May 21

Zelikow Failed To Mention Possible Criminal Referral Of False Statements By NORAD And FAA In Memo To 9/11 Commission Heads

Source: hcgroups.wordpress.com

Kevin Fenton
5/21/2009

A document recently discovered in the National Archives shows that, in a memo to the 9/11 Commission’s chairman and vice-chairman on false statements made by NORAD and FAA officials about the failure of US air defenses, the commission’s Executive Director Philip Zelikow failed to mention the possibility of a criminal referral. This supports allegations that Zelikow “buried” the option of a criminal referral by the commission to the Justice Department for a perjury investigation. The document was found at the National Archives by History Commons contributor paxvector and posted to the History Commons site at Scribd.

Initially, the FAA and NORAD claimed that the FAA had notified NORAD of the third hijacked flight 13 minutes before it hit the Pentagon and that it had also notified NORAD of the fourth plane, which NORAD then allegedly tracked until it crashed in Pennsylvania. After working for a year and analyzing documents and audio recordings, the commission formed the opinion that the FAA had given NORAD much less notice and that the fourth plane had never been tracked. The staff also thought that the FAA and NORAD officials who had made the false statements must have known they were false when they made them, and wanted the issue to be referred to the proper authorities for investigation.
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May 13

9/11 Commission Staffer: “The White House is misleading the public about the extent of their cooperation.”

Here is an internal 9/11 Commission e-mail from staffer Warren Bass calling a claim by White House press spokesman Scott McClellan that the administration was co-operating fully “flatly untrue.” Thank you to Kevin Fenton of www.historycommons.org for showing this to me. The source link is blurry. I have uploaded the downloaded/clear version for you to download.

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Mar 27

Would You Accept This?


I thought telling “the story” from the perspective of a single murder might help some to understand.

Mar 15

The 9/11 Commission And Torture

The bipartisan panel that investigated the terrorist attacks was widely praised. But did its final report rely on suspect information?

Source: newsweek.com

By Philip Shenon | NEWSWEEK
Published Mar 14, 2009

Powerful Democrats on Capitol Hill are clamoring for creation of a bipartisan “9/11 style” commission to investigate the legality of the Bush administration’s antiterrorism tactics—especially its use of harsh interrogation techniques.

President Obama has been notably cool to the idea. But the case for a “truth” commission was bolstered by the disclosure this month that the CIA had destroyed 92 videotapes of the interrogations and confinement of Al Qaeda suspects. A dozen showed the use of “enhanced” techniques routinely described by human-rights groups as torture.

Lawmakers say the obvious model for such an inquiry would be the 9/11 Commission—an independent bipartisan body praised for its authoritative account of the attacks.

But as a reporter who covered the commission from start to finish and later wrote a history of its investigation, I wonder if Congress understands the deep irony of establishing a “new 9/11 Commission” on these issues. Former commission investigators have acknowledged to me over the past year that the panel had a serious blind spot on questions about torture.

The commission appears to have ignored obvious clues throughout 2003 and 2004 that its account of the 9/11 plot and Al Qaeda’s history relied heavily on information obtained from detainees who had been subjected to torture, or something not far from it.

The panel raised no public protest over the CIA’s interrogation methods, even though news reports at the time suggested how brutal those methods were. In fact, the commission demanded that the CIA carry out new rounds of interrogations in 2004 to get answers to its questions.

That has troubling implications for the credibility of the commission’s final report. In intelligence circles, testimony obtained through torture is typically discredited; research shows that people will say anything under threat of intense physical pain.

And yet it is a distinct possibility that Al Qaeda suspects who were the exclusive source of information for long passages of the commission’s report may have been subjected to “enhanced” interrogation techniques, or at least threatened with them, because of the 9/11 Commission.

While the CIA says it ended the use of waterboarding by early 2003, the agency continued to use other “enhanced” methods involving pain, sleep deprivation and extended isolation—all of which have been branded as torture. The CIA insists that its interrogation methods were legal and approved by the White House.

I wish I had known all this before my book was published in January of last year. Only a few days after publication, the CIA acknowledged publicly, for the first time, that it had carried out waterboarding on Al Qaeda detainees. It was a startling disclosure. Before 2001, the United States had routinely condemned waterboarding as torture and had prosecuted it as a war crime.

The CIA insisted that only three men had been waterboarded: Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the architect of the 9/11 attacks; Abu Zubaydah, Al Qaeda’s operations chief; and Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, ringleader of the USS Cole bombing.

Information from CIA interrogations of two of the three—KSM and Abu Zubaydah—is cited throughout two key chapters of the panel’s report focusing on the planning and execution of the attacks and on the history of Al Qaeda.

Footnotes in the panel’s report indicate when information was obtained from detainees interrogated by the CIA. An analysis by NBC News found that more than a quarter of the report’s footnotes—441 of some 1,700—referred to detainees who were subjected to the CIA’s “enhanced” interrogation program, including the trio who were waterboarded.

Commission members note that they repeatedly pressed the Bush White House and CIA for direct access to the detainees, but the administration refused. So the commission forwarded questions to the CIA, whose interrogators posed them on the panel’s behalf.

The commission’s report gave no hint that harsh interrogation methods were used in gathering information, stating that the panel had “no control” over how the CIA did its job; the authors also said they had attempted to corroborate the information “with documents and statements of others.”

But how could the commission corroborate information known only to a handful of people in a shadowy terrorist network, most of whom were either dead or still at large?

Former senator Bob Kerrey of Nebraska, a Democrat on the commission, told me last year he had long feared that the investigation depended too heavily on the accounts of Al Qaeda detainees who were physically coerced into talking. While he thought the commission’s larger narrative about the September 11 attacks held up, “there’s reason now to suspect that we may have gotten some of the details wrong” about the 9/11 plot and about Al Qaeda.

Kerrey said it might take “a permanent 9/11 commission” to end the remaining mysteries of September 11. Those now calling for more 9/11-style panels would be wise to heed his words.

Nov 22

Obama To Take On Torture?

I refer you to Fact #28. - Jon

Source: newsweek.com

By Michael Isikoff | NEWSWEEK
Published Nov 22, 2008
From the magazine issue dated Dec 1, 2008

Despite the hopes of many human-rights advocates, the new Obama Justice Department is not likely to launch major new criminal probes of harsh interrogations and other alleged abuses by the Bush administration. But one idea that has currency among some top Obama advisers is setting up a 9/11-style commission that would investigate counterterrorism policies and make public as many details as possible. “At a minimum, the American people have to be able to see and judge what happened,” said one senior adviser, who asked not to be identified talking about policy matters. The commission would be empowered to order the U.S. intelligence agencies to open their files for review and question senior officials who approved “waterboarding” and other controversial practices.

Obama aides are wary of taking any steps that would smack of political retribution. That’s one reason they are reluctant to see high-profile investigations by the Democratic-controlled Congress or to greenlight a broad Justice inquiry (absent specific new evidence of wrongdoing). “If there was any effort to have war-crimes prosecutions of the Bush administration, you’d instantly destroy whatever hopes you have of bipartisanship,” said Robert Litt, a former Justice criminal division chief during the Clinton administration. A new commission, on the other hand, could emulate the bipartisan tone set by Tom Kean and Lee Hamilton in investigating the 9/11 attacks. The 9/11 panel was created by Congress. An alternative model, floated by human-rights lawyer Scott Horton, would be a presidential commission similar to the one appointed by Gerald Ford in 1975 and headed by Nelson Rockefeller that investigated cold-war abuses by the CIA.

The idea of such panels is not universally favored among Obama advisers. Some with ties to the intelligence community fear the demoralizing impact on intelligence officers, said one source who had discussions with Obama aides about the idea. But during the campaign, both Obama and Eric Holder, slated to be nominated as attorney general, sharply criticized the use of torture and the legal rulings that permitted them. Holder called some Bush counterterror policies “excessive and unlawful.”

The legal rulings on interrogation are among matters being reviewed by an Obama transition team headed by David W. Ogden, once chief of staff to former attorney general Janet Reno. The team has already moved into the first floor of Justice. Detainee policies are an even stickier issue—underscored last week when a federal judge ordered the release of five Bosnians held at Guantánamo Bay. Obama is committed to shutting down Gitmo. But his advisers are wrestling with what to do about the remaining 250 detainees there, especially those considered dangerous. Obama is unlikely to continue the military tribunals started by President Bush. One idea his advisers are exploring is the creation of new national-security courts. But a spokesman for Obama’s transition team said that decisions on all of these issues won’t be made till after the new national-security team is in place.

Sep 23

The “Smoking Gun” Of 9/11

Jon Gold
9/23/2008

Recently, Kevin Fenton posted an update to the timeline available at www.historycommons.org entitled, “United 93, 9/11 Commission – Additions to the 9/11 Timeline as of September 21, 2008.” In it, he stated that “as the commission was just beginning its work in early 2003, Executive Director Philip Zelikow had already completed an outline of its final report.” When I read that entry, I was floored. As you’ll read below, Kean, Hamilton, and Zelikow decided to keep this outline a secret from the 9/11 Commission staffers because it might be seen that they, “had predetermined the report’s outcome.” Now why on Earth would they think something ridiculous like that?
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Sep 05

America Needs To Get Angry

By Jon Gold
9/5/2008

One of the things that drives me to do what I do is anger. Deep, burning in my gut, anger.

Anger that stems from the fact that our 9/11 heroes, those people we saw on the television sets fighting the good fight, trying to save our fellow Americans, those people that motivated us to go out and buy FDNY, and NYPD hats, those people that we saw attend the many funerals for their brothers and sisters lost that day, were lied to about the air quality down at Ground Zero, and then ignored by local, and federal Governments when they began to become sick and die.

Anger that stems from the fact that so many families had to fight this Government for an investigation into how their loved ones were brutally murdered because it didn’t want one, and when they finally got one, it was completely compromised, and the result of their “work” was nothing more than the biggest cover-up of our time, and a slap in the face to us, and those who wanted nothing more than justice.

Anger that stems from the fact that we were told to “never tolerate outrageous conspiracy theories concerning the attacks of September 11th” when in reality what we were being told is, “no matter how questionable certain aspects of the 9/11 attacks are, questioning them will not be tolerated.” In reality what we were being told is, “if you question any aspect of the 9/11 attacks, you will be ridiculed by the mainstream media, portrayed as someone who is unpatriotic, and made to be a terrorist sympathizer.”

Anger that stems from the fact that people in power today have used, and have had the AUDACITY to continue to use the 9/11 attacks for their benefit. Reminding us why it is NOT crazy to think that 9/11 was “designed” for purposes like this, and why those in power today have EARNED the title of suspect for the 9/11 crimes.

America needs to get angry because we are losing her. Non-violently and EFFECTIVELY.

Sep 01

Kean Says Going To Form Organization With 9/11 Families To Address “Unfinished Business” Of 9/11 Commission With New President

He’s probably referring to the 9/11 Commission’s “recommendations.” - Jon

REPUBLICAN CONVENTION: Tom Kean disappointed neither convention addressed 9/11

Source: nj.com

by Bob Braun/ The Star-Ledger
Monday September 01, 2008, 12:34 PM

Former Gov. Tom Kean, best known outside the state as chairman of the 9-11 Commission, says he is disappointed that neither party’s convention devoted time to the work of his panel.

“But I’m not surprised,” says Kean. “We’re very easily distracted. This is an issue that has gone off the radar.”

He says he has not been asked to speak about the 9-11 commission at Republican any convention or caucus, including New Jersey’s. When Bill Baroni, the delegation chairman, introduced Kean, he did mention the commission– but Kean himself didn’t.
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Aug 27

Was The 9/11 Commission Bribed?

Jon Gold
8/27/2008

Recently, Mike Berger from 911Truth.org was interviewed by the “Conscience of Kansas” Conservative Paul Ibbetson. During the interview, Mike mentioned the alleged bribery of the 9/11 Commission by Pakistan to omit any incriminating information about them. I figured a lot of people weren’t familiar with this story, so I was inspired to write this “recap.”
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Jul 31

It’s Not The Crime That Gets You, It’s The Cover-Up

In case you couldn’t tell, I picked this song for two reasons. It’s really long. Both books are “thick as a brick,” and about as useful as one. Ha Ha. Thank you to Michael Wolsey and Justin Martell for helping me to make this video. You may have to pause on occasion. With regards to the cover-up of 9/11, there is so much information. I had to reluctantly remove a lot of clips. Almost enough to make another movie. Thanks to www.historycommons.org. Please spread this video far and wide, and vote it up at youtube. Thank you.