The 9/11 Commission Report: A 571-Page Lie
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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).
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).
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).
84. The failure to mention the contradiction between Clarke's account
of Rumsfeld's whereabouts that morning and Rumsfeld's own accounts (217-19).
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).
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).
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).
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).
89. The omission of all the evidence suggesting that the aircraft that
hit the Pentagon was not Flight 77 (224-25).
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).
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).
92. The omission of the fact that the Secret Service is able to know
everything that the FAA knows (233).
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).
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).
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).
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).
97. The omission of all the evidence indicating that Flight 93 was shot
down by a military plane (238-39, 252-53).
98. The claim that Richard Clarke did not receive the requested shoot-down
authorization until 10:25 (240).
99. The omission of Clarke's own testimony, which suggests that he received
the shoot-down authorization by 9:50 (240).
100. The claim that Cheney did not reach the underground shelter (the
PEOC [Presidential Emergency Operations Center]) until 9:58 (241-44).
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).
102. The claim that shoot-down authorization must be given by the president
(245).
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).
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).
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).
106. The endorsement of General Myers' claim that NORAD had defined its
mission in terms of defending only against threats from abroad (258-62).
107. The endorsement of General Myers' claim that NORAD had not recognized
the possibility that terrorists might use hijacked airliners as missiles
(262-63).
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).
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).
110. The failure to discuss the possible relevance of Operation Northwoods
to the attacks of 9/11 (269-71).
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).
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).
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).
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).
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).
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)
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