qaeda leaders had been subjected to
“enhanced interrogation techniques,” i.e., torture, and it is now widely
acknowledged that statements elicited by torture lack credibility. “At
least four of the operatives whose interrogation figured in the 9/11
Commission Report,” this NBC report pointed out, “have claimed that they
told interrogators critical information as a way to stop being
“-tortured.’” NBC then quoted Michael Ratner, president of the Center
for Constitutional Rights, as saying: “Most people look at the 9/11
Commission Report as a trusted historical document. If their conclusions
were supported by information gained from torture, . . . their
conclusions are suspect.”26
Accordingly, neither the White House, the British government, the
FBI, nor the 9/11 Commission has provided solid evidence that Osama bin
Laden was behind 9/11.
3. Was Evidence of Muslim Hijackers Provided by Phone Calls from the Airliners?
Nevertheless, many readers may respond, there can be no doubt that the
airplanes were taken over by al-Qaeda hijackers, because their presence
and actions on the planes were reported on phone calls by passengers and
flight attendants, with cell phone calls playing an especially
prominent role.
The most famous of the reported calls were from CNN commentator
Barbara Olson to her husband, US Solicitor General Ted Olson. According
to CNN, he reported that his wife had “called him twice on a cell phone
from American Airlines Flight 77,” saying that “all passengers and
flight personnel, including the pilots, were herded to the back of the
plane by . . . hijackers [armed with] knives and cardboard cutters.”27
Although these reported calls, as summarized by Ted Olson, did not
describe the hijackers so as to suggest that they were members of
al-Qaeda, such descriptions were supplied by calls from other flights,
especially United 93, from which about a dozen cell phone calls were
reportedly received before it crashed in Pennsylvania. According to a
Washington Post story of September 13,
[P]assenger Jeremy Glick used a cell phone to tell his wife, Lyzbeth,
. . . that the Boeing 757′s cockpit had been taken over by three Middle
Eastern-looking men. . . . The terrorists, wearing red headbands, had
ordered the pilots, flight attendants and passengers to the rear of the
plane.28
A story about a “cellular phone conversation” between flight attendant Sandra Bradshaw and her husband gave this report:
She said the plane had been taken over by three men with knives. She
had gotten a close look at one of the hijackers. . . . “He had an
Islamic look,” she told her husband. 29
From these calls, therefore, the public was informed that the hijackers looked Middle Eastern and even Islamic.
Still more specific information was reportedly conveyed during a
12-minute cell phone call from flight attendant Amy Sweeney on American
Flight 11, which was to crash into the North Tower of the World Trade
Center.30 After reaching American Airlines employee Michael Woodward and
telling him that men of “Middle Eastern descent” had hijacked her
flight, she then gave him their seat numbers, from which he was able to
learn the identity of Mohamed Atta and two other hijackers.31 Amy
Sweeney’s call was critical, ABC News explained, because without it “the
plane might have crashed with no one certain the man in charge was tied
to al Qaeda.”32
There was, however, a big problem with these reported calls: Given
the technology available in 2001, cell phone calls from airliners at
altitudes of more than a few thousand feet, especially calls lasting
more than a few seconds, were not possible, and yet these calls, some of
which reportedly lasted a minute or more, reportedly occurred when the
planes were above 30,000 or even 40,000 feet. This problem was explained
by some credible people, including scientist A.K. Dewdney, who for many
years had written a column for Scientific American.33
Although some defenders of the official account, such as Popular
Mechanics, have disputed the contention that high-altitude calls from
airliners were impossible,34 the fact is that the FBI, after having at
first supported the claims that such calls were made, withdrew this
support a few years later.
With regard to the reported 12-minute call from Amy Sweeney to
Michael Woodward, an affidavit signed by FBI agent James Lechner and
dated September 12 (2001) stated that, according to Woodward, Sweeney
had been “using a cellular telephone.”35 But when the 9/11 Commission
discussed this call in its Report, which appeared in July 2004, it
declared that Sweeney had used an onboard phone.36
Behind that change was an implausible claim made by the FBI earlier
in 2004: Although Woodward had failed to mention this when FBI agent
Lechner interviewed him on 9/11, he had repeated Sweeney’s call verbatim
to a colleague in his office, who had in turn repeated it to another
colleague at American headquarters in Dallas, who had recorded it; and
this recording—which was discovered only in 2004—indicated that Sweeney
had used a passenger-seat phone, thanks to “an AirFone card, given to
her by another flight attendant.”37
This claim is implausible because, if this relayed recording had
really been made on 9/11, we cannot believe that Woodward would have
failed to mention it to FBI agent Lechner later that same day. While
Lechner was taking notes, Woodward would surely have said: “You don’t
need to rely on my memory. There is a recording of a word-for-word
repetition of Sweeney’s statements down in Dallas.” It is also
implausible that Woodward, having repeated Sweeney’s statement that she
had used “an AirFone card, given to her by another flight attendant,”
would have told Lechner, as the latter’s affidavit says, that Sweeney
had been “using a cellular telephone.”
Lechner’s affidavit shows that the FBI at first supported the claim
that Sweeney had made a 12-minute cell phone call from a high-altitude
airliner. Does not the FBI’s change of story, after its first version
had been shown to be technologically impossible, create the suspicion
that the entire story was a fabrication?
This suspicion is reinforced by the FBI’s change of story in relation
to United Flight 93. Although we were originally told that this flight
had been the source of about a dozen cell phone calls, some of them when
the plane was above 40,000 feet, the FBI gave a very different report
at the 2006 trial of Zacarias Moussaoui, the so-called 20th hijacker.
The FBI spokesman said: “13 of the terrified passengers and crew members
made 35 air phone calls and two cell phone calls.”38 Instead of there
having been about a dozen cell phone calls from Flight 93, the FBI
declared in 2005, there were really only two.
Why were two calls still said to have been possible? They were
reportedly made at 9:58, when the plane was reportedly down to 5,000
feet.39 Although that was still pretty high for successful cell phone
calls in 2001, these calls, unlike calls from 30,000 feet or higher,
would have been at least arguably possible.
If the truth of the FBI’s new account is assumed, how can one explain
the fact that so many people had reported receiving cell phone calls?
In most cases, it seems, these people had been told by the callers that
they were using cell phones. For example, a Newsweek story about United
93 said: “Elizabeth Wainio, 27, was speaking to her stepmother in
Maryland. Another passenger, she explains, had loaned her a cell phone
and told her to call her family.”40 In such cases, we might assume that
the people receiving the calls had simply mis-heard, or mis-remembered,
what they had been told. But this would mean positing that about a dozen
people had made the same mistake.
An even more serious difficulty is presented by the case of Deena
Burnett, who said that she had received three to five calls from her
husband, Tom Burnett. She knew he was using his cell phone, she reported
to the FBI that very day and then to the press and in a book, because
she had recognized his cell phone number on her phone’s Caller ID.41 We
cannot suppose her to have been mistaken about this. We also, surely,
cannot accuse her of lying.
Therefore, if we accept the FBI’s report, according to which Tom
Burnett did not make any cell phone calls from Flight 93, we can only
conclude that the calls were faked—that Deena Burnett was duped.
Although this suggestion may at first sight seem outlandish, there are
three facts that, taken together, show it to be more probable than any
of the alternatives.
First, voice morphing technology was sufficiently advanced at that
time to make faking the calls feasible. A 1999 Washington Post article
described demonstrations in which the voices of two generals, Colin
Powell and Carl Steiner, were heard saying things they had never said.42
Second, there are devices with which you can fake someone’s telephone
number, so that it will show up on the recipient’s Caller ID.43
Third, the conclusion that the person who called Deena Burnett was
not her husband is suggested by various features of the calls. For
example, when Deena told the caller that “the kids” were asking to talk
to him, he said: “Tell them I’ll talk to them later.” This was 20
minutes after Tom had purportedly realized that the hijackers were on a
suicide mission, planning to “crash this plane into the ground,” and 10
minutes after he and other passengers had allegedly decided that as soon
as they were “over a rural area” they must try to gain control of the
plane. Also, the hijackers had reportedly already killed one person.44
Given all this, the real Tom Burnett would have known that he would
likely die, one way or another, in the next few minutes. Is it
believable that, rather than taking this probably last opportunity to
speak to his children, he would say that he would “talk to them later”?
Is it not more likely that “Tom” made this statement to avoid revealing
that he knew nothing about “the kids,” perhaps not even their names?
Further evidence that the calls were faked is provided by timing
problems in some of them. According to the 9/11 Commission, Flight 93
crashed at 10:03 as a result of the passenger revolt, which began at
9:57. However, according to Lyzbeth Glick’s account of the
aforementioned cell phone call from her husband, Jeremy Glick, she told
him about the collapse of the South Tower, and that did not occur until
9:59, two minutes after the alleged revolt had started. After that, she
reported, their conversation continued for several more minutes before
he told her that the passengers were taking a vote about whether to
attack. According to Lyzbeth Glick’s account, therefore, the revolt was
only beginning by 10:03, when the plane (according to the official
account) was crashing.45
A timing problem also occurred in the aforementioned call from flight
attendant Amy Sweeney. While she was describing the hijackers,
according to the FBI’s account of her call, they stormed and took
control of the cockpit.46 However, although the hijacking of Flight 11
“began at 8:14 or shortly thereafter,” the 9/11 Commission said,
Sweeney’s call did not go through until 8:25.47 Her alleged call, in
other words, described the hijacking as beginning over 11 minutes after
it, according to the official timeline, had been successfully carried
out.
Multiple lines of evidence, therefore, imply that the cell phone
calls were faked. This fact has vast implications, because it implies
that all the reported calls from the planes, including those from
onboard phones, were faked. Why? Because if the planes had really been
taken over in surprise hijackings, no one would have been ready to make
fake cell phone calls.
Moreover, the FBI, besides implying, most clearly in the case of
Deena Burnett, that the phone calls reporting the hijackings had been
faked, comes right out and says, in its report about calls from Flight
77, that no calls from Barbara Olson occurred. It does mention her. But
besides attributing only one call to her, not two, the FBI report refers
to it as an “unconnected call,” which (of course) lasted “0 seconds.”48
In 2006, in other words, the FBI, which is part of the Department of
Justice, implied that the story told by the DOJ’s former solicitor
general was untrue. Although not mentioned by the press, this was an
astounding development.
This FBI report leaves only two possible explanations for Ted Olson’s
story: Either he made it up or else he, like Deena Burnett and several
others, was duped. In either case, the story about Barbara Olson’s
calls, with their reports of hijackers taking over Flight 77, was based
on deception.
The opening section of The 9/11 Commission Report is entitled “Inside
the Four Flights.” The information contained in this section is based
almost entirely on the reported phone calls. But if the reported calls
were faked, we have no idea what happened inside these planes. Insofar
as the idea that the planes were taken over by hijackers who looked
“Middle Eastern,” even “Islamic,” has been based on the reported calls,
this idea is groundless.
4. Was the Presence of Hijackers Proved by a Radio Transmission “from American 11″?
It might be objected, in reply, that this is not true, because we know
that American Flight 11, at least, was hijacked, thanks to a radio
transmission in which the voice of one of its hijackers is heard.
According to the 9/11 Commission, the air traffic controller for this
flight heard a radio transmission at 8:25 AM in which someone—widely
assumed to be Mohamed Atta—told the passengers: “We have some planes.
Just stay quiet, and you’ll be okay. We are returning to the airport.”
After quoting this transmission, the Commission wrote: “The controller
told us that he then knew it was a hijacking.”49 Was this transmission
not indeed proof that Flight 11 had been hijacked?
It might provide such proof if we knew that, as the Commission
claimed, the “transmission came from American 11.”50 But we do not.
According to the FAA’s “Summary of Air Traffic Hijack Events,” published
September 17, 2001, the transmission was “from an unknown origin.”51
Bill Peacock, the FAA’s air traffic director, said: “We didn’t know
where the transmission came from.”52 The Commission’s claim that it came
from American 11 was merely an inference. The transmission could have
come from the same room from which the calls to Deena Burnett
originated.
Therefore, the alleged radio transmission from Flight 11, like the
alleged phone calls from the planes, provides no evidence that the
planes were taken over by al-Qaeda hijackers.
5. Did Passports and a Headband Provide Evidence that al-Qaeda Operatives Were on the Flights?
However, the government’s case for al-Qaeda hijackers on also rested
in part on claims that passports and a headband belonging to al-Qaeda
operatives were found at the crash sites. But these claims are patently
absurd.
A week after the attacks, the FBI reported that a search of the
streets after the destruction of the World Trade Center had discovered
the passport of one of the Flight 11 hijackers, Satam al-Suqami.53 But
this claim did not pass the giggle test. “[T]he idea that [this]
passport had escaped from that inferno unsinged,” wrote one British
reporter, “would [test] the credulity of the staunchest supporter of the
FBI’s crackdown on terrorism.”54
By 2004, when the 9/11 Commission was discussing the alleged
discovery of this passport, the story had been modified to say that “a
passer-by picked it up and gave it to a NYPD detective shortly before
the World Trade Center towers collapsed.”55 So, rather than needing to
survive the collapse of the North Tower, the passport merely needed to
escape from the plane’s cabin, avoid being destroyed or even singed by
the instantaneous jet-fuel fire, and then escape from the building so
that it could fall to the ground! Equally absurd is the claim that the
passport of Ziad Jarrah, the alleged pilot of Flight 93, was found at
this plane’s crash site in Pennsylvania.56 This passport was reportedly
found on the ground even though there was virtually nothing at the site
to indicate that an airliner had crashed there.
The reason for this absence of wreckage, we were told, was that the
plane had been headed downward at 580 miles per hour and, when it hit
the spongy Pennsylvania soil, buried itself deep in the ground. New York
Times journalist Jere Longman, surely repeating what he had been told
by authorities, wrote: “The fuselage accordioned on itself more than
thirty feet into the porous, backfilled ground. It was as if a marble
had been dropped into water.”57 So, we are to believe, just before the
plane buried itself in the earth, Jarrah’s passport escaped from the
cockpit and landed on the ground. Did Jarrah, going 580 miles per hour,
have the window open?58 Also found on the ground, according to the
government’s evidence presented to the Moussaoui trial, was a red
headband.59 This was considered evidence that al-Qaeda hijackers were on
Flight 93 because they were, according to some of the phone calls,
wearing red headbands. But besides being absurd for the same reason as
was the claim about Jarrah’s passport, this claim about the headband was
problematic for another reason. Former CIA agent Milt Bearden, who
helped train the Mujahideen fighters in Afghanistan, has pointed out
that it would have been very unlikely that members of al-Qaeda would
have worn such headbands:
[The red headband] is a uniquely Shi’a Muslim adornment.
It is something that dates back to the formation of the Shi’a sect. . . .
[I]t represents the preparation of he who wears this red headband to
sacrifice his life, to murder himself for the cause. Sunnis are by and
large most of the people following Osama bin Laden [and they] do not do
this.60
We learned shortly after the invasion of Iraq that some people in the
US government did not know the difference between Shi’a and Sunni
Muslims. Did such people decide that the hijackers would be described as
wearing red headbands?
6. Did the Information in Atta’s Luggage Prove the Responsibility of al-Qaeda Operatives?
I come now to the evidence that is said to provide the strongest
proof that the planes had been hijacked by Mohamed Atta and other
members of al-Qaeda. This evidence was reportedly found in two pieces of
Atta’s luggage that were discovered inside the Boston airport after the
attacks. The luggage was there, we were told, because although Atta was
already in Boston on September 10, he and another al-Qaeda operative,
Abdul al-Omari, rented a blue Nissan and drove up to Portland, Maine,
and stayed overnight. They caught a commuter flight back to Boston early
the next morning in time to get on American Flight 11, but Atta’s
luggage did not make it.
This luggage, according to the FBI affidavit signed by James Lechner,
contained much incriminating material, including a handheld flight
computer, flight simulator manuals, two videotapes about Boeing
aircraft, a slide-rule flight calculator, a copy of the Koran, and
Atta’s last will and testament.61 This material was widely taken as
proof that al-Qaeda and hence Osama bin Laden were behind the 9/11
attacks.
When closely examined, however, the Atta-to-Portland story loses all credibility.
One problem is the very idea that Atta would have planned to take all
these things in baggage that was to be transferred to Flight 11. What
good would a flight computer and other flying aids do inside a suitcase
in the plane’s luggage compartment? Why would he have planned to take
his will on a plane he planned to crash into the World Trade Center?
A second problem involves the question of why Atta’s luggage did not
get transferred onto Flight 11. According to an Associated Press story
that appeared four days after 9/11, Atta’s flight “arrived at Logan . . .
just in time for him to connect with American Airlines flight 11 to Los
Angeles, but too late for his luggage to be loaded.”62 The 9/11
Commission had at one time evidently planned to endorse this claim.63
But when The 9/11 Commission Report appeared, it said: “Atta and Omari
arrived in Boston at 6:45″ and then “checked in and boarded American
Airlines Flight 11,” which was “scheduled to depart at 7:45.”64 By thus
admitting that there was almost a full hour for the luggage to be
transferred to Flight 11, the Commission was left with no explanation as
to why it was not.
Still another problem with the Atta-to-Portland story was the
question why he would have taken this trip. If the commuter flight had
been late, Atta, being the ringleader of the hijackers as well as the
intended pilot for Flight 11, would have had to call off the whole
operation, which he had reportedly been planning for two years. The 9/11
Commission, like the FBI before it, admitted that it had no answer to
this question.65
The fourth and biggest problem with the story, however, is that it
did not appear until September 16, five days after 9/11, following the
collapse of an earlier story.
According to news reports immediately after 9/11, the incriminating
materials, rather than being found in Atta’s luggage inside the airport,
were found in a white Mitsubishi, which Atta had left in the Boston
airport parking lot. Two hijackers did drive a blue Nissan to Portland
and then take the commuter flight back to Boston the next morning, but
their names were Adnan and Ameer Bukhari.66 This story fell apart on the
afternoon of September 13, when it was discovered that the Bukharis, to
whom authorities had reportedly been led by material in the Nissan at
the Portland Jetport, had not died on 9/11: Adnan was still alive and
Ameer had died the year before.67
The next day, September 14, an Associated Press story said that it
was Atta and a companion who had driven the blue Nissan to Portland,
stayed overnight, and then taken the commuter flight back to Boston. The
incriminating materials, however, were still said to have been found in
a car in the Boston airport, which was now said to have been rented by
“additional suspects.”68 Finally, on September 16, a Washington Post
story, besides saying that the Nissan had been taken to Portland by Atta
and al-Omari, specified that the incriminating material had been found
in Atta’s luggage inside the Boston airport.69
Given this history of the Atta-to-Portland story, how can we avoid the conclusion that it was a fabrication?
7. Were al-Qaeda Operatives Captured on Airport Security Videos?
Still another type of evidence for the claim that al-Qaeda operatives
were on the planes consisted of frames from videos, purportedly taken
by airport security cameras, said to show hijackers checking into
airports. Shortly after the attacks, for example, photos showing Atta
and al-Omari at an airport “were flashed round the world.”70 However,
although it was widely assumed that these photos were from the airport
at Boston, they were really from the airport at Portland. No photos
showing Atta or any of the other alleged hijackers at Boston’s Logan
Airport were ever produced. We at best have photographic evidence that
Atta and al-Omari were at the Portland airport.
Moreover, in light of the fact that the story of Atta and al-Omari
going to Portland was apparently a late invention, we might expect the
photographic evidence that they were at the Portland Jetport on the
morning of September 11 to be problematic. And indeed it is. It shows
Atta and Omari without either jackets or ties on, whereas the Portland
ticket agent said that they had been wearing jackets and ties.71 Also, a
photo showing Atta and al-Omari passing through the security checkpoint
is marked both 05:45 and 05:53.72
Another airport video was distributed on the day in 2004 that The
9/11 Commission Report was published. The Associated Press, using a
frame from it as corroboration of the official story, provided this
caption:
Hijacker Khalid al-Mihdhar . . . passes through the security
checkpoint at Dulles International Airport in Chantilly, Va., Sept. 11
2001, just hours before American Airlines Flight 77 crashed into the
Pentagon in this image from a surveillance video.73
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However, as Rowland Morgan and
Ian Henshall have pointed out,
a normal security video has time and date burned into the
integral video image by proprietary equipment according to an
authenticated pattern, along with camera identification and the
location that the camera covered. The video released in 2004
contained no such data.74
The Associated Press notwithstanding, therefore, this video
contains no evidence that it was taken at Dulles on September
11.
Another problem with this so-called Dulles video is that,
although one of the men on it was identified by the 9/11
Commission as Hani Hanjour,75 he "does not remotely resemble
Hanjour." Whereas Hanjour was thin and had a receding hairline
(as shown by a photo taken six days before 9/11), the man in the
video had a somewhat muscular build and a full head of hair,
with no receding hairline.76
In sum: Video proof that the named hijackers checked into
airports on 9/11 is nonexistent. Besides the fact that the
videos purportedly showing hijackers for Flights 11 and 77 reek
of inauthenticity, there are no videos even purportedly showing
the hijackers for the other two flights. If these 19 men had
really checked into the Boston and Dulles airports that day,
there should be authentic security videos to prove this.
8. Were the Names of the "Hijackers" on the Passenger Manifests?
What about the passenger manifests, which list all the
passengers on the flights? If the alleged hijackers purchased
tickets and boarded the flights, their names would have been on
the manifests for these flights. And we were told that they
were. According to counterterrorism coordinator Richard Clarke,
the FBI told him at about 10:00 that morning that it recognized
the names of some al-Qaeda operatives on passenger manifests it
had received from the airlines.77 As to how the FBI itself
acquired its list, Robert Bonner, the head of Customs and Border
Protection, said to the 9/11 Commission in 2004:
On the morning of 9/11, through an evaluation of data related to
the passenger manifest for the four terrorist hijacked aircraft,
Customs Office of Intelligence was able to identify the likely
terrorist hijackers. Within 45 minutes of the attacks, Customs
forwarded the passenger lists with the names of the victims and
19 probable hijackers to the FBI and the intelligence
community.78
Under questioning, Bonner added:
We were able to pull from the airlines the passenger manifest
for each of the four flights. We ran the manifest through [our
lookout] system. . . . [B]y 11:00 AM, I'd seen a sheet that
essentially identified the 19 probable hijackers. And in fact,
they turned out to be, based upon further follow-up in detailed
investigation, to be the 19.79
Bonner's statement, however, is doubly problematic. In the first
place, the initial FBI list, as reported by CNN on September 13
and 14, contained only 18 names.80 Why would that be if 19 men
had already been identified on 9/11?
Second, several of the names on the FBI's first list, having
quickly become problematic, were replaced by other names. For
example, the previously discussed men named Bukhari, thought to
be brothers, were replaced on American 11's list of hijackers by
brothers named Waleed and Wail al-Shehri. Two other replacements
for this flight were Satam al-Suqami, whose passport was
allegedly found at Ground Zero, and Abdul al-Omari, who
allegedly went to Portland with Atta the day before 9/11. Also,
the initial list for American 77 did not include the name of
Hani Hanjour, who would later be called the pilot of this
flight. Rather, it contained a name that, after being read aloud
by a CNN correspondent, was transcribed "Mosear Caned."81 All in
all, the final list of 19 hijackers contained six names that
were not on the original list of 18---a fact that contradicts
Bonner's claim that by 11:00 AM on 9/11 his agency had
identified 19 probable hijackers who, in fact, "turned out to
be. . . the 19."
These replacements to the initial list also undermine the claim
that Amy Sweeney, by giving the seat numbers of three of the
hijackers to Michael Woodward of American Airlines, allowed him
to identify Atta and two others. This second claim is impossible
because the two others were Abdul al-Omari and Satam
al-Suqami,82 and they were replacements for two men on the
original list---who, like Adnan Bukhari, turned up alive after
9/11.83 Woodward could not possibly have identified men who were
not added to the list until several days later.84
For all these reasons, the claim that the names of the 19
alleged hijackers were on the airlines' passenger manifests must
be considered false.
This conclusion is supported by the fact that the passenger
manifests that were released to the public included no names of
any of the 19 alleged hijackers and, in fact, no Middle Eastern
names whatsoever.85 These manifests, therefore, support the
suspicion that there were no al-Qaeda hijackers on the planes.
It might appear that this conclusion is contradicted by the fact
that passenger manifests with the names of the alleged hijackers
have appeared. A photocopy of a portion of an apparent passenger
manifest for American Flight 11, with the names of three of the
alleged hijackers, was published in a 2005 book by Terry
McDermott, Perfect Soldiers: The 9/11 Hijackers.86 McDermott
reportedly said that he received these manifests from the FBI.87
But the idea that these were the original manifests is
problematic.
For one thing, they were not included in the evidence presented
by the FBI to the Moussaoui trial in 2006.88 If even the FBI
will not cite them as evidence, why should anyone think they are
genuine?
Another problem with these purported manifests, copies of which
can be viewed on the Internet,89 is that they show signs of
being late creations. One such sign is that Ziad Jarrah's last
name is spelled correctly, whereas in the early days after 9/11,
the FBI was referring to him as "Jarrahi," as news reports from
the time show.90 A second sign is that the manifest for American
Flight 77 contains Hani Hanjour's name, even though its absence
from the original list of hijackers had led the Washington Post
to wonder why Hanjour's "name was not on the American Airlines
manifest for the flight."91 A third sign is that the purported
manifest for American Flight 11 contains the names of Wail al-Shehri,
Waleed al-Shehri, Satam al-Suqami, and Abdul al-Omari, all of
whom were added some days after 9/11.
In sum, no credible evidence that al-Qaeda operatives were on
the flights is provided by the passenger manifests.
9. Did DNA Tests Identify Five Hijackers among the Victims at
the Pentagon?
Another type of evidence that the alleged hijackers were really
on the planes could have been provided by autopsies. But no such
evidence has been forthcoming. In its book defending the
official account of 9/11, to be sure, Popular Mechanics claims
that, according to a report on the victims of the Pentagon
attack by the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology: "The five
hijackers were positively identified."92 But this claim is
false.
According to a summary of this pathology report by Andrew Baker,
M.D., the remains of 183 victims were subjected to DNA analysis,
which resulted in "178 positive identifications." Although Baker
says that "[s]ome remains for each of the terrorists were
recovered," this was merely an inference from the fact that
there were "five unique postmortem profiles that did not match
any antemortem material provided by victims' families."93
A Washington Post story made even clearer the fact that this
conclusion---that the unmatched remains were those of "the five
hijackers"---was merely an inference. It wrote: "The remains of
the five hijackers have been identified through a process of
exclusion, as they did not match DNA samples contributed by
family members of all 183 victims who died at the site"
(emphasis added).94 All the report said, in other words, was
that there were five bodies whose DNA did not match that of any
of the known Pentagon victims or any of the regular passengers
or crew members on Flight 77.
We have no way of knowing where these five bodies came from. For
the claim that they came from the attack site at the Pentagon,
we have only the word of the FBI and the military, which
insisted on taking charge of the bodies of everyone killed at
the Pentagon and transporting them to the Armed Forces Institute
of Pathology.95
In any case, the alleged hijackers could have been positively
identified only if samples had been obtained from their
relatives, and there is no indication that this occurred.
Indeed, one can wonder why not. The FBI had lots of information
about the men identified as the hijackers. They could easily
have located relatives. And these relatives, most of whom
reportedly did not believe that their own flesh and blood had
been involved in the attacks, would have surely been willing to
supply the needed DNA. Indeed, a story about Ziad Jarrah, the
alleged pilot of Flight 93, said: "Jarrah's family has indicated
they would be willing to provide DNA samples to US researchers,
. . . [but] the FBI has shown no interest thus far."96
The lack of positive identification of the alleged hijackers is
consistent with the autopsy report, which was released to Dr.
Thomas Olmsted, who had made a FOIA request for it. Like the
flight manifest for Flight 77, he revealed, this report also
contains no Arab names.97
10. Has the Claim That Some of the "Hijackers" Are Still Alive
Been Debunked?
Another problem with the claim that the 19 hijackers were
correctly identified on 9/11, or at least a few days later, is
that some of the men on the FBI's final list reportedly turned
up alive after 9/11. Although Der Spiegel and the BBC claim to
have debunked these reports, I will show this is untrue by
examining the case of one of the alleged hijackers, Waleed al-Shehri---who,
we saw earlier, was a replacement for Adnan Bukhari, who himself
had shown up alive after 9/11.
In spite of the fact that al-Shehri was a replacement, the 9/11
Commission revealed no doubts about his presence on Flight 11,
speculating that he and his brother Wail---another
replacement---stabbed two of the flight attendants.98 But the
Commission certainly should have had doubts.
On September 22, 2001, the BBC published an article by David
Bamford entitled "Hijack "-Suspect' Alive in Morocco." It showed
that the Waleed al-Shehri identified by the FBI as one of the
hijackers was still alive. Explaining why the problem could not
be dismissed as a case of mistaken identity, Bamford wrote:
His photograph was released by the FBI, and has been shown in
newspapers and on television around the world. That same Mr Al-Shehri
has turned up in Morocco, proving clearly that he was not a
member of the suicide attack. He told Saudi journalists in
Casablanca that . . . he has now been interviewed by the
American authorities, who apologised for the misunderstanding.99
The following day, September 23, the BBC published another
story, "Hijack "-Suspects' Alive and Well." Discussing several
alleged hijackers who had shown up alive, it said of al-Shehri
in particular: "He acknowledges that he attended flight training
school at Daytona Beach. . . . But, he says, he left the United
States in September last year, became a pilot with Saudi Arabian
airlines and is currently on a further training course in
Morocco."100
In 2003, an article in Der Spiegel tried to debunk these two BBC
stories, characterizing them as "nonsense about surviving
terrorists." It claimed that the reported still-alive hijackers
were all cases of mistaken identity, involving men with
"coincidentally identical names." This claim by Der Spiegel
depended on its assertion that, at the time of the reports, the
FBI had released only a list of names: "The FBI did not release
photographs until four days after the cited reports, on
September 27th."101 But that was not true. Bamford's BBC story
of September 22, as we saw, reported that Waleed al-Shehri's
photograph had been "released by the FBI" and "shown in
newspapers and on television around the world."
In 2006, nevertheless, the BBC used the same claim to withdraw
its support for its own stories. Steve Herrmann, the editor of
the BBC News website, claimed that confusion had arisen because
"these were common Arabic and Islamic names." Accordingly, he
said, the BBC had changed its September 23 story in one respect:
"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."102 But
Bamford's BBC story of September 22, which Herrmann failed to
mention, had made it "as clear as possible" that there could not
have been any confusion.
These attempts by Der Spiegel and the BBC, in which they tried
to discredit the reports that Waleed al-Shehri was still alive
after 9/11, have been refuted by Jay Kolar, who shows that FBI
photographs had been published by Saudi newspapers as early as
September 19. Kolar thereby undermines the only argument against
Bamford's assertion, according to which there could have been no
possibility of mistaken identity because al-Shehri had seen his
published photograph prior to September 22, when Bamford's story
appeared.103
The fact that al-Shehri, along with several other alleged
hijackers,104 was alive after 9/11 shows unambiguously that at
least some of the men on the FBI's final list were not on the
planes. It would appear that the FBI, after replacing some of
its first-round candidates because of their continued existence,
decided not to replace any more, in spite of their exhibition of
the same defect.
11. Is There Positive Evidence That No Hijackers Were on the
Planes?
At this point, defenders of the official story might argue: The
fact that some of the men labeled hijackers were still alive
after 9/11 shows only that the FBI list contained some errors;
it does not prove that there were no al-Qaeda hijackers on
board. And although the previous points do undermine the
evidence for such hijackers, absence of evidence is not
necessarily evidence of absence.
Evidence of absence, however, is implicit in the prior points in
two ways. First, the lack of Arab names on the Pentagon autopsy
report and on any of the issued passenger manifests does suggest
the absence of al-Qaeda operatives. Second, if al-Qaeda
hijackers really were on the flights, why was evidence to prove
this fact fabricated?
Beyond those two points, moreover, there is a feature of the
reported events that contradicts the claim that hijackers broke
into the pilots' cabins. This feature can be introduced by
reference to Conan Doyle's short story "Silver Blaze," which is
about a famous race horse that had disappeared the night before
a big race. Although the local Scotland Yard detective believed
that Silver Blaze had been stolen by an intruder, Sherlock
Holmes brought up "the curious incident of the dog in the
night-time." When the inspector pointed out that "[t]he dog did
nothing in the night-time," Holmes replied: "That was the
curious incident."105 Had there really been an intruder, in
other words, the dog would have barked. This has become known as
the case of "the dog that didn't bark."
A similar curious incident occurred on each of the four flights.
In the event of a hijacking, pilots are trained to enter the
standard hijack code (7500) into their transponders to alert
controllers on the ground. Using the transponder to send a code
is called "squawking." One of the big puzzles about 9/11 was why
none of the pilots squawked the hijack code.
CNN provided a good treatment of this issue, saying with regard
to the first flight:
Flight 11 was hijacked apparently by knife-wielding men. Airline
pilots are trained to handle such situations by keeping calm,
complying with requests, and if possible, dialing in an
emergency four digit code on a device called a transponder. . .
. The action takes seconds, but it appears no such code was
entered.106
The crucial issue was indicated by the phrase "if possible":
Would it have been possible for the pilots of Flight 11 to have
performed this action? A positive answer was suggested by CNN's
next statement:
[I]n the cabin, a frantic flight attendant managed to use a
phone to call American Airlines Command Center in Dallas. She
reported the trouble. And according to "The Christian Science
Monitor," a pilot apparently keyed the microphone, transmitting
a cockpit conversation.107
If there was time for both of those actions to be taken, there
would have been time for one of the pilots to enter the
four-digit hijack code.
That would have been all the more true of the pilots on United
Flight 93, given the (purported) tapes from this flight. A
reporter at the Moussaoui trial, where these tapes had been
played, wrote:
In those tapes, the pilots shouted as hijackers broke into the
cockpit. "Mayday! Mayday! Mayday!" a pilot screamed in the first
tape. In the second tape, 30 seconds later, a pilot shouted:
"Mayday! Get out of here! Get out of here!"108
According to these tapes, therefore, the pilots were still alive
and coherent 30 seconds after realizing that hijackers were
breaking into the cockpit. And yet in all that time, neither of
them did the most important thing they had been trained to
do---turn the transponder to 7500.
In addition to the four pilots on Flights 11 and 93,
furthermore, the four pilots on Flights 175 and 77 failed to do
this as well.
In "Silver Blaze," the absence of an intruder was shown by the
dog that didn't bark. On 9/11, the absence of hijackers was
shown by the pilots who didn't squawk.
12. Were bin Laden and al-Qaeda Capable of Orchestrating the
Attacks?
For prosecutors to prove that defendants committed a crime, they
must show that they had the ability (as well as the motive and
opportunity) to do so. But several political and military
leaders from other countries have stated that bin Laden and
al-Qaeda simply could not have carried out the attacks. General
Leonid Ivashov, who in 2001 was the chief of staff for the
Russian armed forces, wrote:
Only secret services and their current chiefs---or those retired
but still having influence inside the state organizations---have
the ability to plan, organize and conduct an operation of such
magnitude. . . . . Osama bin Laden and "Al Qaeda" cannot be the
organizers nor the performers of the September 11 attacks. They
do not have the necessary organization, resources or leaders.
Mohamed Hassanein Heikal, the former foreign minister of Egypt,
wrote:
Bin Laden does not have the capabilities for an operation of
this magnitude. When I hear Bush talking about al-Qaida as if it
was Nazi Germany or the communist party of the Soviet Union, I
laugh because I know what is there.
Similar statements have been made by Andreas von Bülow, the
former state secretary of West Germany's ministry of defense, by
General Mirza Aslam Beg, former chief of staff of Pakistan's
army, and even General Musharraf, the president of Pakistan
until recently.109
This same point was also made by veteran CIA agent Milt Bearden.
Speaking disparagingly of "the myth of Osama bin Laden" on CBS
News the day after 9/11, Bearden said: "I was there [in
Afghanistan] at the same time bin Laden was there. He was not
the great warrior." With regard to the widespread view that bin
Laden was behind the attacks, he said: "This was a tremendously
sophisticated operation against the United States---more
sophisticated than anybody would have ascribed to Osama bin
Laden." Pointing out that a group capable of such a
sophisticated attack would have had a way to cover their tracks,
he added: "This group who was responsible for that, if they
didn't have an Osama bin Laden out there, they'd invent one,
because he's a terrific diversion."110
13. Could Hani Hanjour Have Flown Flight 77 into the Pentagon?
The inability of al-Qaeda to have carried out the operation can
be illustrated in terms of Hani Hanjour, the al-Qaeda operative
said to have flown Flight 77 into the Pentagon.
On September 12, before it was stated that Hanjour had been the
pilot of American 77, the final minutes of this plane's
trajectory had been described as one requiring great skill. A
Washington Post story said:
[J]ust as the plane seemed to be on a suicide mission into the
White House, the unidentified pilot executed a pivot so tight
that it reminded observers of a fighter jet maneuver. . . .
Aviation sources said the plane was flown with extraordinary
skill, making it highly likely that a trained pilot was at the
helm.111
But Hani Hanjour was not that. Indeed, a CBS story reported, an
Arizona flight school said that Hanjour's "flying skills were so
bad . . . they didn't think he should keep his pilot's license."
The manager stated: "I couldn't believe he had a commercial
license of any kind with the skills that he had."112 A New York
Times story, entitled "A Trainee Noted for Incompetence," quoted
one of his instructors as saying that Hanjour "could not fly at
all."113
The 9/11 Commission even admitted that in the summer of 2001,
just months before 9/11, a flight instructor in New Jersey,
after going up with Hanjour in a small plane, "declined a second
request because of what he considered Hanjour's poor piloting
skills."114 The Commission failed to address the question of how
Hanjour, incapable of flying a single-engine plane, could have
flown a giant 757 through the trajectory reportedly taken by
Flight 77: descending 8,000 feet in three minutes and then
coming in at ground level to strike Wedge 1 of the Pentagon
between the first and second floors, without even scraping the
lawn.
Several pilots have said this would have been impossible. Russ
Wittenberg, who flew large commercial airliners for 35 years
after serving as a fighter pilot in Vietnam, says it would have
been "totally impossible for an amateur who couldn't even fly a
Cessna" to fly that downward spiral and then "crash into the
Pentagon's first floor wall without touching the lawn."115 Ralph
Omholt, a former 757 pilot, has bluntly said: "The idea that an
unskilled pilot could have flown this trajectory is simply too
ridiculous to consider."116 Ralph Kolstad, who was a US Navy
"top gun" pilot before becoming a commercial airline pilot for
27 years, has said: "I have 6,000 hours of flight time in Boeing
757's and 767's and I could not have flown it the way the flight
path was described. . . . Something stinks to high heaven!"117
The authors of the Popular Mechanics book about 9/11 offered to
solve this problem. While acknowledging that Hanjour "may not
have been highly skilled," they said that he did not need to be,
because all he had to do was, using a GPS unit, put his plane on
autopilot.118 "He steered the plane manually for only the final
eight minutes of the flight," they state
triumphantly119---ignoring the fact that it was precisely during
those minutes that Hanjour had allegedly performed the
impossible.
14. Would an al-Qaeda Pilot Have Executed that Maneuver?
A further question is: Even if one of the al-Qaeda operatives on
that flight could have executed that maneuver, would he have
done so? This question arises out of the fact that the plane
could easily have crashed into the roof on the side of the
Pentagon that housed Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and
all the top brass. The difficult maneuver would have been
required only by the decision to strike Wedge 1 on the side.
But this was the worst possible place, given the assumed motives
of the al-Qaeda operatives: They would have wanted to kill
Rumsfeld and the top brass, but Wedge 1 was as far removed from
their offices as possible. They would have wanted to cause as
much destruction as possible, but Wedge 1---and only it---had
been renovated to make it less vulnerable to attack. Al-Qaeda
operatives would have wanted to kill as many Pentagon employees
as possible, but because the renovation was not quite complete,
Wedge 1 was only sparsely occupied. The attack also occurred on
the only part of the Pentagon that would have presented physical
obstacles to an attacking airplane. All of these facts were
public knowledge. So even if an al-Qaeda pilot had been capable
of executing the maneuver to strike the ground floor of Wedge 1,
he would not have done so.
15. Could al-Qaeda Operatives Have Brought Down the World Trade
Center Buildings?
Returning to the issue of competence, another question is
whether al-Qaeda operatives could have brought down the Twin
Towers and WTC 7?
With regard to the Twin Towers, the official theory is that they
were brought down by the impact of the airplanes plus the
ensuing fires. But this theory cannot explain why the towers,
after exploding outwards at the top, came straight down, because
this type of collapse would have required all 287 of each
building's steel columns---which ran from the basement to the
roof---to have failed simultaneously; it cannot explain why the
top parts of the buildings came straight down at virtually
free-fall speed, because this required that the lower parts of
the building, with all of their steel and concrete, offered no
resistance; it cannot explain why sections of steel beams,
weighing thousands of tons, were blown out horizontally more
than 500 feet; it cannot explain why some of the steel had
melted, because this melting required temperatures far hotter
than the fires in the buildings could possibly have been; and it
cannot explain why many firefighters and WTC employees reported
massive explosions in the buildings long after all the jet-fuel
had burned up. But all of these phenomena are easily explainable
by the hypothesis that the buildings were brought down by
explosives in the procedure known as controlled demolition.120
This conclusion now constitutes the consensus of independent
physicists, chemists, architects, engineers, and demolition
experts who have studied the facts.121 For example, Edward
Munyak, a mechanical and fire protection engineer who worked in
the US departments of energy and defense, says: "The concentric
nearly freefall speed exhibited by each building was identical
to most controlled demolitions. . . . Collapse [was] not caused
by fire effects."122 Dwain Deets, the former director of the
research engineering division at NASA's Dryden Flight Research
Center, mentions the "massive structural members being hurled
horizontally" as one of the factors leaving him with "no doubt
[that] explosives were involved."123
Given the fact that WTC 7 was not even hit by a plane, its
vertical collapse at virtually free-fall speed, which also was
preceded by explosions and involved the melting of steel, was
still more obviously an example of controlled demolition.124 For
example, Jack Keller, emeritus professor of engineering at Utah
State University, who has been given special recognition by
Scientific American, said: "Obviously it was the result of
controlled demolition."125 Likewise, when Danny Jowenko---a
controlled demolition expert in the Netherlands who had not
known that WTC 7 had collapsed on 9/11---was asked to comment on
a video of its collapse, he said: "They simply blew up columns,
and the rest caved in afterwards. . . . [I]t's been imploded. .
. . A team of experts did this."126
If the Twin Towers and WTC 7 were brought down by explosives,
the question becomes: Who would have had the ability to place
the explosives? This question involves two parts: First, who
could have obtained access to the buildings for all the hours it
would have taken to plant the explosives? The answer is: Only
someone with connections to people in charge of security for the
World Trade Center.
The second part of the question is: Who, if they had such
access, would have had the expertise to engineer the controlled
demolition of these three buildings? As Jowenko's statement
indicated, the kind of controlled demolition to which these
buildings were subjected was implosion, which makes the building
come straight down. According to ImplosionWorld.com, an
implosion is "by far the trickiest type of explosive project,
and there are only a handful of blasting companies in the world
that possess enough experience . . . to perform these true
building implosions."127
Both parts of the question, therefore, rule out al-Qaeda
operatives. The destruction of the World Trade Center had to
have been an inside job.
16. Would al-Qaeda Operatives Have Imploded the Buildings?
Finally, we can also ask whether, even if al-Qaeda operatives
had possessed the ability to cause the World Trade Center
buildings to implode so as to come straight down, they would
have done so? The answer to this question becomes obvious once
we reflect upon the purpose of this kind of controlled
demolition, which is to avoid damaging near-by buildings. Had
the 110-story Twin Towers fallen over sideways, they would have
caused massive destruction in lower Manhattan, destroying dozens
of other buildings and killing tens of thousands of people.
Would al-Qaeda have had the courtesy to make sure that the
buildings came straight down?
Conclusion
All the proffered evidence that America was attacked by Muslims
on 9/11, when subjected to critical scrutiny, appears to have
been fabricated. If that is determined indeed to be the case,
the implications would be enormous. Discovering and prosecuting
the true perpetrators of the 9/11 attacks would obviously be
important. The most immediate consequence, however, should be to
reverse those attitudes and policies that have been based on the
assumption that America was attacked by Muslims on 9/11.
Continued
NEWS
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Was America Attacked by Muslims on 9/11?
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Notes
1. On the ways in which torture, extraordinary rendition,
government spying, and the military tribunals have undermined US
constitutional principles, see Louis Fisher, The Constitution
and 9/11: Recurring Threats to America's Freedoms (Lawrence:
Kansas University Press, 2008).
2. The 9/11 Commission Report: Final Report of the National
Commission on Terrorist Attacks upon the United States,
authorized edition (New York: W. W. Norton, 2004), 160
(henceforth 9/11CR).
3. 9/11CR 154.
4. Kevin Fagan, "Agents of Terror Leave Their Mark on Sin City,"
San Francisco Chronicle, 4 October 2001 (click
here
5. See ibid.; David Wedge, "Terrorists Partied with Hooker at
Hub-Area Hotel," Boston Herald, 10 October, 2001 (click
here and Jody A. Benjamin, "Suspects' Actions Don't Add Up,"
South Florida Sun-Sentinel, 16 September 2001 (click
here
6. "Terrorist Stag Parties," Wall Street Journal, 10 October
2001 (http://www.opinionjournal.com/best/?id=95001298).
7. 9/11CR 248.
8. "Meet the Press," NBC, 23 September, 2001 (click
here
9. "Remarks by the President, Secretary of the Treasury O'Neill
and Secretary of State Powell on Executive Order," White House,
24 September 2001 (click
here
10. Seymour M. Hersh, "What Went Wrong: The C.I.A. and the
Failure of American Intelligence," New Yorker, 1 October 2001 (http://cicentre.com/Documents/DOC_Hersch_OCT_01.htm).
11. "White House Warns Taliban: "-We Will Defeat You,'" CNN, 21
September 2001 (click
here
12. Office of the Prime Minister, "Responsibility for the
Terrorist Atrocities in the United States," BBC News, 4 October
2001 (click
here
13. "The Investigation and the
Evidence," BBC News, 5 October 2001 (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/1581063.stm).
14. Kathy Gannon, "Taliban Willing to Talk, But Wants U.S.
Respect," Associated Press, 1 November 2001 (click here
15. Federal Bureau of Investigation, "Most Wanted Terrorists:
Usama bin Laden" (http://www.fbi.gov/wanted/terrorists/terbinladen.htm).
16. Ed Haas, "FBI says, "-No Hard Evidence Connecting Bin Laden
to 9/11'" Muckraker Report, 6 June 2006 (http://www.teamliberty.net/id267.html).
17. See my discussion in The New Pearl Harbor Revisited: 9/11,
the Cover-Up, and the Exposé (Northampton: Olive Branch, 2008),
208-11.
18. BBC News, "Tape "-Proves Bin Laden's Guilt,'" 14 December
2001 (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/1708091.stm).
19. See "The Fake 2001 bin Laden Video Tape" (http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/osamatape.html).
20. Thomas H. Kean and Lee H. Hamilton, with Benjamin Rhodes,
Without Precedent: The Inside Story of the 9/11 Commission (New
York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2006).
21. 9/11CR 149, 155, 166.
22. See 9/11CR Ch. 5, notes 16, 41, and 92.
23. Kean and Hamilton, Without Precedent, 118.
24. Ibid., 122-24.
25. Ibid., 119.
26. Robert Windrem and Victor Limjoco, "The 9/11 Commission
Controversy," Deep Background: NBC News Investigations, 30
January 2008 (click
here
27. Tim O'Brien, "Wife of Solicitor General Alerted Him of
Hijacking from Plane," CNN, 11 September 2001 (http://archives.cnn.com/2001/US/09/11/pentagon.olson).
28. Charles Lane and John Mintz, "Bid to Thwart Hijackers May
Have Led to Pa. Crash," Washington Post, 13 September 2001 (click
here29. Kerry Hall,
"Flight Attendant Helped Fight Hijackers," News & Record
(Greensboro, N.C.), 21 September 2001 (click
here
30. 9/11CR 6.
31. Gail Sheehy, "Stewardess ID'd Hijackers Early, Transcripts
Show," New York Observer, 15 February 2004 (http://www.observer.com/node/48805).
32. "Calm Before the Crash: Flight 11 Crew Sent Key Details
Before Hitting the Twin Towers," ABC News, 18 July 2002 (click
here
33. A. K. Dewdney, "The Cellphone and Airfone Calls from Flight
UA93," Physics 911, 9 June 2003 (http://physics911.net/cellphoneflight93.htm).
For discussion of this issue, see The New Pearl Harbor
Revisited, 112-14.
34. See Debunking 9/11 Myths: Why Conspiracy Theories Can't
Stand Up to the Facts: An In-Depth Investigation by Popular
Mechanics, ed. David Dunbar and Brad Reagan (New York: Hearst
Books, 2006), 83-86.
35. Lechner FBI Affidavit; available at Four Corners:
Investigative TV Journalism (click
here Woodward and Sweeney are not identified by name in the
affidavit, which refers simply to the former as "an employee of
American Airlines at Logan" and to the latter as "a flight
attendant on AA11." But their names were revealed in an
"investigative document compiled by the FBI" to which Eric
Lichtblau referred in "Aboard Flight 11, a Chilling Voice," Los
Angeles Times, 20 September 2001 (click
here
36. 9/11CR 453n32.
37. Gail Sheehy, "9/11 Tapes Reveal Ground Personnel Muffled
Attacks," New York Observer, 24 June, 2004 (http://www.observer.com/node/49415).
38. Greg Gordon, "Prosecutors Play Flight 93 Cockpit Recording,"
McClatchy Newspapers, KnoxNews.com, 12 April 2006 (click
here The quoted statement is Gordon's paraphrase of the
testimony of "a member of the FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force."
39. See United States v. Zacarias Moussaoui, Exhibit Number
P200054 (click
here This graphics presentation can be more easily viewed in
"Detailed Account of Phone Calls from September 11th Flights" at
9-11 Research (click here
40. "The Final Moments of United Flight 93," Newsweek, 22
September 2001 (click here See "Interview with Deena Lynne
Burnett (re: phone call from hijacked flight)," 9/11 Commission,
FBI Source Documents, Chronological, September 11, 2001,
Intelfiles.com, 14 March 2008 (click
here Greg Gordon, "Widow Tells of Poignant Last Calls,"
Sacramento Bee, 11 September 2002 (click
here and Deena L. Burnett (with Anthony F. Giombetti),
Fighting Back: Living Beyond Ourselves (Longwood, Florida:
Advantage Inspirational Books, 2006), where she wrote: "I looked
at the caller ID and indeed it was Tom's cell phone number"
(61).
42. William M. Arkin, "When Seeing and Hearing Isn't Believing,"
Washington Post, 1 February 1999 (click here Although Brickhouse
Security's advertisement for Telephone Voice Changers (click
here has been modified in recent years, it previously
included a device called "FoneFaker," the ad for which said:
"Record any call you make, fake your Caller ID and change your
voice, all with one service you can use from any phone."
44. For Deena Burnett's reconstruction of the calls, see
click here
45. See The New Pearl Harbor Revisited, 122.
46. Lichtblau, "Aboard Flight 11, a Chilling Voice" (see note
34, above).
47. 9/11CR 4, 6.
48. See note 38, above.
49. 9/11CR 19.
50. Ibid.
51. "Summary of Air Traffic Hijack Events: September 11, 2001,"
FAA, 17 September 2001 (click
here
52. Frank J. Murray, "Americans Feel Touch of Evil; Fury Spurs
Unity," Washington Times, 11 September 2002 (click
here
53. "Ashcroft Says More Attacks May Be Planned," CNN, 18
September 2001 (click
here "Terrorist Hunt," ABC News (click here
54. Anne Karpf, "Uncle Sam's Lucky Finds," Guardian, 19 March
2002 (click
here Like some others, this article mistakenly said the
passport belonged to Mohamed Atta.
55. Statement by Susan Ginsburg, senior counsel to the 9/11
Commission, at the 9/11 Commission Hearing, 26 January 2004 (click
here The Commission's account reflected a CBS report that
the passport had been found "minutes after" the attack, which
was stated by the Associated Press, 27 January 2003.
56. Sheila MacVicar and Caroline Faraj, "September 11 Hijacker
Questioned in January 2001," CNN, 1 August 2002 (click
here 9/11 Commission Hearing, 26 January 2004.
57. 9/11CR 14; Jere Longman, Among the Heroes: United 93 and the
Passengers and Crew Who Fought Back (New York: HarperCollins,
2002), 215.
58. In light of the absurdity of the claims about the passports
of al-Suqami and Jarrah, we can safely assume that the ID cards
of Majed Moqed, Nawaf al-Hazmi, and Salem al-Hazmi, said to have
been discovered at the Pentagon crash site (see "9/11 and
Terrorist Travel," 9/11 Commission Staff Report [click
here 27, 42), were also planted.
59. For a photograph of the headband, see 9-11 Research, "The
Crash of Flight 93" (click
here
60. Quoted in Ross Coulthart, "Terrorists Target America,"
Ninemsn, September 2001 (click
here
61. Lechner FBI Affidavit (see note 34, above).
62. Sydney Morning Herald, 15 September 2001; Boston Globe, 18
September, 2001.
63. The 9/11 Commission's Staff
Statement No. 16, dated 16 June 2004 (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5224099),
said: "The Portland detour almost prevented Atta and Omari from
making Flight 11 out of Boston. In fact, the luggage they
checked in Portland failed to make it onto the plane."
64. 9/11CR 1-2.
65. 9/11CR 451n1; FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III, "Statement
for the Record," Joint Intelligence Committee Inquiry, 26
September 2002 (click
here
66. "Two Brothers among Hijackers," CNN Report, 13 September
2001 (click
here
67. "Feds Think They've Identified Some Hijackers," CNN, 13
September 2001 (click
here
68. "Portland Police Eye Local Ties," Associated Press,
Portsmouth Herald, 14 September 2001 (click
here
69. Joel Achenbach, "'You Never Imagine' A Hijacker Next Door,"
Washington Post, 16 September 2001 (click here Rowland Morgan
and Ian Henshall, 9/11 Revealed: The Unanswered Questions (New
York: Carroll & Graf, 2005), 181.
71. David Hench, "Ticket Agent Haunted by Brush with 9/11
Hijackers," Portland Press Herald, 6 March 2005 (http://www.spartacus.blogs.com/ticketagent.htm).
72. This photo can be seen at click here
73. Associated Press, 22 July 2004. The photo with this caption
can be seen in Morgan and Henshall, 9/11 Revealed, 117-18, along
with a genuine security video (with identification data), or at
http://killtown.911review.org/flight77/hijackers.html
(scroll half-way down).
74. Rowland and Henshall, 9/11 Revealed, 118.
75. 9/11CR 452n11.
76. Jay Kolar, "What We Now Know about the Alleged 9-11
Hijackers," in Paul Zarembka, ed., The Hidden History of 9-11
(New York: Seven Stories, 2008), 3-44, at 8 (emphasis Kolar's).
77. Richard A. Clarke, Against All Enemies: Inside America's War
on Terror (New York: Free Press, 2004), 13.
78. "Statement of Robert C. Bonner to the National Commission on
Terrorist Attacks upon the United States," 26 January 2004 (click
here
79. Ibid.
80. "FBI: Early Probe Results
Show 18 Hijackers Took Part," CNN, 13 September 2001 (click
here "List of Names of 18 Suspected Hijackers," CNN, 14
September 2001 (click
here
81. "List of Names of 18 Suspected Hijackers."
82. Gail Sheehy, "Stewardess ID'd Hijackers Early, Transcripts
Show," New York Observer, 15 February 2004 (http://www.observer.com/node/48805).
83. Satam al-Suqami replaced a man named Amer Kamfar, and
Abdulaziz al-Omari replaced a man with a similar name,
Abdulrahman al-Omari; see Kolar, "What We Now Know," 12-15.
84. Another problem with the claim that Woodward had identified
these three men is that the seat numbers reportedly used to
identify Atta and al-Omari (see Gail Sheehy, "Stewardess ID'd
Hijackers Early") did not match the numbers of the seats
assigned to these two men (9/11CR 2).
85. All four passenger manifests can be found at click here
86. Terry McDermott, Perfect Soldiers: The 9/11 Hijackers: Who
They Were, Why They Did It (New York: HarperCollins, 2005),
photo section after p. 140.
87. This is stated at "The Passengers," 911myths.com (http://911myths.com/html/the_passengers.html).
88. Although discussions on the Internet have often claimed that
these manifests were included in the FBI's evidence for the
Moussaoui trial, several researchers failed to find them. See
Jim Hoffman's discussion at
click here
89. To view them, see "Passenger Lists," 9-11 Research (click
here To download them and/or read cleaned-up versions, see
"The Passengers," 911myths.com (http://911myths.com/html/the_passengers.html).
90. "Hijackers Linked to USS Cole Attack? Investigators Have
Identified All the Hijackers; Photos to Be Released," CBS News,
14 September 2001 (click
here Elizabeth Neuffer, "Hijack Suspect Lived a Life, or a
Lie," Boston Globe, 25 September 2001 (click
here
91. "Four Planes, Four Coordinated Teams," Washington Post, 16
September 2001 (click here
92. David Dunbar and Brad Reagan, eds., Debunking 9/11 Myths:
Why Conspiracy Theories Can't Stand Up to the Facts (New York:
Hearst Books, 2006), 63.
93. Andrew M. Baker, M.D., "Human Identification in a Post-9/11
World: Attack on American Airlines Flight 77 and the Pentagon
Identification and Pathology" (click
here
94. Steve Vogel, "Remains Unidentified for 5 Pentagon Victims,"
Washington Post, 21 November 2001 (click here See my discussion
in Debunking 9/11 Debunking: An Answer to Popular Mechanics and
Other Defenders of the Official Conspiracy Theory, revised &
updated edition (Northampton: Olive Branch, 2007), 268-69.
96. "Ziad Jarrah," Wikipedia, as the article existed prior to
September 8, 2006. On that date, that passage was removed.
However, the earlier version of the article, containing the
passage, is available at
http://www.wanttoknow.info/articles/ziad_jarrah.
97. Thomas R. Olmsted, M.D. "Still
No Arabs on Flight 77," Rense.com, 23 June 2003 (http://www.rense.com/general38/77.htm).
98. 9/11CR 5.
99. David Bamford, "Hijack "-Suspect' Alive in Morocco," BBC, 22
September 2001 (click
here
100. "Hijack "-Suspects' Alive and Well," BBC News, 23 September
2001 (click here "Panoply of the Absurd," Der Spiegel, 8
September 2003 [click
here
102. Steve Herrmann, "9/11 Conspiracy Theory," The Editors, BBC
News, 27 October 2006 (click
here
103. Jay Kolar, "Update: What We Now Know about the Alleged 9-11
Hijackers," Zarembka, ed., The Hidden History of 9-11: 293-304,
at 293-94.
104. For discussion of some of these other men, see ibid.,
295-98.
105. The story "Silver Blaze" is available at Wikisource (http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Silver_Blaze).
106. "America Under Attack: How could It Happen?" CNN Live
Event, 12 September 2001 (click
here
107. Ibid. This was the "radio transmission" discussed earlier.
108. Richard A. Serrano, "Heroism, Fatalism Aboard Flight 93,"
Los Angeles Times, 12 April 2006 (click
here
109. All of these statements are contained in the section headed
"Senior Military, Intelligence, Law Enforcement, and Government
Officials" at Patriots Question 9/11 (http://www.patriotsquestion911.com).
110. "9/12/2001: CIA Veteran Doubts Bin Laden Capable of 9/11
Attacks, Suspects Larger Plot," Aidan Monaghan's Blog, 11 March
2008 (http://www.911blogger.com/blog/2074).
111. Marc Fisher and Don Phillips, "On Flight 77: "-Our Plane Is
Being Hijacked,'" Washington Post, 12 September 2001 (click here
112. "FAA Was Alerted To Sept. 11 Hijacker," CBS News, 10 May
2002 (click
here
113. Jim Yardley, "A Trainee Noted for Incompetence," New York
Times, 4 May 2002 (click here 9/11CR 242.
115. Greg Szymanski, "Former
Vietnam Combat and Commercial Pilot Firm Believer 9/11 Was
Inside Government Job," Arctic Beacon, 17 July 2005 (click here
Email from Ralph Omholt, 27 October 2006.
117. Alan Miller, "U.S. Navy 'Top Gun' Pilot Questions 911
Pentagon Story," OpedNews.com, 5 September 2007 (click here
Dunbar and Reagan, eds., Debunking 9/11 Myths, 6.
119. Ibid.
120. These problems and more are discussed in The New Pearl
Harbor Revisited, Ch. 1.
121. For such people who have been willing to go public, see
Patriots Question 9/11 (http://PatriotsQuestion911.com).
122. Patriots Question 9/11 (http://PatriotsQuestion911.com/engineers.html#Munyak).
123. Stated at Architects and Engineers for 9/11 Truth (http://www.ae911truth.org/profile.php?uid=998819).
124. For anyone aware of the facts, NIST's report on the
collapse of WTC 7, issued August 22, 2008, is laughable. For one
thing, as I had predicted (Ch. 1 of The New Pearl Harbor
Revisited), NIST simply ignored all the facts to which its fire
theory cannot do justice, such as the melted steel, the thermite
residue, and the reports of explosions in the building.
125. Architects and Engineers for 9/11 Truth (click here This
interview can be seen at "Controlled Demolition Expert and WTC7"
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k3DRhwRN06I).
A portion is contained in the film Loose Change Final Cut.
127. "The Myth of Implosion" (http://www.implosionworld.com/dyk2.html).
David Ray Griffin is professor
emeritus at Claremont School of Theology and Claremont Graduate
University, where he taught philosophy of religion and theology,
with special emphases on the problem of evil and the relations
between science and religion, theology and ecology, religion and
politics, and modernity and postmodernity. He has published 34
books, including seven about 9/11, most recently The New Pearl
Harbor Revisited: 9/11, The Cover-Up, and the Exposé (Olive
Branch, 2008). Dr. Griffin's previous books about 9/11 include
The New Pearl Harbor: Disturbing Questions about the Bush
Administration and 9/11 (2004), The 9/11 Commission Report:
Omissions and Distortions (2005), The American Empire and the
Commonwealth of God (2005, co-authored with John B. Cobb, Jr.,
Richard Falk, and Catherine Keller), Christian Faith and the
Truth about 9/11: A Call to Reflection and Action (2006), 9/11
and American Empire: Intellectuals Speak Out (2006, co-edited
with Peter Dale Scott), Debunking 9/11 Debunking: An Answer to
Popular Mechanics and Other Defenders of the Official Conspiracy
Theory (2007), and 9/11 Contradictions: An Open Letter to
Congress and the Press (2008).
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