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Global
Research recently published my essay entitled 9/11,
Deep State Violence and the Hope of Internet Politics
In this article, I argue that 9/11 should be analyzed as a deep
event (an event not fully aired or understood because of its
intelligence connections) and above all as one of a series of deep
events which from time to time have frustrated peace initiatives or
become pretexts for war.
In support
of this overall thesis I pointed to features of 9/11 which recalled
similar deep events: the still not fully understood outbreak of the
Korean War in 1950, the JFK assassination, and the so-called Second
Tonkin Gulf Incident of 1964 (an alleged attack on U.S. destroyers
which we now know never happened).
The
similarities between these deep events which have disturbed American
history since World War Two suggest that they are not just a
sequence of unrelated external accidents, but at least in part the
product of some on-going deep indigenous force not yet adequately
understood.
In this
series of deep events, perhaps the most striking similarities are
between the JFK assassination (henceforward referred to as "JFK")
and 9/11. Earlier talks and articles I have delivered on this topic
are developed even further in my forthcoming much expanded reissue
of my early book,
The War Conspiracy. As The War Conspiracy: JFK, 9/11, and the
Deep Politics of War,
it is due to be published by the Mary Ferrell Foundation Press in
August 2008.
The
following essay is the concluding section of the new book, and has
never hitherto been published.]
I wish to summarize again the first striking similarity between
11/22/63 and of 9/11/01: the dubious detective work on those two
days. Less than fifteen minutes after the President’s assassination,
the height and weight of Kennedy’s alleged killer was posted. 1
Before the last of the hijacked planes crashed on
9/11, the FBI told Richard Clarke that they had a list of alleged
hijackers.2
In the case
of Oswald, within fifteen minutes of the assassination and long
before Oswald was picked up in the Texas Theater, Inspector Sawyer
of the Dallas police put out on the police radio network, and
possibly other networks, a description of the killer – "About 30,
5’10", 165 pounds." 3
As noted, this height and weight exactly matched the
measurements attributed to Lee Harvey Oswald in Oswald’s FBI file,
and also in CIA documents about him.4
The
announced height and weight were however different from Oswald’s
actual measurements, as recorded by the Dallas police after his
arrest: 5’9 1/2", 131 pounds. 5
More importantly, there is no credible source for the
posted measurements from any witness in Dallas. (The witness said to
have spotted him, Howard Brennan, failed to identify Oswald in a
line-up.)6
This leaves the possibility
that the measurements were taken from existing files on Oswald,
rather than from any observations in Dallas on November 22. If so,
someone with access to those files may have already designated
Oswald as the culprit, before there was any evidence to connect him
to the crime.
A similar
situation pertains to the alleged hijackers on 9/11. For example,
shortly afterwards men in Saudi Arabia complained that "the
hijackers' `personal details’" released by the FBI -- "including
name, place, date of birth and occupation -- matched their own." 7
One of them, Saeed al-Ghamdi, claimed further that an
alleged photograph shown on CNN (of an alleged Flight 93 hijacker
with the same name) was in fact a photograph of himself. He
speculated "that CNN had probably got the picture from the Flight
Safety flying school he attended in Florida."8
If the above
information is accurate, then the details posted by the FBI and CNN
about the alleged hijackers cannot have derived from the events of
9/11, with which the survivors in Saudi Arabia would appear to have
been uninvolved. Once again this leaves the strong possibility that
the details were taken from existing files, rather than from
empirical observations on September 11. 9
And some of the hijackers, like Lee Harvey
Oswald, may have been in CIA files for a special reason: because the
CIA had an operational interest in them.
Internal CIA Evidence of Operational Interest in Oswald and the
Hijackers
I have
speculated that Oswald, like the al-Qaeda trainer Ali Mohamed, might
have been a double agent reporting to the FBI about the terrorist
group (Alpha 66) with which some law enforcement officers associated
him.
I
would like now to discuss more unequivocal evidence, from internal
CIA records, about an operational CIA
interest in first Oswald and later
two of the alleged al-Qaeda hijackers, Nawaz al-Hazmi and Khalid al-Mihdar.
In 2001 as in 1963 the CIA inexplicably withheld information about
the subjects from the FBI, which ought categorically to have
received it. The anomalies are extreme.
This is now
easy to show in the case of Oswald. On October 10, 1963, six
weeks before
the assassination of John F. Kennedy, CIA Headquarters sent out two
messages about Oswald, a teletype to the FBI, State, and Navy, and a
cable to the chief of the CIA’s Mexico City station. Both messages
contained false and mutually contradictory statements, and also
withheld known facts of great potential importance. 10
The teletype to the FBI withheld the obviously
significant information that Oswald had reportedly met in Mexico
City with a Soviet Vice-Consul, Valeriy Kostikov, who was believed
by CIA officers to be an officer of the KGB.11
One CIA
officer, Jane Roman, helped draft both messages. In 1995 she was
confronted by two interviewers with irrefutable evidence that she
had signed off on erroneous information about Oswald in the CIA
cable to Mexico City. After much questioning, she finally admitted,
"I’m signing off on something I know isn’t true." One of the
interviewers, John Newman, then asked her, "‘Is this indicative of
some sort of operational interest in Oswald’s file?’ ‘Yes,’ Roman
replied. ‘To me it’s indicative of a keen interest in Oswald held
very closely on the need-to-know basis.’" She later repeated, "I
would think there was definitely some operational reason to withhold
it [the information at CIA headquarters on Oswald], if it was not
sheer administrative error, when you see all the people who signed
off on it." 12
Other CIA
officers withheld important information from the FBI in January
2000, with respect to Khalid al-Mihdar, who would later be
identified as one of the al-Qaeda hijackers on September 11, 2001.
The NSA overheard on a Yemeni telephone about a meeting in Malaysia
which al-Mihdar would attend, along with Tewfiq bin Attash, the
mastermind of the fatal attack on the USS Cole. 13
It
notified the CIA but not the FBI. In consequence
[Khalid al-Mihdar’s] Saudi passport – which contained a visa
for travel to the United States – was photocopied [in Qatar]
and forwarded to CIA headquarters. The information was not
shared with FBI headquarters until August 2001. An FBI agent
detailed to the Bin Ladin unit at the CIA attempted to share
this information with colleagues at FBI Headquarters. A CIA
desk officer instructed him not to send the cable with this
information. Several hours later, this same desk officer
drafted a cable distributed solely within CIA alleging that
the visa documents had been shared with the FBI. 14
Lawrence Wright, reviewing this and other significant anomalies,
reported in The Looming Tower
the belief among FBI agents following bin Laden "that
the agency was protecting Mihdar and [his companion, the alleged
9/11 hijacker Nawaz al-] Hazmi because it hoped to recruit them," or
alternatively that "the CIA was running a joint venture with Saudi
intelligence" using al-Mihdhar and al-Hazmi.15
Wright himself speculated in a companion essay he wrote for The
New Yorker that "The
CIA may also have been protecting an overseas operation and was
afraid that the F.B.I. would expose it."16
The Consequences of the CIA’s Withholding of Evidence
As just
noted, the CIA, in its teletype to the FBI of October 10, 1963,
withheld the information that Oswald had reportedly met with a KGB
officer, Valeriy Kostikov. Former FBI Director Clarence Kelley in
his memoir later complained that this failure to inform the FBI was
the major reason why Oswald was not put under surveillance on
November 22, 1963. 17
In other
words, the withholding enabled Oswald to play whatever role he
played on that fateful day, even if it was only to become a
designated patsy.
FBI
officials are even more bitter about the consequences of the
withholding of information about al-Mihdar:
They
didn’t want the bureau meddling in their business – that’s
why they didn’t tell the FBI….They purposely hid from the
FBI, purposely refused to tell the bureau that they were
following a man in Malaysia who had a visa to come to
America….And that’s why September 11 happened. That is why
it happened….They have blood on their hands. They have three
thousand deaths on their hands. 18
But the CIA
withheld information from the FBI about bin Attash (already the
subject of a criminal investigation) as well, even when asked by an
FBI agent, Ali Soufan, about bin Attash and the Malaysia meeting.
According to Wright,
The agency did not respond to his
clearly stated request. The fact that the CIA withheld
information about the mastermind of the
Cole
bombing and the meeting in Malaysia, when directly asked by
the FBI, amounted to obstruction of justice in the death of
the seventeen American sailors."19
In late
August 2001, only days before 9/11, FBI agent Steve Bongardt,
complaining about the CIA’s withholding of information about al-Mihdar,
correctly predicted in an angry email to the CIA’s bin Laden unit
that "someday someone will die." 20
The
CIA’s Dishonest Efforts to Cover-Up
From the
moment Congress, in the 1970s, began to evince an interest in the
Kennedy assassination, former CIA officer David Phillips became a
vigorous defender of the CIA’s performance. With respect to false
information about Oswald in CIA cables both to and from Mexico City
(where Phillips was in charge of Cuban affairs for the CIA station),
Phillips’s first response was to dismiss Oswald as "a blip" of no
interest. 21
A similar
defense of the CIA’s failure to act on al-Mihdar was offered to the
Congressional Joint Inquiry into 9/11 by the Director of the CIA’s
Counterterrorism Center, Cofer Black: "I think that month we
watchlisted about 150 people." 22
The same
defense was offered by Dale Watson, the FBI’s former
counterterrorism chief:
There were a lot of red flags prior to 9/11….So it’s a mass
of information and it’s a sea of threats, and it’s like
working against a maze. If you know where the end point of a
maze is, it’s certainly easier to work your way back to the
starting point than trying to go through the maze and sort
out all the red flags. 23
The problem
with this excuse is that both Oswald and al-Mihdar were singled out
for special CIA attention, not left floating in a sea of red flags.
The cable to Mexico City which Jane Roman signed off on was not
handled routinely, it was sent for signature to the CIA’s Assistant
Deputy Director for Plans, Thomas Karamessines. And in the case of
al-Mihdar in Malaysia, back in 2000
CIA
leaders were so convinced about the potential significance
of the al Qaeda meeting in Malaysia, they not only set up
surveillance of it, but provided regular updates to the FBI
director [Louis Freeh], the head of the CIA [George Tenet],
and the national security advisor [Samuel Berger]. 24
That Freeh
and Berger were being notified at the top about the Malaysia meeting
(at the same time that the regular FBI bureaucracy was being cut
out) is confirmed in accounts by Terry McDermott and Philip Shenon. 25
CIA
officials testified falsely to congressional committees with respect
to both Oswald and al-Mihdar. James Angleton was asked by the staff
of the House Select Committee on Assassinations about a memoir
written by the CIA’s station chief in Mexico City, Win Scott, and
later personally retrieved for the Agency after Scott’s death by
Angleton himself. Angleton testified that Scott’s "manuscript was
fictional and did not include a chapter on Oswald." In fact,
according to Jefferson Morley, "The only surviving manuscript is
clearly nonfictional and does have a chapter on Oswald." 26
Both
George Tenet and Cofer Black testified before the Congressional
Joint Inquiry into 9/11 that the FBI
had
been granted access to the information
linking al-Mihdar and Tewfiq bin Attash (alias Khallad), the
mastermind of the Cole bombing. The 9/11 Commission, after a lengthy
review of the matter, concluded "this was not the case."27
The CIA, Oswald, and Al-Mihdar: Suppression of Vital Records
That the CIA
regards its relationship to the suspects Oswald and al-Mihdar as
sensitive is further illustrated by its suppression of vital
evidence with respect to both. Although in the 1990s all government
agencies were required by law to submit their Oswald-related
documents to the Assassination Records Review Board, the CIA has
been vigorously resisting pressure to do this in the case of former
CIA officer George Joannides. In 1963 Joannides was the case officer
for AMSPELL, the CIA’s operation in support of the Cuban exile group
DRE (Directorio Revolucionario Estudiantil). In August 1963 the DRE
was in contact with Oswald and participated with him in a radio
broadcast which was later distributed with CIA help throughout Latin
America. 28
According to
Jefferson Morley, "four decades after the fact, the most important
AMSPELL records are missing from CIA archives – perhaps
intentionally." Monthly reports on DRE activities were filed by CIA
case officers Ross Crozier and William Kent, and these records were
declassified by the ARRB for the periods September 1960-November
1962 and after May 1964.
But
the board was unable to locate any monthly AMSPELL reports
from December 1962 to April 1964. There was a
seventeen-month gap in the AMSPELL records, which coincided
exactly with the period in which George Joannides handled
the group. 29
With respect
to 9/11, all that is known about suppression so far has to do with
the public record. Here it is striking that the Report of the Joint
Inquiry by Congress into 9/11 has one glaring redaction of
twenty-eight pages, dealing with "sources of foreign support for
some of the September 11 th
hijackers while they were in the United States." Press reports have
specified that this refers to Saudi money which reached al-Mihdar
and al-Hazmi in 2000 while they were in San Diego. According to
committee cochair Senator Bob Graham,
The
draft contained a twenty-eight page passage that detailed
evidence that Saudis in the United States – Saudi government
"spies," Graham called them – had provided financial and
logistical support to [al-Mihdar and al-Hazmi] while they
lived in Southern California. 30
Similarly
the 9/11 Commission failed to deal with the information on an FBI
"hijacker timeline" that al-Mihdar and al-Hazmi were met at the
airport on their first arrival in the United States by Omar al-Bayoumi,
the transmitter of the Saudi funds, whom Graham claimed was
obviously "a low-ranking Saudi intelligence agent." 31
The FBI findings were leaked in an early story in
Newsweek:
At
the airport, they were swept up by a gregarious fellow
Saudi, Omar al-Bayoumi, who had been living in the United
States for several years. Al-Bayoumi drove the two men to
San Diego, threw a welcoming party and arranged for the
visitors to get an apartment next to his. He guaranteed the
lease, and plunked down $1,550 in cash to cover the first
two months' rent. 32
One month
later, "In January 2003, Graham and the other members of the
committee were …the focus of a criminal investigation by the FBI
into whether someone on the panel had leaked classified
information." 33
The 9/11
Commission avoided this sensitive area. It cited the FBI Chronology
a total of 52 times in its footnotes, for example at 493n55,
concerning al-Mihdar’s travel from Yemen to the Malaysian meeting.
But it suppressed the FBI’s report that al-Bayoumi met al-Mihdar and
al-Hazmi on their arrival; and it substituted what Shenon calls an
"improbable tale" supplied by al-Bayoumi himself: namely, that he
had run into the two men two weeks later by accident "at a halal
food restaurant" near Los Angeles. 34
It is clear
that two members of the 9/11 Commission staff who redacted this part
of the report – Dietrich Snell and Philip Zelikow – were concerned
to tone down what junior staffers considered to be "explosive
material" on the Saudis. 35
Shenon tells how this section of the 9/11 report was
rewritten by Snell and Zelikow, until the text "removed all of the
most serious allegations against the Saudis."36
But Snell
and Zelikow may have been protecting the CIA as well as the Saudis.
We have already noted how Lawrence Wright, looking at the
extraordinary CIA record on withholding information about al-Mihdar
and al-Hazmi, concluded, "It is also possible, as some FBI
investigators suspect, the CIA was running a joint venture with
Saudi intelligence." 37
Conclusion
It is clear,
as everyone who has studied these matters closely and impartially
concurs, that there have been cover-ups of the CIA’s relationships
to first Oswald and later al-Mihdar – cover-ups which in both cases
have not yet been adequately resolved.
A reasonable
conclusion from the available evidence is that the cover-ups were in
order to conceal prior CIA operational interest in the designated
subjects, just as in the case of Ali Mohamed in the early 1990s. It
could of course be a coincidence that people of operational interest
to the CIA became designated subjects in the deep events of JFK and
9/11. Another, more disturbing possibility is that those responsible
for these events knew of the CIA’s operational interest, and
exploited it in such a way as to ensure that the government would be
embarrassed into covering up what really happened on those days.
A lot of
books about 9/11, including my own, have focused on the roles played
by Bush, Cheney, and Rumsfeld on that day. But it is clear that 9/11
involved a USG connection to at least one figure (Ali Mohamed) so
sensitive that it had been covered up from the time of the Nosair
murder in 1990 and the first World Trade Center bombing in 1993. It
is probable that Oswald’s covert USG connections also dated back to
the time of his strange release from the U.S. Marine Corps in 1959,
enabling him to travel to the Soviet Union. 38
In short
there is a substratum of covert operations underlying both events
that antedates the presidencies in which they occurred. Thus one
should not expect the cover-up of 9/11 in the G.W. Bush
administration to dissipate simply because the Democrats take over
the White House, just as the Johnson administration’s cover-up of
the Kennedy assassination did not dissipate with the election of
Richard Nixon. 39
This is said
not out of despair, but out of belief in the ultimate resilience and
good sense of the American people. The analysis in this book is that
America’s involvement in two disastrous wars – first Vietnam and
later Iraq – was not an outcome of the people’s will, but rather in
large part because of deep events that were used to manipulate that
will. Thus this analysis is not an attack on America, but on that
manipulative mindset that has twice succeeded in maneuvering America
into war.
This
dominant mindset is not restricted to intelligence agencies, though
it is largely rooted there. Over time it has spread into other parts
of government, and has also corrupted large sections of the media
and even universities. That the mindset is widespread does not
however make it either omnipotent or invincible.
It is
important to identify the dominant mindset clearly, if we are ever
going to displace it. It is important also to recognize that the
dark topics discussed in this book are not representative of America
as a whole. In the half century since the CIA’s first adventures in
Burma and Laos, America has continued to be, as in the two centuries
before it, a source of life-enhancing innovations, such as the
computer and the internet.
As Amy
Chua has written in her book Day of
Empire,
If
America can rediscover the path that has been the secret to
its success since its founding and avoid the temptations of
empire building, it could remain the world’s hyperpower in
the decades to come – not a hyperpower of coercion and
military force, but a hyperpower of opportunity, dynamism,
and moral force. 40
I have tried
to suggest in this book that the key to this rediscovery is the
identification and displacement of the manipulative forces that have
maneuvered America, almost unsuspectingly, into two unnecessary and
disastrous wars.
If there is
any merit to my analysis, then, to isolate those forces, we must
press for the truth about both the Kennedy assassination and 9/11.
NOTES
1 Transcript of Dallas Police
Channel Two, 12:44 PM; cf. Channel One 12:45 PM,
http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/dpdtapes/ ; Warren Report 5, 17
Warren Commission Hearings 397, 23 Warren Commission Hearings 916.
2 Clarke, Against All
Enemies, 13-14. The list of 19 names, accepted without question
by the 9/11 Commission Report, was given by the FBI to the press on
September 14, 2001 (Daily Telegraph, September 15, 2001,
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2001/09/15/whunt15.xml
).
3 Transcript of Dallas Police
Channel Two, 12:44 PM; cf. Channel One 12:45 PM,
http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/dpdtapes/;
Warren Report 5, 17 Warren Commission Hearings 397.
4 E.g. Dallas FBI Report from
John Fain, May 12, 1960, 17 Warren Commission Hearings 704, NARA
#157-10006-10213 ("Height: 5’10" Weight: 165 lbs." [inaccurate
description supplied by Marguerite Oswald]); CIA HQ Cable DIR 74830
to Mexico City, 10 Oct 1963, NARA #104-10015-10048, reproduced in
John Newman, Oswald and the CIA (New York: Carroll & Graf,
1995), 512 ("five feet ten inches, one hundred sixty five pounds").
5 Fingerprint card dated
"11-25-63," 17 Warren Commission Hearings 308.
6 Warren Report 5, 144; Sylvia
Meagher, Accessories After the Fact (Mary Ferrell Foundation
Press, 2006), 10-13, 78n. After seeing Oswald twice on television,
Brennan picked out Oswald in a second lineup (Warren Report, 143).
7 Daily Telegraph,
September 23, 2001,
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2001/09/23/widen23.xml.
Cf. Guardian, September
21 2001,
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2001/sep/21/afghanistan.september112
:" Abdulaziz
Al-Omari has also come forward
to say he was not on the flight from Boston that crashed into the
north tower of the World Trade Centre. An electrical engineer who
works in Saudi Arabia, Mr Al-Omari said he was a student in Denver
during the mid-1990s, and that his passport and other papers were
stolen in a burglary in the US five years ago. … `The name is my
name and the birth date is the same as mine,’ he told Asharq al-Aswat,
a London-based Arabic newspaper. `But I am not the one who bombed
the World Trade Centre in New York.’"
8 Daily Telegraph,
September 23, 2001,
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2001/09/23/widen23.xml.
9 On October 4, 2001, the FBI
issued a press release showing what appeared to be photos from
surveillance videotape of two hijackers, Mohammed Atta and Abdulaziz
Al-Omari, entering Portland Jetport on the morning of September 11,
2001 (FBI Press Release, October 4, 2001,
http://www.fbi.gov/pressrel/pressrel01/100401picts.htm
). If valid, these would constitute
evidence from the event itself. However the photos are anomalous, in
that they show two time superimposed stamps, one showing 5:45, the
other showing 5:53. The photos are not cited as evidence in the 9/11
Commission Report. On July 22, 2004, the date of the release of the
9/11 Commission Report, CNN aired what they said was surveillance
videotape of two hijackers, Majed Moqed and Khalid al-Mihdar.
entering "at one of the security screening points at Dulles
International" (CNN,
http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0407/22/lad.04.html
). The authenticity of the videotape has been challenged, however,
because it lacks the time and date and location identification
normally burned into a surveillance video image (Rowland Morgan and
Ian Henshall, 9/11 Revealed: The Unanswered Questions [New
York: Carroll and Graf, 2005], 117-19).
10 I have argued that the
conflicting messages were part of a so-called "marked card" or
"barium meal" test to determine if and where leaks of sensitive
information were occurring. This was a familiar technique, and was
the responsibility of the CI/SIG or Counterintelligence Special
Intelligence Group which drafted the two cables. See Peter Dale
Scott, Deep Politics II: The New Revelations in U.S. Government
Files,1994-1999 (Ipswich, MA: Mary Ferrell Foundation Press,
2007), 17-18, 92; also Peter Dale Scott, "Oswald and the Hunt for
Popov's Mole," The Fourth Decade, III, 3 (March 1996), 3;
www.maryferrell.org/mffweb/archive/viewer/showDoc.do?absPageId=519798.
11 Peter Dale Scott, Deep
Politics II, 30-33.
12 Jefferson Morley, Our
Man in Mexico: Winston Scott and the Hidden History of the CIA
(Lawrence, KA: University Press of Kansas, 2008), 196-98. See Peter
Dale Scott, Deep Politics II, 30-33.
13 Lawrence Wright, The
Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11 (New York: Knopf,
2006), 310.
14 9/11 Commission Report,
502n44.
15 Wright, The Looming
Tower, 312, 313.
16 Lawrence Wright, "The
Agent," New Yorker, July 10 and 17, 2006, 68.
17 Clarence M. Kelley,
Kelley: The Story of an FBI Director (Kansas City: Andrews,
McMeel, & Parker, 1987), 268.
18 James Bamford, A Pretext
for War: 9/11, Iraq, and the Abuse of America’s Intelligence
Agencies (New York: Doubleday, 2004), 224.
19 Wright, The Looming
Tower, 329. In his New Yorker story (p. 70), Wright wrote
that "By withholding the picture of Khallad [bin Attash]…the C.I.A.
may in effect have allowed the September 11th plot to proceed."
20 9/11 Commission Report,
271; Wright, The Looming Tower, 353-54.
21 David Atlee Phillips,
Nightwatch, 139; quoted in Morley, Our Man in Mexico,
184. Morley observes that in the 1970s Phillips offered a total of
"four not entirely consistent versions of the story of Oswald’s
visit to Mexico City."
22 J. Cofer Black testimony
before 9/11 Congressional Joint Inquiry, 107th Cong., 2nd
Sess., July 24, 2003.
23 Dale Watson testimony
before Joint Inquiry, 107th Cong., 2nd Sess., September 26, 2002.
24 Amy B. Zegart, Flying
Blind: The CIA, the FBI, and the Origins of 9/11(Princeton, NJ:
Princeton UP, 2007), 117.
25 Terry McDermott, Perfect
Soldiers: The Hijackers: Who They Were, Why TheyDid It (New
York: HarperCollins, 20050, 294n45; Philip Shenon, The
Commission: The Uncensored History of the 9/11 Investigation
(New York: Twelve/Hachette, 2008), 141.
26 Morley, Our Man in
Mexico, 7, 294.
27 9/11 Commission Report,
267.
28 Peter Dale Scott, Deep
Politics and the Death of JFK (Berkeley: University of
California Press, 1998), 81-86; Morley, Our Man in Mexico,
170-77.
29 Morley, Our Man in
Mexico, 177.
30 Shenon, The Commission,
50-51.
31 Larisa Alexandrovna, "FBI
documents contradict 9/11 Commission report," RawStory, February 28,
2008,
http://rawstory.com/news/2008/FBI_documents_contradict_Sept._11_Commission_0228.html
(met at the airport); Shenon, The Commission, 52 (al-Bayoumi).
Al-Bayoumi "apparently did work for Dallah Avco, an
aviation-services company with extensive contracts with the Saudi
Ministry of Defense and Aviation, headed by Prince Sultan, the
father of the Saudi ambassador to the United States, Prince Bandar"
("The Saudi Money Trail," Newsweek, December 2, 2002,
http://www.newsweek.com/id/66665).
32 "The Saudi Money Trail,"
Newsweek, December 2, 2002. The FBI "hijacker timeline" was
released by the FBI on February 4, 2008. See Larisa Alexandrovna,
"FBI documents contradict 9/11 Commission report, Rawstory.com,
February 28, 2008,
http://rawstory.com/news/2008/FBI_documents_contradict_Sept._11_Commission_0228.html.
33 Shenon, The Commission,
54.
34 9/11 Commission Report,
217; Shenon, The Commission, 52-53.
35 Shenon, The
Commission, 398.
36 Shenon, The
Commission, 398.
37 Wright, The Looming
Tower, 313. Looking at the same evidence, Christopher Ketcham
has raised an alternative possibility, that "the CIA may have
subcontracted to Mossad, given that the agency was both prohibited
by law from conducting intelligence operations on U.S. soil, and
lacked a pool of competent Arabic-fluent field officers. In such a
scenario, the CIA would either have worked actively with the
Israelis or quietly abetted an independent operation on U.S. soil….
When in the spring of 2002 the scenario of CIA's domestic
subcontracting to foreign intelligence
was posed to the veteran CIA/NSA
intelligence operative, with whom I spoke extensively, the operative
didn't reject it out of hand" (Christopher Ketcham, "Cheering Movers
and Art Student Spies: What Did Israel Know in Advance of the 9/11
Attacks?" CounterPunch, February 7, 2007,
http://www.conspiracyplanet.com/channel.cfm?channelid=73&contentid=4253&page=2
).
38 Oswald requested a
dependency discharge from the Marines in August 1959, "on the ground
that his mother needed his support" (Warren Report, 688).
Accordingly Marine Lt. A.G. Ayers, Jr. signed a document for
Oswald’s release to inactive duty on September 11, 1959 (19 WH 679,
cf. 17 WH 762) "by reason of hardship (19 WH 678). However Lt. Ayers
should have known that Oswald had no intention of staying in Texas
to support his mother; he had already, on September 4, 1959, signed
an affidavit in support of Oswald’s passport application "to attend
the College of A. Schweitzer, Chur, Switzerland and the Univ of
Turku, Turku, Finland" (22 WH 77-79). (It is a sign of some covert
intrigue that the language of instruction at the University of Turku
was Finnish, a language Oswald did not know.)
39 A significant symptom of
this enduring substratum has been the Bush Administration’s
protection of Samuel Berger, Clinton’s national security advisor.
Berger pleaded guilty in April 2005 to having stolen 9/11 documents
from the National Archives (Shenon, The Commission, 414). A
condition of his plea bargain was to submit to a Justice Department
polygraph test, to determine what documents had been stolen.
Republican Congressman Dana Rohrabacher, a long-time critic of CIA
operations in Afghanistan, revealed to the House in February 2008
that he had written to the Bush Justice Department, demanding that
it administer the polygraph test, and that the Justice Department
had rejected his demand (Congressional Record, February 26,
2008, House, pp. H1065-H1072). We have already seen that Berger when
in office was receiving regular reports from the CIA about the
presence of al-Mihdar and al-Hamzi at the Kuala Lumpur meeting (Zegart,
Flying Blind, 117). It is possible that these were the
reports he was stealing from the Archives, and that the Justice
Department refusal to administer the polygraph test is part of a
cover-up to protect the CIA’s relationship to the two Saudis.
40 Amy Chua, Day of
Empire: How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance – and Why They Fall
(New York: Doubleday, 2007), 342.
Peter Dale Scott, a former Canadian diplomat and
professor at the University of California, Berkeley, is the author
of the forthcoming The War Conspiracy: JFK, 9/11, and the
Deep Politics of War, due in August 2008. This previously
unpublished essay is the concluding section of the new book, which
can be ordered from the Mary Ferrell Foundation Press by clicking
here at
http://www.maryferrell.org/wiki/index.php/MFF_Store.
His website is
http://www.peterdalescott.net.
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