How
Little We Know About the Origins of 9/11
by Robert Scheer
Truthdig
Recently
by Robert Scheer: Still
in the Dark About 9/11
For a decade,
the main questions about 9/11 have gone unanswered while the alleged
perpetrators who survived the attacks have never been publicly cross-examined
as to their methods and motives. It is not conspiratorial but rather
obviously plausible to suggest that they have been kept out of sight
because legal due process, constitutionally guaranteed to even the
most heinous of criminals, might provide information that our government
would find embarrassing.
We remain in
ignorance as to what drove religious zealots formerly allied with
the United States to turn against us, and what was the role of our
ally, Saudi Arabia, the country of origin for most of the hijackers
and their financing. Why in the aftermath of the attack did the
United States embrace Pakistan, which was one of only three governments
(Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates were the others) to diplomatically
recognize the Taliban and which turned out to be harboring the fugitive
Osama bin Laden? And why did we instead invade Iraq, a nation known
to be engaged in a deadly war with bin Laden and his al-Qaida?
How little
we know about the origins of the Sept. 11 attacks is laid out in
the disclaimer on Page 146 of the official 9/11 presidential commission
report. A box on that page states clearly that the conventional
narrative of how those portentous events unfolded is based largely
on the interrogation under torture of key witnesses who have never
been permitted a single moment in a publicly observed court of law.
As the bipartisan
commissioners ruefully conceded, their examination of the motives,
financing and actions of the alleged 9/11 perpetrators had to rely
heavily on information from captured al Qaeda members that
the commissioners, despite having been granted the highest security
clearance, were never allowed to seriously vet:
We submitted
questions for use in the interrogations but had no control over
whether, when, or how questions of particular interest would be
asked. Nor were we allowed to talk to the interrogators so that
we could better judge the credibility of the detainees and clarify
ambiguities in the reporting. We were told that our requests might
disrupt the sensitive interrogation process.
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September
9, 2011
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