Even I question the 'truth' about 9/11
By Robert Fisk
08/25/07 "The
Independent"
-- - Each time I lecture abroad on the Middle
East, there is always someone in the audience – just
one – whom I call the "raver". Apologies here to all
the men and women who come to my talks with bright
and pertinent questions – often quite humbling ones
for me as a journalist – and which show that they
understand the Middle East tragedy a lot better than
the journalists who report it. But the "raver" is
real. He has turned up in corporeal form in
Stockholm and in Oxford, in Sao Paulo and in
Yerevan, in Cairo, in Los Angeles and, in female
form, in Barcelona. No matter the country, there
will always be a "raver".
His – or her – question goes like this. Why, if you
believe you're a free journalist, don't you report
what you really know about 9/11? Why don't you tell
the truth – that the Bush administration (or the CIA
or Mossad, you name it) blew up the twin towers? Why
don't you reveal the secrets behind 9/11? The
assumption in each case is that Fisk knows – that
Fisk has an absolute concrete, copper-bottomed
fact-filled desk containing final proof of what "all
the world knows" (that usually is the phrase) – who
destroyed the twin towers. Sometimes the "raver" is
clearly distressed. One man in Cork screamed his
question at me, and then – the moment I suggested
that his version of the plot was a bit odd – left
the hall, shouting abuse and kicking over chairs.
Usually, I have tried to tell the "truth"; that
while there are unanswered questions about 9/11, I
am the Middle East correspondent of The Independent,
not the conspiracy correspondent; that I have quite
enough real plots on my hands in Lebanon, Iraq,
Syria, Iran, the Gulf, etc, to worry about imaginary
ones in Manhattan. My final argument – a clincher,
in my view – is that the Bush administration has
screwed up everything – militarily, politically
diplomatically – it has tried to do in the Middle
East; so how on earth could it successfully bring
off the international crimes against humanity in the
United States on 11 September 2001?
Well, I still hold to that view. Any military which
can claim – as the Americans did two days ago – that
al-Qa'ida is on the run is not capable of carrying
out anything on the scale of 9/11. "We disrupted al-Qa'ida,
causing them to run," Colonel David Sutherland said
of the preposterously code-named "Operation
Lightning Hammer" in Iraq's Diyala province. "Their
fear of facing our forces proves the terrorists know
there is no safe haven for them." And more of the
same, all of it untrue.
Within hours, al-Qa'ida attacked Baquba in battalion
strength and slaughtered all the local sheikhs who
had thrown in their hand with the Americans. It
reminds me of Vietnam, the war which George Bush
watched from the skies over Texas – which may
account for why he this week mixed up the end of the
Vietnam war with the genocide in a different country
called Cambodia, whose population was eventually
rescued by the same Vietnamese whom Mr Bush's more
courageous colleagues had been fighting all along.
But – here we go. I am increasingly troubled at the
inconsistencies in the official narrative of 9/11.
It's not just the obvious non sequiturs: where are
the aircraft parts (engines, etc) from the attack on
the Pentagon? Why have the officials involved in the
United 93 flight (which crashed in Pennsylvania)
been muzzled? Why did flight 93's debris spread over
miles when it was supposed to have crashed in one
piece in a field? Again, I'm not talking about the
crazed "research" of David Icke's Alice in
Wonderland and the World Trade Center Disaster –
which should send any sane man back to reading the
telephone directory.
I am talking about scientific issues. If it is true,
for example, that kerosene burns at 820C under
optimum conditions, how come the steel beams of the
twin towers – whose melting point is supposed to be
about 1,480C – would snap through at the same time?
(They collapsed in 8.1 and 10 seconds.) What about
the third tower – the so-called World Trade Centre
Building 7 (or the Salmon Brothers Building) – which
collapsed in 6.6 seconds in its own footprint at
5.20pm on 11 September? Why did it so neatly fall to
the ground when no aircraft had hit it? The American
National Institute of Standards and Technology was
instructed to analyse the cause of the destruction
of all three buildings. They have not yet reported
on WTC 7. Two prominent American professors of
mechanical engineering – very definitely not in the
"raver" bracket – are now legally challenging the
terms of reference of this final report on the
grounds that it could be "fraudulent or deceptive".
Journalistically, there were many odd things about
9/11. Initial reports of reporters that they heard
"explosions" in the towers – which could well have
been the beams cracking – are easy to dismiss. Less
so the report that the body of a female air crew
member was found in a Manhattan street with her
hands bound. OK, so let's claim that was just
hearsay reporting at the time, just as the CIA's
list of Arab suicide-hijackers, which included three
men who were – and still are – very much alive and
living in the Middle East, was an initial
intelligence error.
But what about the weird letter allegedly written by
Mohamed Atta, the Egyptian hijacker-murderer with
the spooky face, whose "Islamic" advice to his
gruesome comrades – released by the CIA – mystified
every Muslim friend I know in the Middle East? Atta
mentioned his family – which no Muslim, however
ill-taught, would be likely to include in such a
prayer. He reminds his comrades-in-murder to say the
first Muslim prayer of the day and then goes on to
quote from it. But no Muslim would need such a
reminder – let alone expect the text of the "Fajr"
prayer to be included in Atta's letter.
Let me repeat. I am not a conspiracy theorist. Spare
me the ravers. Spare me the plots. But like everyone
else, I would like to know the full story of 9/11,
not least because it was the trigger for the whole
lunatic, meretricious "war on terror" which has led
us to disaster in Iraq and Afghanistan and in much
of the Middle East. Bush's happily departed adviser
Karl Rove once said that "we're an empire now – we
create our own reality". True? At least tell us. It
would stop people kicking over chairs.
© 2007 Independent News and Media Limited
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