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<title>The Flogging (Flood's Blog)</title>
<link>http://anthonyflood.powerblogs.com/</link>
<description>Expostulations by Anthony Flood</description>
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<dc:date>2007-03-08T15:03+00:00</dc:date>
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<item rdf:about="http://anthonyflood.powerblogs.com/posts/1173368182.shtml">
<title>Debunking 9/11 Debunking: Griffin Answers Critics</title>
<link>http://anthonyflood.powerblogs.com/posts/1173368182.shtml</link>
<description>...</description>
<dc:creator>Anthony Flood</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2007-03-08T15:03+00:00</dc:date>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<br />
<center><a href="/files/anthonyflood-debunking.jpg"><img src="/files/anthonyflood-debunking-small.jpg" width="220" height="220"  alt=""></a></center><br />
<b><br />
<i>Debunking 9/11 Debunking: An Answer to Popular Mechanics and Other Defenders of the Official Conspiracy Theory</i>, by David Ray Griffin</b><br />
<br />
“By virtue of his previous four books on the subject, David Ray Griffin is widely recognized as one of the leading spokespersons of the 9/11 truth movement, which rejects the official conspiracy theory about 9/11. Although this movement was long ignored by the US government and the mainstream media, recent polls have shown that (as <i>Time </i>magazine has acknowledged) the rejection of the official theory has become "a mainstream political phenomenon." It is not surprising, therefore, that the government and the corporately controlled media have shifted tactics. No longer ignoring the 9/11 truth movement, they have released a flurry of stories and reports aimed at debunking it. <br />
<br />
“In the present book, David Ray Griffin shows that these attempts can themselves be easily debunked. Besides demonstrating the pitiful failure of Debunking 9/11 Myths (published by Popular Mechanics and endorsed by Senator John McCain), Griffin riddles recent reports and stories put out by the US Department of State, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, the <i>New York Times</i>, <i>Vanity Fair</i>, and <i>Time</i> magazine. He also responds to criticisms of these efforts by left-leaning and Christian publications-which one might have expected to be supportive. <br />
<br />
“Throughout these critiques, Griffin shows that the charge that is regularly leveled against critics of the official theory--that they employ irrational and unscientific methods to defend conclusions based on faith--actually applies more fully to those who defend the official theory. <br />
<br />
“This book, by debunking the most prevalent attempts to refute the evidence cited by the 9/11 truth movement, shows that this movement's central claim--that 9/11 was an inside job-remains the only explanation that fits the facts. <br />
<br />
”David Ray Griffin is professor of philosophy of religion and theology, emeritus, at Claremont School of Theology and Claremont Graduate University in Claremont, California, where he remains a co-director of the Center for Process Studies. His 30 books include <i>The New Pearl Harbor: Disturbing Questions about the Bush Administration and 9/11 </i>(2004), <i>The 9/11 Commission Report: Omissions and Distortions </i>(2005), <i>9/11 and American Empire </i>(2006, with Peter Dale Scott).”<br />
From <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Debunking-11-Mechanics-Defenders-Conspiracy/dp/156656686X/ref=pd_bbs_sr_3/002-5798047-4332837?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1173367496&sr=8-3">Amazon</a>  <br />
<br />
Available March 30]]></content:encoded>
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<item rdf:about="http://anthonyflood.powerblogs.com/posts/1168285931.shtml">
<title>Enough with the Anti-Conspiracy Smears!</title>
<link>http://anthonyflood.powerblogs.com/posts/1168285931.shtml</link>
<description>...</description>
<dc:creator>Anthony Flood</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2007-01-08T19:01+00:00</dc:date>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<br />
<b>I submitted this to Lew Rockwell in response to Bill Barnwell's <a href="http://www.lewrockwell.com/barnwell/barnwell68.html">"Enough with the Jewish Conspiracy Theories,"</a> which appears today on LRC, but Lew tells me he doesn't publish responses.</b><br />
<br />
<b><center>*  *  *</center></b><br />
<br />
Bill Barnwell feels the need to tell others he gets e-mails from people who hold certain views about Jews and 9/11</a>.  For him, however, it isn’t enough to take them to task for their vituperation or lack of evidence for particular claims. No, this is his opportunity to show everyone he’s not an anti-Semite. <br />
<br />
He proclaims his anti-anti-Semitism in the course of smearing a line of serious questioning of governmental behavior as “paranoid delusional nonsense” that “wildly blow[s] things out of proportion.”  The anti-Semites of Barnwell’s in-box “believe that Jews are hiding under their beds each night” and “suffer from paranoid hatred of any particular racial or ethnic group [and] are able to work their targets into any conversation and blame them for any problem.”  And while these paranoids “rightfully deplore racist statements towards whites, Arabs, and others, . . . they have no problem changing their tune when it comes to Jews. As such, it makes little sense for libertarians to take these people seriously.”  <br />
<br />
So why does Barnwell take them seriously to the extent of recounting his petty annoyance on LRC?  I surmise, and I invite any needed correction, that his motive is to brand as “off-limits” certain topics even though more reasonable, less dismissible, souls pursue them.  <br />
<br />
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By the latter I mean scholars who subscribe to the <a href="http://www.amazon.com/11-American-Empire-Intellectuals-Speak/dp/1566566592">most damning indictment of the Bush administration regarding 9/11</a>, David Ray Griffin pre-eminently, some of whom, like retired Lt. Col. Karen Kwiatkowski, are regular writers for LRC.  Barnwell notes that “Conspiracy theorists on a whole are not real keen on nuance,” but that generalization certainly does not apply to distinguished philosophers like Griffin.  Barnwell does not distinguish him from that “whole,” however, and thereby creates the impression that Barnwell is inclined to let <a href="http://www.amazon.com/11-Commission-Report-Omissions-Distortions/dp/1566565847">the government’s own conspiracy theory</a> off the hook.<br />
<br />
Roderick Long recently argued here that <a href="http://www.lewrockwell.com/long/long17.html">the State is “incompetent to protect us.”</a> It is not far-fetched for libertarians to surmise that it occasionally undertakes to murder some of us.  It is a grave empirical matter, not a topic for ridicule, to weigh the probabilities of whether, in certain instances, the State has in fact done so. <br />
<br />
By “more reasonable, less dismissible, souls” I also mean scholars like the Kennedy School's Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer of The University of Chicago, who have been arguing forcefully in <a href="http://anthonyflood.powerblogs.com/posts/1159969633.shtml">debates with their critics</a> that Zionists, mostly but not only Jewish, have disproportionate influence over the conduct of U.S. foreign policy.  And what is the first stick their critics used to beat them with?  The charge of “anti-Semitism,” i.e., anti-Jewish animus.  <br />
<br />
More evidence of Barnwell’s forensic sloppiness is available here:<br />
<br />
<blockquote><br />
“I call on every LRC reader who is actually interested to do a web search and read the garbage out there "proving" the government blew up the Pentagon and/or that Jews have their hands in everything. Then make up your own minds. If you were able to recognize the reference to the paranormal talk show host who blames most things on Israel, go read his stuff too. Then you can decide for yourself if the whole rest of the world has it wrong and some guy who believes in space aliens and his gullible followers has it right.”<br />
</blockquote><br />
<br />
Barnwell, who holds two Masters degrees (in ministry and theology), invites us to read garbage, when his burden is to show that there is <i>nothing but </i>garbage promoting the hypothesis of governmental involvement in the commission of the events of 9/11. <br />
<br />
His smear tactic is indistinguishable from that of the <i>New York Sun</i> which, immediately after Mearsheimer and Walt’s thesis got mainstream attention last year, <a href="http://anthonyflood.powerblogs.com/posts/1142883948.shtml">trumpeted on page one</a> that their views were essentially those of David Duke’s.  The point was not, of course, to promote Duke, but to create a hostile environment for the reception of a scholarly defense of an anti-war thesis simply because it resembles certain positions held by Duke. <br />
<br />
Barnwell should bear in mind that for many Americans, his supernaturalist theology is not much more credible than belief in “space aliens.”  If the Golden Rule informs his next anti-anti-conspiracy sermon, he won’t engage in fallacies he would not like to see used to hold up his own cherished beliefs to ridicule.<br />
<br />
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<item rdf:about="http://anthonyflood.powerblogs.com/posts/1159202177.shtml">
<title>The Coming Embarrassment of Kean-Zelikow’s Implicit Defenders</title>
<link>http://anthonyflood.powerblogs.com/posts/1159202177.shtml</link>
<description>...</description>
<dc:creator>Anthony Flood</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2006-09-25T16:09+00:00</dc:date>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<br />
Many of those exigent minds whose high standards of probity force them to withhold their assent to the hypothesis that 9/11 was an inside job are going to have egg on their faces, and I can hardly wait.  In this gravest of public matters they will be shown to have been intellectually sloppy.  Inclining them to sloppiness is either panic about official murder impeding the advance of political agendas (whether libertarian or socialist), or tunnel vision about one or two <i>a priori </i>“what-abouts?” that are supposed to make the larger picture go away so they can go back to business as usual.  <br />
<br />
The larger picture is that the Kean-Zelikow Report is a mockery of a criminal investigation and has all the credibility of a Stalinist show-trial.  That, ladies and gentlemen, is what is at stake, not “Well, then what happened to the passengers of Flight 77?  Ya see? <ha-ha> These conspiracy guys are just daffy!”  <br />
<br />
Exigent minds have acquiesced in delinquency by major news organizations on a level that ordinarily would have had them screaming bloody murder.  In the face of bloody murder, however, their response has been to ridicule those leveling the charge.  The ridiculers are either driven by political agendas that speculations about murder can derail, or they are incarnations of the caricature of the absent-minded professor whose eyes are ever on the stars until he falls into the ditch in his path.<br />
<br />
A substantial interview with David Ray Griffin from September 5th covers a multitude of topics pertaining to 9/11 and is available <a href="http://wholelifetimes.com/2006/09/griffin0609.html">here</a>.  One salient excerpt, if I may:<br />
<blockquote><br />
A lot of people say the 9/11 Commission, which has endorsed the official account, was an impartial commission and can be believed. It was independent, there were Republicans and Democrats, and they did a deep and thorough investigation. Who are we, without their resources, to question their conclusions? <br />
</blockquote><br />
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<blockquote><br />
Who actually ran the Commission? People think it was kindly old chairman Thomas Kean, Governor of New Jersey. These commissioners we saw on TV didn’t do the work. The work was done by a staff of 75 people run by Philip Zelikow, Executive Director. He was essentially a member of the Bush/Cheney administration. He had been part of the National Security Council during the administration of the first president Bush. He and Condoleezza Rice were on that together. Then when the Republicans were out of power during the Clinton years, they wrote a book together. And you have to be very close to somebody both personally and ideologically to write a book together. Then when Rice was named national security adviser for the second president Bush, she brought Zelikow on to help with the transition to the new National Security Council. Then he was appointed by President Bush to the president’s foreign intelligence advisory board. After that then, he became chairman of the 9/11 Commission. So it was no different than if Condoleezza Rice or Dick Cheney had been running the Commission. But the press didn’t tell us this about Zelikow. They would have a few mentions of it in the <i>New York Times</i>, about the families of the victims being unhappy with Philip Zelikow. But I never saw a story spell out how closely allied he was to the Bush Administration. <br />
<br />
Now here’s something I learned from the book <i>Rise of the Vulcans </i>by James Mann. I mentioned this, the new doctrine of pre-emption, which is really a doctrine of preventive warfare. But people don’t understand, prevention sounds like a good thing, sounds better than pre-emption. So I call it the doctrine of preventive pre-emption warfare, which means that we see that some country may cause us trouble somewhere down the line—maybe five or 10 years from now—but we decide it would be easier to get rid of their weapons now than later, so we’ll just go ahead and attack them now. That was the new doctrine that was signed into existence in a document called <i>National Security Strategy of United States of America 2002</i>. And in the cover letter to that document the president himself says, “We can no longer wait until our enemies have gotten ready to attack us, we’ve got to act offensively.” And who wrote that document? Philip Zelikow. Condoleezza Rice was in charge of writing that—that’s her job as national security adviser. So she had evidently asked Philip Hoss, a subordinate to Colin Powell in the State Department, to write it. He wrote a first draft and she thought it wasn’t bold enough, so she ordered it completely rewritten and had Zelikow come in and do the writing. She and Zelikow and Stephen Hadley were the three who primarily wrote it. So here you have a guy who [helps] write the document that on the basis of 9/11 says we can get this new doctrine of pre-emptive preventive warfare that neo-cons have been wanting—the guy who most turned 9/11 into the pretext for making this US official policy. And he is the one who is a year later brought on to be the executive director of the 9/11 Commission, which is supposed to see if the White House was complicit somehow—maybe just through incompetence or for deliberately allowing it to happen or ordering a stand down operation or whatever it is, was the White House somehow involved. <br />
<br />
It’s outrageous, and the press has never talked about it. That’s what we’re talking about, an unfree press that will not reveal even the most basic facts. You wouldn’t have to argue any kind of complicity, you could say, “Isn’t this an interesting fact: The fellow who was put in charge of the 9/11 Commission was the one who wrote this document which contains this new doctrine which is so central to the Bush administration that it’s called the Bush Doctrine, this new doctrine of preventive warfare.” There’s always been a Nixon Doctrine, a Johnson Doctrine, a Carter Doctrine—this was the Bush Doctrine. <br />
<br />
Zelikow decided which topics would be investigated, and which ones not. So they did not investigate any of the evidence about Bush administration complicity and show why they had motives for this. Our motives were much more powerful than Al Qaeda’s—what were the Al Qaeda motives? They hated Americans, they hated our freedoms. Our way of life. So they would do this. It’s comic book stuff. What the American people don’t know is that basically Zelikow controlled the Commission, controlled what the reports were. And then when some things would leak through that he didn’t want in the final report, he controlled the final report, so he just deleted it. So here’s an example of a big thing that leaked through. Has to do with the Pentagon’s claim and the 9/11 Commission Report’s claim that nobody in the Pentagon knew that some aircraft was coming after them. And of course the official story is that here was Flight 77 coming back after them, and it went along for about 40 minutes, and gosh none of their radars picked that up. And so it’s an incredible story on its face. But we have actual evidence that they did know something was coming to the Pentagon. <br />
<br />
Norman Mineta, secretary of transportation, reports that he was told by Richard Clark to come to the White House. He got to the White House, went in, reported to Clark. Clark tells him he should just go on down to the underground bunker, the presidential emergency operation center, and the vice president’s already down there. And so Mineta said he got down there about 9:20am. Well he hadn’t been there very long before this young man comes in and says to the vice president that this aircraft is now 50 miles out. And pretty soon he comes back in and he says that now it’s 30 miles out. And then he comes back in and says that now it’s 10 miles out, <i>, "Do the orders still stand?" </i> And the vice president whips his head around and says that of course the orders still stand, has he heard anything differently? Then Tim Romer, commissioner, asked what time was this, how long it was after he got down there. He said it was about five or six minutes. So Romer asked if that would have been about 9:25 or 9:26? Yeah. Well then the official story is that of course the Pentagon was hit, about 9:37 or 9:38, there’s a big gap in there so there’s a problem, but nevertheless you have the testimony that something was coming towards Washington and that the vice president said yes, the orders still stand. <br />
<br />
Now Mineta says he assumed the order was to shoot the aircraft down. But whatever it was, it was not shot down, and why would the young man have asked<i>, "Do the orders still stand?," </i>if the order was to shoot it down? Of course we would shoot something down that’s coming towards us. So the order must have been not to shoot it down. So it looked like we had testimony there given to the 9/11 Commission about a stand down ordered by the vice president. Don’t shoot down the aircraft. Well what happened to that testimony? Disappears. Does not make it into the 9/11 Commission Report. <br />
</blockquote><br />
But don’t bother the Report’s implicit defenders with reasoning tied to the text of the official explanation.  Don’t bore them with ignored testimony or conflicting testimony regarding, say, stand-down orders or Dick Cheney's whereabouts.  Let us instead entertain their <i>a priori </i>conjectures.  So if they grant arguendo that explosives brought down the Towers, then let’s accommodate them by laboring to rule out the possibility that Al Qaeda infiltrated the government so as to be in a position to set the charges.  Again, if they generously entertain the idea that Bush may have sought a pretext for his pre-emptive “war on terror,” well, aren’t we now obliged to press Griffin about why didn’t Bush & Co. didn’t settle for planes crashing into the Towers? Wouldn’t that have sufficed?  Come, come!  Don’t evade the question!<br />
<br />
Griffin’s sense of humor about the whole thing is revealed in the last Q&A:<br />
<br />
<blockquote><br />
<i>Do you ever have concerns for your safety? </i><br />
<br />
I don’t worry about that because there are two choices—they can either leave me alone or they can take me out. If they leave me alone I get to enjoy my old age and write my systematic theology. If they take me out, my 9/11 books rise to number one on the <i>New York Times </i>bestseller list. So it’s a win/win situation.<br />
</blockquote><br />
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<item rdf:about="http://anthonyflood.powerblogs.com/posts/1158715972.shtml">
<title>9/11, the Rational Temper, and Temper Tantrums</title>
<link>http://anthonyflood.powerblogs.com/posts/1158715972.shtml</link>
<description>...</description>
<dc:creator>Anthony Flood</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2006-09-20T01:09+00:00</dc:date>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<br />
<a href="http://www.ksl.com/?nid=148&sid=476951"></a><br />
In an address to students in his 90th year, philosopher Brand Blanshard (1892-1987) put his finger on why it is so hard to be reasonable:<br />
<blockquote><br />
On any given subject there is just one true view.  That view may be hidden away beneath mounds of ambiguous and conflicting evidence which only a committed seeker after truth would have the determination to sift and clear away.  Yet our whole nonrational self may press upon us a simpler view of its own that unifies our nature behind it, that satisfies our sentiments regarding ourselves and our group, that cuts off the restlessness of doubt and the strain of reflective effort, that gives us the serene inner peace of being right, that has in fact only one thing against it: that it may be, and probably is, wrong.<br />
<br />
What our intelligence wants is, of course, the truth.  What the rest of our nature asks from our intelligence is not what is true but what will satisfy.  By that we mean what will appease our impulsive and emotional nature, our longing to be liked, our desire to see our future secure, our character respected, our faith vindicated, our party shown to be the party of sober sense, or nation triumphant.  When one considers how hidden and barricaded the truth commonly is, how definite it is, allowing no alternative, how feeble is our passion for it, and how overwhelming the tendencies in us to look for it through distorting prisms, the wonder is not that most of us are irrational but that some of us are as rational as we are.  (<a href="http://www.anthonyflood.com/blanshardbeingreasonable.htm">“On the Difficulties of Being Reasonable”</a>)<br />
</blockquote><br />
When it comes to 9/11, the relevance of Blanshard’s wisdom should be obvious.  A couple of recent columns exhibit the polar ends of the spectrum of reasonableness regarding how to evaluate 9/11 theories (the government’s and alternatives to it), and they provide material for today’s longer than usual post.<br />
<br />
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On Monday’s <a href="http://www.lewrockwell.com/shaffer/shaffer144.html">LewRockwell.com</a>, law professor Butler Shaffer eloquently defends, as he exemplifies, the rational temper. Implicitly amplifying Blanshard’s concerns, Shaffer regards mockers of hypotheses alternative to the Kean-Zelikow Commission Report (hereafter KZCR) as denigrators of “the epistemological inquiry that is at the base of our character and intelligence: how do we know what we know?”:<br />
<blockquote><br />
. . . To even consider the possibility that a given event might have been produced by a conspiracy, is to run the risk of being labeled a “paranoid” or a “wacko.” As we have no desire to appear foolish in the eyes of others, we give in to such intimidation and preface our opinions with the aforesaid mantra. . . . While some of these presentations [of alternative 9/11 hypotheses] test one’s credulity, others have provided purported evidence which, if true, would lead intelligent minds to demand further investigation. To say this, however, is not to give credence to any particular theory that one might offer as a counter-explanation to the “official” one. It is only to suggest that a further examination might be merited.<br />
<br />
To ask empirically based questions is not to make an accusation, but only to pursue the “cui bono?” question as a point of departure for uncovering wrongdoing. . . . The answer to the “cui bono” question does not necessarily identify the culprit, but it is a very rational place from which to begin asking questions. To be a suspect is not to be accused. . . . <br />
</blockquote><br />
Professor Shaffer then draws upon the Wikipedia entry for <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Northwoods">“Operation Northwoods,”</a> a “black-flag operation” that the U. S. military never carried out, but incontrovertibly planned:<br />
<blockquote><br />
. . . The plan was to have terrorist acts committed in various American cities—including Washington, D.C.—in which people would be shot; bombings would take place and planes hijacked; while “evidence” would be fabricated implicating the Castro regime with such acts. One proposal in the plan called for the destruction of an empty drone plane – which, people would be told, carried American college students on a holiday. All of these contrived “attacks” would then be used as a justification for an attack on Cuba. This plan had the written support of all members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, including its chairman [General Lyman L. Lemnitzer—AF].<br />
</blockquote><br />
The necessary caveat follows:<br />
<blockquote><br />
That top U.S. government officials could concoct such a deadly plan as a pretext for war in no way proves that 9/11 was a similarly contrived event. What it does do, however, is strip away some of the high-school civics class veneer of the state that leads most Americans . . . to dismiss in knee-jerk fashion and without any felt need to examine the evidence, the idea that their government could engage in such calculated wrongdoing. . . . <br />
</blockquote><br />
Shaffer will not be misunderstood:<br />
<blockquote><br />
I want to emphasize, again, that I am not even suggesting that persons other than Al Qaeda operatives were responsible for the 9/11 attacks. . . . I am, however, suggesting that a number of critics of the “official” explanation have offered enough thoughtful evidence and factual analysis to warrant a thorough investigation of these events. The inquiry should be conducted by competent men and women with no preconceived agenda – whether as defenders or critics of governmental behavior – and without fear of asking any and all empirically related questions. <br />
</blockquote><br />
Shaffer’s words imply that KZCR does not qualify as the needed “thorough investigation.”  To show it does not qualify has been David Ray Griffin’s explicit burden in recent years.  To the degree that he has shouldered it successfully, to that degree he is within his cognitive rights to offer an alternative explanation.  <br />
<br />
But Griffin’s critics do not condescend to rebut his putative refutation.  Their practice demonstrates a preference for pecking away at one or two of his sentences outside the context of that substantial effort.  They apparently do not accept the latter, but will not say why.  They seem content to try to discredit Griffin’s alternative theory.  But if his refutation remains unanswered, their views on his alternative are irrelevant.  <br />
<br />
Professor Shaffer concludes:<br />
<blockquote><br />
Suspicion and guilt are not synonymous words. At the same time, however, intellectually respectable thinking demands a willingness to pursue any inquiry wherever it may lead. . . . But there is another factor – what I call “existential courage” – that must remain at the forefront of our efforts to live as human beings, rather than as servo-mechanisms to the institutional order. . . . What have we become that we regard any questioning of this arrangement as the products of “irresponsible” or “paranoid” minds? Why should free and energized minds be fearful of asking any questions, particularly those we have been told it is improper to ask?<br />
</blockquote><br />
I endorse Professor Shaffer’s article in letter and in spirit.  As if to supply him with a current illustration of what we need existential courage to stomach, Alexander Cockburn arrives on the scene with one of his more poorly reasoned (and copyedited) rants.  Expanding his recent piece in <i>The Nation</i>, <a href="http://www.counterpunch.org/cockburn09092006.html">this performance</a> begins: <br />
<blockquote><br />
You trip over one fundamental idiocy of the 9/11 conspiracy nuts—the ones who say Bush and Cheney masterminded the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon—in the first paragraph of the opening page of the book by one of their high priests, David Ray Griffin, <i>The New Pearl Harbor</i>. “In many respects,” Griffin writes, “the strongest evidence provided by critics of the official account involves the events of 9/11 itself… In light of standard procedures for dealing with hijacked airplanes… not one of these planes should have reached its target, let alone all three of them.”  <br />
</blockquote><br />
It goes downhill from there.  <br />
<br />
The people who have a problem with KZCR are “nuts”—an epithet he monotonously employs a dozen times (not counting the title).  Between two citations of Griffin in his second paragraph, Cockburn observes that “[o]ne characteristic of the nuts is that they have a devout, albeit preposterous belief in American efficiency, thus many of them start with the racist premise that ‘Arabs in caves’ weren’t capable of the mission.”  Inadvertently or not, Cockburn creates the impression that this characterization of Arabs is owned by Griffin, the eminently gracious and liberal Christian theologian of deep religious pluralism.  <br />
<br />
Whether it was substantively, not just theoretically, possible that Laden, Atta & Co. could have arranged to satisfy all the conditions necessary for the events of 9/11 to unfold—the free-fall collapse of the Towers’ inner cores, the NORAD-FAA communications foul-up, the put options on the hi-jacked airlines, to name a few—is a topic worthy of reasonable people to consider.  Cockburn’s attempt to rule it out of court simply by smearing Griffin reveals more about Cockburn’s mentality than Griffin’s.<br />
<br />
Cockburn’s exercise in character assassination takes a break to deliver some down-home realism about how the world allegedly works.  This strategy of evading the evidence against KZCR surfaces frequently in debates.  One hears, for instance, of the “raw absurdity of life,” a phrase found in the recent <i>Washington Post </i><a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/07/AR2006090701669.html">article</a> which absurdity, I guess, is superior in explanatory power to human action: <br />
<blockquote><br />
They [i.e., the “nuts”] appear to have read no military history, which is too bad because if they did they’d know that minutely planned operations—let alone responses to an unprecedented emergency—screw up with monotonous regularity, by reason of stupidity, cowardice, venality, weather and all the other whims of providence. <br />
</blockquote><br />
Apparently they screw up except when carried out by Al Qaeda, in which case everything gels and plan-implementation whirrs like a Switch watch.  <br />
<br />
And certain contributors to the recently published <i>9/11 and the American Empire: Intellectuals Speak Out</i>, e.g., Princeton’s Richard Falk, University of Basel’s Danielle Ganser, or (Oslo-based) International Peace Research Institute’s Ola Tunander, will be dismayed to hear that they “appear to have read no military history” (assuming they care what Alexander Cockburn thinks). I cannot recommend <i>9/11 and the American Empire</i>, edited by Griffin and Peter Dale Scott, too highly.<br />
<br />
Cockburn frames the controversy as a forensic battle between prosecution (here, the good guys) and defense (the bad guys).  He suggests that KZCR’s disparagers are like those infamous defense lawyers who get murderers (Al Qaeda) off by exploiting weaknesses in the prosecution’s case (KZCR). <br />
<blockquote><br />
. . . minute focus of a death penalty defense team on one such weak link often leads to a distorted view of the whole case. I remember more than one case where, after weeks of interviewing witnesses at one particular crime scene, the defense’s investigator had collected enough witness reports to mount a decent attack on this aspect of the prosecution’s overall case. . . . But when . . . I saw the prosecution’s whole case . . . it became clear enough to me . . . that the accused were incontestably guilty. But even then, such cases had a vigorous afterlife, with the defense trying to muster up grounds for an appeal, on the basis of testimony and evidence withheld by the prosecution, faulty rulings by the judge, a prejudiced jury member and so on. A seemingly “cut and dried case” is very rarely beyond challenge, even though in essence it actually may well be just that, “cut and dried.” <br />
</blockquote><br />
Translation:  9/11 nuts disserve society as a de facto murderer’s “dream team” who drone the political equivalent of “if the gloves don’t fit, you must acquit.”  Of course, this begs the question, namely, who’s guilty and therefore in need of such expert assistance to escape justice.<br />
<br />
Cockburn might take a look at some of his unwitting allies.  When BYU Physics Professor Steven Jones was reported to have claimed that terrorists could not have set the explosive charges which, according to his hypothesis, brought down the Twin Towers, a decidedly non-leftist <a href="http://maverickphilosopher.powerblogs.com/posts/1157842256.shtml">philosopher</a> whom I respect ignored Jones detailed argument for the hypothesis and instead raised, rather abstractly, a mere non-impossibility (greater-than-zero probability).  <br />
<br />
What is that theoretical possibility?  That al-Qaeda could have infiltrated the government and subsequently set the charges undetected.  He provided no evidence, but only conjectured the theoretical (i.e. , non-contradictory) possibility that, for all that Jones has shown to the contrary, might actually be the case.  <br />
<br />
Now, does this philosopher accept Jones’ hypothesis of controlled demolition, remaining agnostic only about the charge-setters’ identity?  He doesn’t say.  Instead he ends his post with “Epicycle upon epicycle . . . .”  without explaining the precise relevance of a certain episode in the history of science to Jones’ rejection of KZCR.  <br />
<br />
The desperate attempt to save a hypothesis at all costs more accurately describes the engineers who keep tweaking their computer models until they get the results that conform to KZCR (who came to their conclusions without their expertise).  I understand that the engineering report that will show how Tower No. 7 collapsed won’t be ready until next year!  Epicycle upon epicycle indeed.<br />
<br />
(Incidentally, the above-linked article says the “State Department has released a rebuttal to Jones' theory in a 10-thousand page report.” Ten thousand pages to rebut a paper that takes up 31 pages, including reference notes, in <i>9/11 and the American Empire: Intellectuals Speak Out</i>?  That’s a ratio of more than 322:1, or one fat book per page.  Sounds like government to me.) <br />
<br />
<i>The 9/11 Commission Report: Omissions and Distortions </i>by Griffin <i>was </i>an examination of the “whole case.”  Cockburn just doesn’t like Griffin’s conclusions, so he ridicules them and its author.  He knocks the stuffing out of his imagination’s strawmen, but leaves Griffin’s exercise in reasonableness standing.<br />
<br />
Griffin himself employs the courtroom analogy differently, taking on the role of prosecuting attorney himself with the Bush administration as the defendant.  In another book he co-authored earlier this year, Griffin claims that the failure of KZCR “to answer the prima facie case for the claim that the Bush administration was itself responsible for 9/11” is forensically significant: <br />
<blockquote><br />
In a criminal trial, it is the responsibility of the defense attorneys, once the prima facie case has been made, to rebut the various kinds of evidence presented by the prosecuting attorneys. If they fail to do this, then the prima facie case is deemed by the judge or the jury to be conclusive.  The 9/11 Commission had the opportunity to rebut the prima facie case against the Bush administration but failed to do so.  It would not be unreasonable, therefore, to conclude that the prima facie case can now be considered a conclusive case. (<i>The American Empire and the Commonwealth of God</i>, Westminster John Knox Press, 2006, p. 21)<br />
</blockquote><br />
As he put it <a href="http://www.anthonyflood.com/griffin911mythandreality.htm">elsewhere</a>, “the official story has never been publicly defended against informed criticism by any member of NIST, the 9/11 Commission, or the Bush administration.”  Let’s put that in the active voice: <br />
<br />
<center><i><b>No member of NIST, the 9/11 Commission, or the Bush administration has ever defended the official story against informed criticism.  </b></i></center><br />
And neither has Alexander Cockburn.<br />
<br />
Certain leftist theoreticians give the impression that were they to become convinced that Griffin was right to pin 9/11 on the Bush administration, they would, apparently, be distressed.  Why?  Because to their ideological way of thinking, that truth would take many an activist’s eye off the main enemy.  And so Cockburn laments:<br />
<blockquote><br />
The nuts disdain the real world because, like much of the left and liberal sectors, they have promoted Bush, Cheney and the Neo-Cons to an elevated status as the Arch Demons of American history, instead of being just one more team running the American empire, a team of more than usual stupidity and incompetence (characteristics I personally favor in imperial leaders.) The Conspiracy Nuts have combined to produce a huge distraction . . . .<br />
</blockquote><br />
Ergo, the 9/11 nuts couldn’t be right.  Period.<br />
<br />
But such ideological types have nothing to fear on this score.  From believing that KZCR is a “571-page lie” (Griffin) nothing political follows apodictically.  My fallible, probable judgment that Griffin has made a sustainable case against the Bush gang does not entail, for example, that I must enlist in his campaign for “global democratic governance.”  Flood the anarchocapitalist anti-democrat and Griffin the anti-capitalist global democrat are politically “poles apart.”   In particular, I deem his idea that international anarchy is (in the sense he specifies) a “cause of war” to be gravely mistaken, and I am working on an article that shows why.  <br />
<br />
Why some of Griffin’s fellow socialists and some of my fellow libertarians view interest in the etiology of 9/11 as a distraction will remain a mystery to me.  If libertarians may argue that <a href="http://www.lewrockwell.com/long/long17.html">the State cannot protect its citizens</a>, <i>a fortiori </i>they may suggest, if the facts so warrant, that in at least one instance a state directly murdered many of them.   <br />
<br />
I’m sure Griffin has no qualms about the support and even collaboration his efforts have enjoyed from Paul Craig Roberts, Karen Kwiatkowski, Morgan Reynolds, or any other contributor to LewRockwell.com.<br />
<br />
Instead of barricading ourselves in our respective ideological cocoons, peering at each other through “distorting prisms,” and casting each other into outer darkness as “nuts,” let us together storm the barricades that conceal the truth.   <br />
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<title>What If CBS News Reported And Nobody Listened?</title>
<link>http://anthonyflood.powerblogs.com/posts/1158441906.shtml</link>
<description>...</description>
<dc:creator>Anthony Flood</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2006-09-16T21:09+00:00</dc:date>
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September 10, 2006<br />
<br />
Mr. Armen Keteyian<br />
The CBS Evening News <br />
524 West 57th St. <br />
New York, NY 10019 <br />
<br />
Dear Mr. Keteyian,<br />
<br />
As I watched your report, <a href="http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/09/08/eveningnews/main1989462.shtml">“Making Our Skies Safer,”</a> last Friday, re-watched it, and read its transcript, I wondered why CBS News still acts as it did when only a few networks, magazines, and newspapers shaped its audience’s view of the world.  That the world’s mightiest Air Force, ready for almost fifty years to take on the Soviet Union at a moment’s notice, simply “could not see what the FAA could see” is antecedently incredible.  Their officers’ feigning, in 2006, “gosh-we-sure-fouled-up-that-day-but-that-ain’t-never-gonna-happen-again” insults our intelligence.  <br />
<br />
Two years before 9/11, President Clinton thanked the FAA and the Air Force for cooperating to escort, and endeavor to provide assistance to, a Learjet that went off the reservation, meandered over the skies of America with no one at the controls, and crashed killing all six on board, including golfer Payne Stewart.  You can read the original Dallas Morning News story <a href="http://www.wanttoknow.info/991026dallasmorningnews">here</a> and CNN’s <a href="http://www.cnn.com/US/9910/26/shootdown/">here</a> Here’s how this event struck retired Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Karen Kwiatkowski, who worked in the Pentagon on 9/11 (and is being copied on this message):<br />
<blockquote><br />
The [9/11] Commission concluded that the FAA was not really capable of giving the military what it needed to know.  Things have certainly gone downhill since 1999, when Payne Stewart’s twin engine Learjet quietly drifted off its flight plan, and was escorted by military jets from Eglin AFB and Tyndall AFB in Florida, ANG out of Tulsa, and out of Fargo, for several hours across several states before it ran out of gas and crashed in South Dakota.  The difference was that Stewart was just a guy in a single private plane off course with no explanation, while on 9/11, it was one, no two, wait—three, I mean four, jumbo passenger jets.  Unlike Stewart’s plane, which simply left its flight plan and was unresponsive, the FAA actually had hijack warnings on AA 11 at 89 AM and UA 175 at 8:521 AM.  After two hijack warnings, AA 77 made an unauthorized turn at 8:54 AM.  The Herndon Control Center knew UA 93 was hijacked at 9:34.<br />
<br />
The Commission reports the first fighter jets from Otis ANG Base were scrambled for AA 11 thirty-four minutes after the first hijack alert and again, from Langley AFB, a half hour or so later.  At 10:38, fighter jets from Andrews AFB were airborne.  None had a visual on any of the four planes until it was too late.  In 1999, more military jets were on the job watching a lone Learjet over the Midwest than in the 2001 response to multiple hijacks on the densely populated East Coast. [Karen Kwiatkowski, “Assessing the Official 9/11 Conspiracy Theory,” in 9/11 and the American Empire: Intellectuals Speak Out, David Ray Griffin and Peter Dale Scott, eds., Northhampton, MA: Olive Branch Press, 2007 [sic], p. 23.<br />
</blockquote><br />
And yet no heads rolled either at the FAA or the Air Force after what can only be described (at least at first glance) as a display of a level of incompetence indistinguishable from criminal neglect.  <br />
<br />
Philosopher and theologian David Ray Griffin (who is also being copied) has repeatedly demonstrated, however, that incompetence cannot explain the failure of so many systems that day.  A stand-down order, however, does.  Below this letter I have appended one of his popular, yet documented, presentations of his examination of the Air Force’s series of tales.<br />
<br />
Last week Time reported that according an August Scripps-Howard poll “36% of Americans consider it ‘very likely’ or ‘somewhat likely’ that government officials either allowed the attacks to be carried out or carried out the attacks themselves.  Thirty-six percent adds up to a lot of people.  This is not a fringe phenomenon.  It is mainstream political reality.”  (Sep. 11, 2006, p. 46).  The Washington Post explored this reality in last Friday’s edition (Michael Powell, <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/07/AR2006090701669.html">“The Disbelievers: 9/11 Conspiracy Theorists Are Building Their Case Against the Government From Ground Zero,”</a> Sep. 8, 2006).<br />
<br />
Perhaps the CBS News’ future investigations into 9/11 will reflect cognizance of that reality.<br />
<br />
<center><b><a href="http://www.anthonyflood.com/griffin911mythandreality.htm">9/11: The Myth and the Reality</a> (Excerpt)<br />
David Ray Griffin <br />
Myth Number 7: US officials have explained why the hijacked airliners were not intercepted.</b></center><br />
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Actually, there is a sense in which this statement is true. US officials have explained why the US military did not prevent the attacks. The problem, however, is that they have given three explanations, each of which is contradicted by the others and none of which is a satisfactory explanation. I will explain. <br />
<br />
According to standard operating procedures, if an FAA flight controller notices anything that suggests a possible hijacking, the controller is to contact a superior. If the problem cannot be fixed quickly (within about a minute), the superior is to ask NORAD—the North American Aerospace Defense Command—to send up, or "scramble," jet fighters to find out what is going on. NORAD then issues a scramble order to the nearest air force base with fighters on alert. <br />
<br />
The jet fighters at NORAD's disposal could respond very quickly: According to the US Air Force website, F-15s can go from "scramble order" to 29,000 feet in only 2.5 minutes, after which they can fly over 1800 miles per hour.50 Therefore--according to General Ralph Eberhart, the head of NORAD—after the FAA senses that something is wrong, "it takes about one minute" for it to contact NORAD, after which, according to a spokesperson, NORAD can scramble fighter jets "within a matter of minutes to anywhere in the United States."51 These statements were, to be sure, made after 9/11, so we might suspect that they reflect a post-9/11 speed-up in procedures. But an Air Traffic Control document put out in 1998 warned pilots that any airplanes persisting in unusual behavior "will likely find two [jet fighters] on their tail within 10 or so minutes."52 <br />
<br />
If these procedures had been carried out on the morning of 9/11, AA Flight 11 and UA Flight 175 would have been intercepted before they could have reached Manhattan, and AA Flight 77 would have been intercepted long before it could have reached the Pentagon. <br />
<br />
Such interceptions are routine, being carried out about 100 times a year. A month after 9/11, the Calgary Herald reported that in the year 2000, NORAD had scrambled fighters 129 times. Do these scrambles regularly result in interceptions? Just a few days after 9/11, Major Mike Snyder, a NORAD spokesperson, told the Boston Globe that "[NORAD's] fighters routinely intercept aircraft."53 Why did such interceptions not occur on 9/11? <br />
<br />
During the first few days, the public was told that no fighter jets were sent up until after the strike on the Pentagon at 9:38. However, it was also reported that signs of Flight 11's hijacking had been observed at 8:15. That would mean that although interceptions usually occur within "10 or so" minutes after signs of trouble are observed, in this case 80 or so minutes had elapsed before fighters were even airborne. This story suggested that a "stand-down" order had been issued. <br />
<br />
Within a few days, however, a second story was put out, according to which NORAD had sent up fighters but, because notification from the FAA had been very slow in coming, the fighters arrived too late. On September 18, NORAD made this second story official, embodying it in a timeline, which indicated when NORAD had been notified by the FAA about each airplane and when it had scrambled fighters in response.54 <br />
<br />
Critics showed, however, that even if the FAA notifications had come as late as NORAD's timeline indicated, NORAD's jets would have had time to make the interceptions.55 This second story did not, therefore, remove the suspicion that a stand-down order had been given. <br />
<br />
Hoping to overcome this problem, The 9/11 Commission Report provided a third account, according to which, contrary to NORAD's timeline of September 18, 2001, the FAA did not notify NORAD about Flight 175 until after it had struck the south tower or about Flight 77 until after it had struck the Pentagon. But there are serious problems with this third story. <br />
<br />
One problem is the very fact that it is the third story. Normally, when a suspect in a criminal investigation keeps changing his story, we get suspicious. Let's say that the police ask Charlie Jones where he was Saturday night. He says he was at the movie theater, but they say, "No, the movie theater has been closed all week." Then Charlie says, "Oh, that's right, I was with my girl friend." But, the police say, "No, we checked with her and she was home with her husband." If at that point Charlie says, "Oh, now I remember, I was home reading my Bible," you are probably not going to believe him. And yet that's what we have here. The military told one story right after 9/11, another story a week later, and a third story through The 9/11 Commission Report in 2004. <br />
<br />
A second problem with this third story is that it contradicts several features of the second story, which had served as the official story for almost three years. <br />
<br />
For example, NORAD's timeline of September 18, 2001, had indicated that the FAA had notified it about Flight 175 exactly 20 minutes before it hit its target and about Flight 77 some 14 minutes before the Pentagon was struck. The 9/11 Commission maintains that both of these statements were "incorrect"—that, really, there had been no notification about these flights until after they hit their targets. This, it claims, is why the military had failed to intercept them.56 But if NORAD's timeline was false, as the Commission now claims, NORAD must have been either lying or confused. But it is hard to believe that it could have been confused one week after 9/11. So it must have been lying. But if the military's second story was a lie, why should we believe this third one? <br />
<br />
Further scepticism about this third story arises from the fact that it is contradicted by considerable evidence. For example, the Commission's claim that the military did not know about Flight 175 until it crashed is contradicted by a report involving Captain Michael Jellinek, a Canadian who on 9/11 was overseeing NORAD's headquarters in Colorado. According to a story in the Toronto Star, Jellinek was on the phone with NORAD as he watched Flight 175 crash into the south tower. He then asked NORAD: "Was that the hijacked aircraft you were dealing with?"--to which NORAD said "yes."57 <br />
<br />
The 9/11 Commission's claims about Flights 175 and 77 are also contradicted by a memo sent to the Commission by Laura Brown of the FAA. Her memo stated that at about 8:50 the FAA had set up a teleconference, in which it started sharing information with the military about all flights. She specifically mentioned Flight 77, indicating that the FAA had been sharing information about it even before the formal notification time of 9:24. Her memo, which is available on the Web,58 was discussed by the 9/11 Commission and read into its record on May 23, 2003.59 But Zelikow's 9/11 Commission Report fails to mention this memo. <br />
<br />
Because of these and still more problems, which I have discussed in my book on the 9/11 Commission's report and also in a lecture called "Flights of Fancy",60 this third story does not remove the grounds for suspicion that a stand-down order had been issued. <br />
<br />
There is, moreover, ear-witness testimony for this suspicion. An upper management official at LAX, who needs to remain anonymous, has told me that he overheard members of LAX Security--including officers from the FBI and LAPD—interacting on their walkie-talkies shortly after the attacks. In some cases, he could hear both sides of the conversation. At first, the LAX officials were told that the airplanes that attacked World Trade Center and the Pentagon had not been intercepted because the FAA had not notified NORAD about the hijackings. But later, he reports, they were told that NORAD had been notified but did not respond because it had been "ordered to stand down." When LAX security officials asked who had issued that order, they were told that it had come "from the highest level of the White House."61 <br />
 <br />
50.Cited in Griffin, The 9/11 Commission Report: Omissions and Distortions, 140. <br />
<br />
51. Ibid. <br />
<br />
52. Ibid., 141. <br />
<br />
53.See the Calgary Herald, Oct. 13, 2001, and Glen Johnson, "Otis Fighter Jets Scrambled Too Late to Halt the Attacks," Boston Globe, Sept. 15, 2001. At an average of 100 scrambles a year, fighters would have been scrambled about 1000 times in the decade prior to 9/11. One of the many falsehoods in an essay entitled "9/11: Debunking Myths," which was published by Popular Mechanics (March 2005), is its claim that in the decade before 9/11, there had been only one interception, that of golfer Payne Stewart's Learjet. This essay's "senior researcher," 25-year old Benjamin Chertoff, has (on a radio show) tried to reconcile this claim with the fact that fighters are scrambled about 100 times per year by saying that these statements speak only of scrambles, not interceptions. But Chertoff's position would require the claim that only one of the 1000 scrambles in that period resulted in interceptions—that the other 999 fighters were called back before they actually made the interception. Besides being highly improbable, this interpretation contradicts Major Snyder's statement that interceptions are carried out routinely. <br />
<br />
54.Griffin, The 9/11 Commission Report: Omissions and Distortions, 141-43. <br />
<br />
55. Ibid., 139-48. <br />
<br />
56. Ibid., 192. <br />
<br />
57. Ibid., 176. <br />
<br />
58. Laura Brown, "FAA Communications with NORAD on September 11, 2001," available online. <br />
<br />
59.National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, May 23, 2003. Commissioner Richard Ben-Veniste, who read the memo into the record, reported that he had been told that it had been authored by two "high level individuals at FAA, Mr. Asmus and Ms. Schuessler." However, I was told by Laura Brown during a telephone conversation on August 15, 2004, that she had written the memo. <br />
<br />
60.Griffin, The 9/11 Commission Report: Omissions and Distortions, 155-226; "Flights of Fancy: The 9/11 Commission's Incredible Tales of Flights 11, 175, 77, and 93," Global Outlook, 12 (Fall-Winter 2006), and in Christian Faith and the Truth behind 9/11 (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2006). <br />
<br />
61."My Observation of LAX Security Events on 9/11," by an Upper Management LAX Official. Although this official needs to remain anonymous, he has said that he would be willing to take a polygraph test if his anonymity could be protected.<br />
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<title>Explosions . . .</title>
<link>http://anthonyflood.powerblogs.com/posts/1157990540.shtml</link>
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<dc:creator>Anthony Flood</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2006-09-11T16:09+00:00</dc:date>
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. . . on the lower floors and in the basement of the Twin Towers are the focal point of a 17.5-minute <a href="http://www.usmob.com/land%20mark%20tower%20911.wvx">documentary</a> consisting wholly of on-the-scene video and print reports from 9/11, illustrated by many examples of controlled demolition.  <br />
<br />
Listen to reporters, fire fighters, police, and 20-year WTC veteran janitor Willie Rodriguez give their raw, earwitness testimony.  <br />
<br />
Listen to and watch Larry Silverstein recall the decision to “Pull it” . . . “it” being Tower 7, not hit by any plane.  <br />
<br />
Who had the opportunity to install the charges and when?  See for yourself (at 15:25).   <br />
<br />
All of this was beneath the notice of the august Kean-Zelikow Commission.  <br />
<br />
Of course, if you simply don't want to have an insight into the data, which insight may force you deliver a socially forbidden judgment, then you must avoid every occasion of receiving the data.<br />
<br />
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<title>The 9/11 Commission Report: A 571 Page Lie </title>
<link>http://anthonyflood.powerblogs.com/posts/1157979022.shtml</link>
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<dc:creator>Anthony Flood</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2006-09-11T12:09+00:00</dc:date>
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<b>“. . . the official story has never been publicly defended against informed criticism by any member of NIST, the 9/11 Commission, or the Bush administration.” David Ray Griffin, <a href="http://www.anthonyflood.com/griffin911mythandreality.htm">“9/11: The Myth and The Reality,”</a> March 30, 2006  </b><br />
<br />
<a href="www.globalresearch.ca/PrintArticle.php?articleId=907"><b>The 9/11 Commission Report: A 571 Page Lie</b></a> <br />
<br />
<b>By Dr. David Ray Griffin</b><br />
<br />
September 8, 2005<br />
<br />
In discussing my second 9/11 book, <i>The 9/11 Commission Report: Omissions and Distortions</i>, I have often said, only half in jest, that a better title might have been "a 571-page lie." (Actually, I was saying "a 567-page lie," because I was forgetting to count the four pages of the Preface.) In making this statement, one of my points has been that the entire <i>Report </i>is constructed in support of one big lie: that the official story about 9/11 is true.<br />
<br />
Another point, however, is that in the process of telling this overall lie, <i>The 9/11 Commission Report </i>tells many lies about particular issues.  This point is implied by my critique's subtitle, "Omissions and Distortions." It might be thought, to be sure, that of the two types of problems signaled by those two terms, only those designated "distortions" can be considered lies.<br />
<br />
It is better, however, to understand the two terms as referring to two types of lies: implicit and explicit. We have an explicit lie when the Report claims that the core of each of the Twin Towers consisted of a hollow steel shaft or when it claims that Vice President Cheney did not give the shoot-down order until after 10:10 that morning. But we have an implicit lie when the Commission, in its discussion of the 19 alleged suicide hijackers, omits the fact that at least six of them have credibly been reported to be still alive, or when it fails to mention the fact that Building 7 of the World Trade Center collapsed. Such omissions are implicit lies partly because they show that the Commission did not honor its stated intention "to provide the fullest possible account of the events surrounding 9/11." They are also lies insofar as the Commission could avoid telling an explicit lie about the issue in question only by not mentioning it, which, I believe, was the case in at least most instances.<br />
<br />
Given these two types of lies, it might be wondered how many lies are contained in <i>The 9/11 Commission Report </i>. I do not know. But, deciding to see how many lies I had discussed in my book, I found that I had identified over 100 of them. Once I had made the list, it occurred to me that others might find this summary helpful. Hence this article.<br />
<br />
One caveat: Although in some of the cases it is obvious that the Commission has lied, in other cases I would say, as I make clear in the book, that it appears that the Commission has lied. However, in the interests of simply giving a brief listing of claims that I consider to be lies, I will ignore this distinction between obvious and probable lies, leaving it to readers, if they wish, to look up the discussion in <i>The 9/11 Commission Report: Omissions and Distortions</i>. For ease in doing this, I have parenthetically indicated the pages of the book on which the various issues are discussed.<br />
<br />
Given this clarification, I now list the omissions and claims of <i>The 9/11 Commission Report</i> that I, in my critique of that report, portrayed as lies:<br />
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1. The omission of evidence that at least six of the alleged hijackers - including Waleed al-Shehri, said by the Commission probably to have stabbed a flight attendant on Flight 11 before it crashed into the North Tower of the WTC - are still alive (19-20).<br />
<br />
2. The omission of evidence about Mohamed Atta - such as his reported fondness for alcohol, pork, and lap dances &mdash; that is in tension with the Commission's claim that he had become fanatically religious (20-21).<br />
<br />
3. The obfuscation of the evidence that Hani Hanjour was too poor a pilot to have flown an airliner into the Pentagon (21-22).<br />
<br />
4. The omission of the fact that the publicly released flight manifests contain no Arab names (23).<br />
<br />
5. The omission of the fact that fire has never, before or after 9/11, caused steel-frame buildings to collapse (25). <br />
<br />
6. The omission of the fact that the fires in the Twin Towers were not very big, very hot, or very long-lasting compared with fires in several steel-frame buildings that did not collapse (25-26). <br />
<br />
7. The omission of the fact that, given the hypothesis that the collapses were caused by fire, the South Tower, which was struck later than the North Tower and also had smaller fires, should not have collapsed first (26). <br />
<br />
8. The omission of the fact that WTC 7 (which was not hit by an airplane and which had only small, localized fires) also collapsed - an occurrence that FEMA admitted it could not explain (26). <br />
<br />
9. The omission of the fact that the collapse of the Twin Towers (like that of Building 7) exemplified at least 10 features suggestive of controlled demolition (26-27).<br />
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10. The claim that the core of each of the Twin Towers was "a hollow steel shaft" - a claim that denied the existence of the 47 massive steel columns that in reality constituted the core of each tower and that, given the "pancake theory" of the collapses, should have still been sticking up many hundreds of feet in the air (27-28). <br />
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11. The omission of Larry Silverstein's statement that he and the fire department commander decided to "pull" Building 7 (28). <br />
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12. The omission of the fact that the steel from the WTC buildings was quickly removed from the crime scene and shipped overseas before it could be analyzed for evidence of explosives (30). <br />
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13. The omission of the fact that because Building 7 had been evacuated before it collapsed, the official reason for the rapid removal of the steel - that some people might still be alive in the rubble under the steel - made no sense in this case (30). <br />
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14. The omission of Mayor Giuliani's statement that he had received word that the World Trade Center was going to collapse (30-31). <br />
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15. The omission of the fact that President Bush's brother Marvin and his cousin Wirt Walker III were both principals in the company in charge of security for the WTC (31-32). <br />
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16. The omission of the fact that the west wing of the Pentagon would have been the least likely spot to be targeted by al-Qaeda terrorists, for several reasons (33-34). <br />
<br />
17. The omission of any discussion of whether the damage done to the Pentagon was consistent with the impact of a Boeing 757 going several hundred miles per hour (34). <br />
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18. The omission of the fact that there are photos showing that the west wing's façade did not collapse until 30 minutes after the strike and also that the entrance hole appears too small for a Boeing 757 to have entered (34). <br />
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19. The omission of all testimony that has been used to cast doubt on whether remains of a Boeing 757 were visible either inside or outside the Pentagon (34-36). <br />
<br />
20. The omission of any discussion of whether the Pentagon has a anti-missile defense system that would have brought down a commercial airliner - even though the Commission suggested that the al-Qaeda terrorists did not attack a nuclear power plant because they assumed that it would be thus defended (36). <br />
<br />
21. The omission of the fact that pictures from various security cameras - including the camera at the gas station across from the Pentagon, the film from which was reportedly confiscated by the FBI immediately after the strike - could presumably answer the question of what really hit the Pentagon (37-38). <br />
<br />
22. The omission of Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld's reference to "the missile [used] to damage [the Pentagon]" (39). <br />
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23. The apparent endorsement of a wholly unsatisfactory answer to the question of why the Secret Service agents allowed President Bush to remain at the Sarasota school at a time when, given the official story, they should have assumed that a hijacked airliner might be about to crash into the school (41-44). <br />
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24. The failure to explore why the Secret Service did not summon fighter jets to provide air cover for Air Force One (43-46). <br />
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25. The claims that when the presidential party arrived at the school, no one in the party knew that several planes had been hijacked (47-48). <br />
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26. The omission of the report that Attorney General Ashcroft was warned to stop using commercial airlines prior to 9/11 (50). <br />
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27. The omission of David Schippers' claim that he had, on the basis of information provided by FBI agents about upcoming attacks in lower Manhattan, tried unsuccessfully to convey this information to Attorney General Ashcroft during the six weeks prior to 9/11 (51). <br />
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28. The omission of any mention of the FBI agents who reportedly claimed to have known the targets and dates of the attacks well in advance (51-52). <br />
<br />
29. The claim, by means of a circular, question-begging rebuttal, that the unusual purchases of put options prior to 9/11 did not imply advance knowledge of the attacks on the part of the buyers (52-57). <br />
<br />
30. The omission of reports that both Mayor Willie Brown and some Pentagon officials received warnings about flying on 9/11 (57). <br />
<br />
31. The omission of the report that Osama bin Laden, who already was America's "most wanted" criminal, was treated in July 2001 by an American doctor in the American Hospital in Dubai and visited by the local CIA agent (59). <br />
<br />
32. The omission of news stories suggesting that after 9/11 the US military in Afghanistan deliberately allowed Osama bin Laden to escape (60). <br />
<br />
33. The omission of reports, including the report of a visit to Osama bin Laden at the hospital in Dubai by the head of Saudi intelligence, that were in tension with the official portrayal of Osama as disowned by his family and his country (60-61). <br />
<br />
34. The omission of Gerald Posner's account of Abu Zubaydah's testimony, according to which three members of the Saudi royal family - all of whom later died mysteriously within an eight-day period - were funding al-Qaeda and had advance knowledge of the 9/11 attacks (61-65). <br />
<br />
35. The Commission's denial that it found any evidence of Saudi funding of al-Qaeda (65-68). <br />
<br />
36. The Commission's denial in particular that it found any evidence that money from Prince Bandar's wife, Princess Haifa, went to al-Qaeda operatives (69-70). <br />
<br />
37. The denial, by means of simply ignoring the distinction between private and commercial flights, that the private flight carrying Saudis from Tampa to Lexington on September 13 violated the rules for US airspace in effect at the time (71-76). <br />
<br />
38. The denial that any Saudis were allowed to leave the United States shortly after 9/11 without being adequately investigated (76-82). <br />
<br />
39. The omission of evidence that Prince Bandar obtained special permission from the White House for the Saudi flights (82-86). <br />
<br />
40. The omission of Coleen Rowley's claim that some officials at FBI headquarters did see the memo from Phoenix agent Kenneth Williams (89-90). <br />
<br />
41. The omission of Chicago FBI agent Robert Wright's charge that FBI headquarters closed his case on a terrorist cell, then used intimidation to prevent him from publishing a book reporting his experiences (91). <br />
<br />
42. The omission of evidence that FBI headquarters sabotaged the attempt by Coleen Rowley and other Minneapolis agents to obtain a warrant to search Zacarias Moussaoui's computer (91-94). <br />
<br />
43. The omission of the 3.5 hours of testimony to the Commission by former FBI translator Sibel Edmonds - testimony that, according to her later public letter to Chairman Kean, revealed serious 9/11-related cover-ups by officials at FBI headquarters (94-101). <br />
<br />
44. The omission of the fact that General Mahmoud Ahmad, the head of Pakistan's intelligence agency (the ISI), was in Washington the week prior to 9/11, meeting with CIA chief George Tenet and other US officials (103-04). <br />
<br />
45. The omission of evidence that ISI chief Ahmad had ordered $100,000 to be sent to Mohamed Atta prior to 9/11 (104-07). <br />
<br />
46. The Commission's claim that it found no evidence that any foreign government, including Pakistan, had provided funding for the al-Qaeda operatives (106). <br />
<br />
47. The omission of the report that the Bush administration pressured Pakistan to dismiss Ahmad as ISI chief after the appearance of the story that he had ordered ISI money sent to Atta (107-09). <br />
<br />
48. The omission of evidence that the ISI (and not merely al-Qaeda) was behind the assassination of Ahmad Shah Masood (the leader of Afghanistan's Northern Alliance), which occurred just after the week-long meeting between the heads of the CIA and the ISI (110-112). <br />
<br />
49. The omission of evidence of ISI involvement in the kidnapping and murder of Wall Street Reporter Daniel Pearl (113). <br />
<br />
50. The omission of Gerald Posner's report that Abu Zubaydah claimed that a Pakistani military officer, Mushaf Ali Mir, was closely connected to both the ISI and al-Qaeda and had advance knowledge of the 9/11 attacks (114). <br />
<br />
51. The omission of the 1999 prediction by ISI agent Rajaa Gulum Abbas that the Twin Towers would be "coming down" (114). <br />
<br />
52. The omission of the fact that President Bush and other members of his administration repeatedly spoke of the 9/11 attacks as "opportunities" (116-17). <br />
<br />
53. The omission of the fact that The Project for the New American Century, many members of which became key figures in the Bush administration, published a document in 2000 saying that "a new Pearl Harbor" would aid its goal of obtaining funding for a rapid technological transformation of the US military (117-18). <br />
<br />
54. The omission of the fact that Donald Rumsfeld, who as head of the commission on the US Space Command had recommended increased funding for it, used the attacks of 9/11 on that very evening to secure such funding (119-22). <br />
<br />
55. The failure to mention the fact that three of the men who presided over the failure to prevent the 9/11 attacks - Secretary Rumsfeld, General Richard Myers, and General Ralph Eberhart - were also three of the strongest advocates for the US Space Command (122). <br />
<br />
56. The omission of the fact that Unocal had declared that the Taliban could not provide adequate security for it to go ahead with its oil-and-gas pipeline from the Caspian region through Afghanistan and Pakistan (122-25). <br />
<br />
57. The omission of the report that at a meeting in July 2001, US representatives said that because the Taliban refused to agree to a US proposal that would allow the pipeline project to go forward, a war against them would begin by October (125-26). <br />
<br />
58. The omission of the fact that Zbigniew Brzezinski in his 1997 book had said that for the United States to maintain global primacy, it needed to gain control of Central Asia, with its vast petroleum reserves, and that a new Pearl Harbor would be helpful in getting the US public to support this imperial effort (127-28). <br />
<br />
59. The omission of evidence that some key members of the Bush administration, including Donald Rumsfeld and his deputy Paul Wolfowitz, had been agitating for a war with Iraq for many years (129-33). <br />
<br />
60. The omission of notes of Rumsfeld's conversations on 9/11 showing that he was determined to use the attacks as a pretext for a war with Iraq (131-32). <br />
<br />
61. The omission of the statement by the Project for the New American Century that "the need for a substantial American force presence in the Gulf transcends the issue of the regime of Saddam Hussein" (133-34). <br />
<br />
62. The claim that FAA protocol on 9/11 required the time-consuming process of going through several steps in the chain of command - even though the Report cites evidence to the contrary (158). <br />
<br />
63. The claim that in those days there were only two air force bases in NORAD's Northeast sector that kept fighters on alert and that, in particular, there were no fighters on alert at either McGuire or Andrews (159-162). <br />
<br />
64. The omission of evidence that Andrews Air Force Base did keep several fighters on alert at all times (162-64). <br />
<br />
65. The acceptance of the twofold claim that Colonel Marr of NEADS had to telephone a superior to get permission to have fighters scrambled from Otis and that this call required eight minutes (165-66). <br />
<br />
66. The endorsement of the claim that the loss of an airplane's transponder signal makes it virtually impossible for the US military's radar to track that plane (166-67). <br />
<br />
67. The claim that the Payne Stewart interception did not show NORAD's response time to Flight 11 to be extraordinarily slow (167-69). <br />
<br />
68. The claim that the Otis fighters were not airborne until seven minutes after they received the scramble order because they did not know where to go (174-75). <br />
<br />
69. The claim that the US military did not know about the hijacking of Flight 175 until 9:03, when it was crashing into the South Tower (181-82). <br />
<br />
70. The omission of any explanation of (a) why NORAD's earlier report, according to which the FAA had notified the military about the hijacking of Flight 175 at 8:43, was now to be considered false and (b) how this report, if it was false, could have been published and then left uncorrected for almost three years (182). <br />
<br />
71. The claim that the FAA did not set up a teleconference until 9:20 that morning (183). <br />
<br />
72. The omission of the fact that a memo by Laura Brown of the FAA says that its teleconference was established at about 8:50 and that it included discussion of Flight 175's hijacking (183-84, 186). <br />
<br />
73. The claim that the NMCC teleconference did not begin until 9:29 (186-88). <br />
<br />
74. The omission, in the Commission's claim that Flight 77 did not deviate from its course until 8:54, of the fact that earlier reports had said 8:46 (189-90). <br />
<br />
75. The failure to mention that the report that a large jet had crashed in Kentucky, at about the time Flight 77 disappeared from FAA radar, was taken seriously enough by the heads of the FAA and the FBI's counterterrorism unit to be relayed to the White House (190). <br />
<br />
76. The claim that Flight 77 flew almost 40 minutes through American airspace towards Washington without being detected by the military's radar (191-92). <br />
<br />
77. The failure to explain, if NORAD's earlier report that it was notified about Flight 77 at 9:24 was "incorrect," how this erroneous report could have arisen, i.e., whether NORAD officials had been lying or simply confused for almost three years (192-93). <br />
<br />
78. The claim that the Langley fighter jets, which NORAD had previously said were scrambled to intercept Flight 77, were actually scrambled in response to an erroneous report from an (unidentified) FAA controller at 9:21 that Flight 11 was still up and was headed towards Washington (193-99). <br />
<br />
79. The claim that the military did not hear from the FAA about the probable hijacking of Flight 77 before the Pentagon was struck (204-12). <br />
<br />
80. The claim that Jane Garvey did not join Richard Clarke's videoconference until 9:40, after the Pentagon was struck (210). <br />
<br />
81. The claim that none of the teleconferences succeeded in coordinating the FAA and military responses to the hijackings because "none of [them] included the right officials from both the FAA and the Defense Department" - although Richard Clarke says that his videoconference included FAA head Jane Garvey as well as Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld and General Richard Myers, the acting chair of the joint chiefs of staff (211). <br />
<br />
82. The Commission's claim that it did not know who from the Defense Department participated in Clarke's videoconference - although Clarke's book said that it was Donald Rumsfeld and General Myers (211-212). <br />
<br />
83. The endorsement of General Myers' claim that he was on Capitol Hill during the attacks, without mentioning Richard Clarke's contradictory account, according to which Myers was in the Pentagon participating in Clarke's videoconference (213-17). <br />
<br />
84. The failure to mention the contradiction between Clarke's account of Rumsfeld's whereabouts that morning and Rumsfeld's own accounts (217-19). <br />
<br />
85. The omission of Secretary of Transportation Norman Mineta's testimony, given to the Commission itself, that Vice-President Cheney and others in the underground shelter were aware by 9:26 that an aircraft was approaching the Pentagon (220). <br />
<br />
86. The claim that Pentagon officials did not know about an aircraft approaching Pentagon until 9:32, 9:34, or 9:36 - in any case, only a few minutes before the building was hit (223). <br />
<br />
87. The endorsement of two contradictory stories about the aircraft that hit the Pentagon - one in which it executed a 330-degree downward spiral (a "high-speed dive") and another in which there is no mention of this maneuver (222-23). <br />
<br />
88. The claim that the fighter jets from Langley, which were allegedly scrambled to protect Washington from "Phantom Flight 11," were nowhere near Washington because they were mistakenly sent out to sea (223-24). <br />
<br />
89. The omission of all the evidence suggesting that the aircraft that hit the Pentagon was not Flight 77 (224-25). <br />
<br />
90. The claim that the military was not notified by the FAA about Flight 93's hijacking until after it crashed (227-29, 232, 253). <br />
<br />
91. The twofold claim that the NMCC did not monitor the FAA-initiated conference and then was unable to get the FAA connected to the NMCC-initiated teleconference (230-31). <br />
<br />
92. The omission of the fact that the Secret Service is able to know everything that the FAA knows (233). <br />
<br />
93. The omission of any inquiry into why the NMCC initiated its own teleconference if, as Laura Brown of the FAA has said, this is not standard protocol (234). <br />
<br />
94. The omission of any exploration of why General Montague Winfield not only had a rookie (Captain Leidig) take over his role as the NMCC's Director of Operations but also left him in charge after it was clear that the Pentagon was facing an unprecedented crisis (235-36). <br />
<br />
95. The claim that the FAA (falsely) notified the Secret Service between 10:10 and 10:15 that Flight 93 was still up and headed towards Washington (237). <br />
<br />
96. The claim that Vice President Cheney did not give the shoot-down authorization until after 10:10 (several minutes after Flight 93 had crashed) and that this authorization was not transmitted to the US military until 10:31 (237-41). <br />
<br />
97. The omission of all the evidence indicating that Flight 93 was shot down by a military plane (238-39, 252-53). <br />
<br />
98. The claim that Richard Clarke did not receive the requested shoot-down authorization until 10:25 (240). <br />
<br />
99. The omission of Clarke's own testimony, which suggests that he received the shoot-down authorization by 9:50 (240). <br />
<br />
100. The claim that Cheney did not reach the underground shelter (the PEOC [Presidential Emergency Operations Center]) until 9:58 (241-44). <br />
<br />
101. The omission of multiple testimony, including that of Norman Mineta to the Commission itself, that Cheney was in the PEOC before 9:20 (241-44). <br />
<br />
102. The claim that shoot-down authorization must be given by the president (245). <br />
<br />
103. The omission of reports that Colonel Marr ordered a shoot-down of Flight 93 and that General Winfield indicated that he and others at the NMCC had expected a fighter jet to reach Flight 93 (252). <br />
<br />
104. The omission of reports that there were two fighter jets in the air a few miles from NYC and three of them only 200 miles from Washington (251). <br />
<br />
105. The omission of evidence that there were at least six bases with fighters on alert in the northeastern part of the United States (257-58). <br />
<br />
106. The endorsement of General Myers' claim that NORAD had defined its mission in terms of defending only against threats from abroad (258-62). <br />
<br />
107. The endorsement of General Myers' claim that NORAD had not recognized the possibility that terrorists might use hijacked airliners as missiles (262-63). <br />
<br />
108. The failure to highlight the significance of evidence presented in the Report itself, and to mention other evidence, showing that NORAD had indeed recognized the threat that hijacked airliners might be used as missiles (264-67). <br />
<br />
109. The failure to probe the issue of how the "war games" scheduled for that day were related to the military's failure to intercept the hijacked airliners (268-69). <br />
<br />
110. The failure to discuss the possible relevance of Operation Northwoods to the attacks of 9/11 (269-71). <br />
<br />
111. The claim - made in explaining why the military did not get information about the hijackings in time to intercept them - that FAA personnel inexplicably failed to follow standard procedures some 16 times (155-56, 157, 179, 180, 181, 190, 191, 193, 194, 200, 202-03, 227, 237, 272-75). <br />
<br />
112. The failure to point out that the Commission's claimed "independence" was fatally compromised by the fact that its executive director, Philip Zelikow, was virtually a member of the Bush administration (7-9, 11-12, 282-84). <br />
<br />
113. The failure to point out that the White House first sought to prevent the creation of a 9/11 Commission, then placed many obstacles in its path, including giving it extremely meager funding (283-85). <br />
<br />
114. The failure to point out that the Commission's chairman, most of the other commissioners, and at least half of the staff had serious conflicts of interest (285-90, 292-95). <br />
<br />
115. The failure of the Commission, while bragging that it presented its final report "without dissent," to point out that this was probably possible only because Max Cleland, the commissioner who was most critical of the White House and swore that he would not be part of "looking at information only partially," had to resign in order to accept a position with the Export-Import Bank, and that the White House forwarded his nomination for this position only after he was becoming quite outspoken in his criticisms (290-291). <br />
</blockquote><br />
<br />
I will close by pointing out that I concluded my study of what I came to call "the Kean-Zelikow Report" by writing that it, "far from lessening my suspicions about official complicity, has served to confirm them. Why would the minds in charge of this final report engage in such deception if they were not trying to cover up very high crimes?" (291)<br />
<br />
© Copyright David Ray Griffin, Global Research, 2005<br />
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<title>Two Theologians Debate 9/11 </title>
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<dc:creator>Anthony Flood</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2006-07-26T13:07+00:00</dc:date>
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<b>Ian Markham, Hartford Seminary:</b><br />
<blockquote><br />
When a book argues that the American President deliberately and knowingly was "involved" in the slaughter of 3,000 US citizens, then this is irresponsible.<br />
</blockquote><br />
<b>David Ray Griffin, Claremont School of Theology:</b><br />
<blockquote><br />
This is itself, of course, a very strong charge. . . . I will respond to this charge . . . by showing that Markham has provided no support for it and that, therefore, he has failed his own test: that criticism needs to be responsible.<br />
</blockquote><br />
Those who are best able to evaluate the merits of a controversial position when it is honed in battle with a well-meaning, honest, and intelligent adversary have a treat in store for them <b><a href="http://www.anthonyflood.com/griffinmarkhamdebate911.htm">here</a>.  </b>I will not risk overstating Griffin’s performance.  Taste and see. <br />
<br />
Previous posts on Griffin are <b><a href="http://anthonyflood.powerblogs.com/posts/1132071750.shtml">here</a>, <a href="http://anthonyflood.powerblogs.com/posts/1123602424.shtml">here</a>, <a href="http://anthonyflood.powerblogs.com/posts/1122565904.shtml">here</a>, <a href="http://anthonyflood.powerblogs.com/posts/1121365650.shtml">here</a>, </b>and <b><a href="http://anthonyflood.powerblogs.com/posts/1121284962.shtml">here</a>.</b>  More links on my site's <b><a href="http://www.anthonyflood.com/griffin.htm">David Ray Griffin page</a>.</b><br />
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