Monday, February 20, 2006

authorisation to shoot down the planes on 911

* further to my recent post where Newsweek states that Cheney didnt really have any authorisation from Preznit Blinky to shoot down the plane on 911, this isn't really new news - but it was just interesting to see some of the detail in print. IIRC, condi sort of half-pretended that she overheard Cheney talking to Blinky but didnt quite hear what was said, and there was someone else who half-made the same half-claim - or something like that. (was it Karen? or maybe even lynne cheney? i cant remember, and it doesnt really matter). The interesting thing of course is why he made up that lie - many speculate that the plane was in fact shot down, and i'm inclined to believe that - not least because the LetsRoll thing sounds exactly like it came outta the same prop-shop that gave us Jessica Lynch et al.

Damien in the comments pointed to something that i didnt know (by Prof. David Ray Griffin):
"The Commission also claims that people in the Pentagon had no idea that an aircraft was heading in their direction until shortly before the Pentagon was struck. But this claim was contradicted by Secretary of Transportation Norman Mineta, in open testimony given to the Commission itself. Mineta testified that at 9:20 that morning, he went down to the shelter conference room (technically the Presidential Emergency Operations Center) under the White House, where Vice President Cheney was in charge. Mineta then said:
During the time that the airplane was coming in to the Pentagon, there was a young man who would come in and say to the Vice President, "The plane is 50 miles out." "The plane is 30 miles out." And when it got down to "the plane is 10 miles out," the young man also said to the Vice President, "Do the orders still stand?" And the Vice President turned and whipped his neck around and said, "Of course the orders still stand. Have you heard anything to the contrary?"
When Mineta was asked by Commissioner Timothy Roemer how long this conversation occurred after he arrived, Mineta said: "Probably about five or six minutes," which, as Roemer pointed out, would mean "about 9:25 or 9:26."

According to the 9/11 Commission, no one in our government knew that an aircraft was approaching the Pentagon until 9:36 so there was no time to shoot it down. But the Commission had been told by Mineta that the vice president knew at least 10 minutes earlier, at 9:26. The 9/11 Commission dealt with Mineta's testimony in the same way it dealt with almost everything else that threatened its story--by simply ignoring it in the final report.

This testimony by Mineta was a big threat not only because it indicated that there was knowledge of the approaching aircraft at least 12 minutes before the Pentagon was struck, but also because it implied that Cheney had issued stand-down orders. Mineta himself did not make this allegation, to be sure. He assumed, he said, that "the orders" mentioned by the young man were orders to have the plane shot down. Mineta's interpretation, however, does not fit with what actually happened: The aircraft was not shot down. That interpretation, moreover, would make the story unintelligible: If the orders had been to shoot down the aircraft if it got close to the Pentagon, the young man would have had no reason to ask if the orders still stood. His question makes sense only if the orders were to do something unexpected--not to shoot down the aircraft. The implication of Mineta's story is, therefore, that the attack on the Pentagon was desired."
That's interesting for a few reasons, not least cos they didnt tell Rumsfeld till after the plane hit the building - lucky he was on the safe side of the building. But it's also interesting juxtaposed against Cheney's claim that he had authority to shoot down the LetsRoll plane.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

"The implication of Mineta's story is, therefore, that the attack on the Pentagon was desired." [Griffin]

This is not a necessary conclusion. If there were radar injects (false blips as part of the war games) it is possible that some kind of general order could have been in place not to shoot at anything until any suspect planes had been properly identified as hijacked. Under this scenario Cheney would have been able to defend himself against the type of reporting provided by Minetta - and claims such as Griffin's. But it never came to this. The Commission just passed over the issue.

Floating round behind this story are the unexamined questions of the war games of 911 and whether or not they involved FAA radar injects. Mike Ruppert believes this. And Indira Singh presents some murky allegations supporting this idea.

Anonymous said...

Lukery, I hope you don't mind this lengthier bit here, but some of the non 911 buffs may not have registered on these issues (cut it, if you wish):

Acting Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Richard Myers, allegedly saw reports of the first WTC crash on television in an outer office of Sen. Max Cleland (D), but he says, “They thought it was a small plane or something like that,” so he continued his meeting with Cleland. He says, “Nobody informed us” about the second WTC crash. Officially, he remained oblivious to the emergency until the meeting with Cleland ended and the Pentagon explosion took place at 9:37 a.m. In Myers' testimony before the 9/11 Commission, he fails to mention where he was or what he was doing from the time of the Pentagon crash until about 10:30 a.m., except to say, “I went back to my duty station."

Rumsfeld, who entered the NMCC around 10:30 am, claimed that as he entered, Myers “had just returned from Capitol Hill.”

Rumsfeld was in his office only 200 feet away from the NMCC until the Pentagon crash at 9:37 a.m. His activities during this period are unclear. He went outside to the Flight 77 crash site and then stayed somewhere else in the Pentagon until his arrival at the NMCC at 10.30. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, missing for at least 30 minutes, finally enters the NMCC. Rumsfeld later claims that he only started to gain a situational awareness of what was happening after arriving at the NMCC at 10.30. [9/11 Commission Report, 6/17/04]

The 911 Commission in its final report had this to say: “The Secretary of Defense did not enter the chain of command until the morning’s key events were over.”

And again, “The President apparently spoke to Secretary Rumsfeld for the first time that morning shortly after 10:00”. This was more than an hour after the first World Trade Center tower was hit, 20 minutes after the Pentagon was attacked.

The National Military Command Center (NMCC) inside the Pentagon was the nerve center of the military’s response to the attacks on 9-11. But the lead military officer that day, Brigadier General Winfield, told the Commission that the center had been leaderless. “For 30 minutes we couldn’t find Secretary Rumsfeld.”

Now, Vice-President Cheney was removed to a White House bunker by Security Service personnel just after 9.00 am (as reported by White House photographer David Bohrer). Yet, allegedly, Defense Secretary Rumsfeld is first contacted only 40 minutes later.

What’s going on here? Why wouldn’t Rumsfeld have been contacted immediately?

[Later media reports, eg CNN, have Vice President Cheney removed by Security Staff at 9.30 am, but these appear to be creative White House rewrites designed to deflect questions about why VP Cheney was secured when President Bush was left standing around in an unsecured location for an extra half hour. Bohrer was a direct witness at 9.00am that Cheney was moved about this time 9 - 9.05].

Richard Clarke, in his book Against All Enemies, has both Rumsfeld and Myers in a White House directed videoconference beginning at approximately 9.12am.

Clarke quotes a Deputy Director of the Situation Room in the White House saying, when Clarke arrives at approximately 9.10, that a "Threat Conference Call" was underway with both Rumsfeld and Myers present. The 911 Commission has the "Threat Conference" starting at 9.37 or 9.39.

We might also add here that the 911 Commission figures are rubbery throughout due to their efforts to provide a non-contradictory timeline and to cover the gaping hole of NORAD non-responsiveness.

If the reporting by Clarke is correct then both Myers and Rumsfeld lied under oath to the 911 Commission about where they were and when they first became involved.These are major discrepancies that demand answers.

How could Rumsfeld and Myers be left out of the loop over the entire 109 minutes it took for the attacks to be carried out?

These two men were in charge of the US air defences on that day. They were either completely absent or won’t tell the American people what they were doing. Either way it’s a disgrace. The reality is that Richard Clarke's account is to be believed and both Rumsfeld and Myers were actively involved from at least 9.10am onwards via the videoconference.

Bush was informed of the first WTC attack prior to entering the Sarasota primary school at 9.00am where he stayed till 9.30. Imagine now if President Bush had not entered Booker Elementary School on hearing of the 8.48 crash but had proceeded to Air Force One and immediately taken charge of the crisis.

Would Defense Secretary Rumsfeld have remained uncontactable till 9.41am?

Would any explanation by him along those lines have been accepted by the American people?

What explanation would NORAD have been able to provide for not getting any defence aircraft airborne, especially against Flight 77?

We need to understand that the practical effect - intended or otherwise - of President Bush’s extended stay at the elementary school till 9.30am was to give credibility to the later unsatisfactory explanations for the failure of US air defences on 911.

The whole 911 Commission account of US leadership on 911 is a disgrace.