[NewPacifica] Last word on 9/11 conspiracy theories



There's about 600,000 entries on the Web  about this.  If you want more,
look for yourselves.  Meanwhile, we have a democracy to attend to.

Avis


When 9/11 Conspiracy Theories Go Bad
By David Corn, AlterNet
Posted on March 1, 2002, Printed on April 6, 2006
http://www.alternet.org/story/12536/

Please stop sending me those emails. You know who are. And you know what
emails I mean ... Okay, I'll spell it out -- those forwarded emails
suggesting, or flat-out stating, the CIA and the U.S. government were
somehow involved in the horrific September 11 attacks.

There are emails about a fellow imprisoned in Canada who claims to be a
former U.S. intelligence office and who supposedly passed advance warning of
the attack to jail guards in mid-August. There are emails, citing an Italian
newspaper, reporting that last July Osama bin Laden was treated for kidney
disease at the American hospital in Dubai and met with a CIA official. There
are the emails, referring to a book published in France, that note the
attacks came a month after Bush Administration officials, who were
negotiating an oil deal with the Taliban, told the Afghans "either you
accept our offer of a carpet of gold, or we bury you under a carpet of
bombs."

Get the hint? Washington either did nothing to stop the September 11 attacks
or plotted the assaults so a justifiable war could then be waged against
Afghanistan to benefit Big Oil.

One email I keep receiving is a timeline of so-called suspicious events that
"establishes CIA foreknowledge of [the September 11 attacks] and strongly
suggests that there was criminal complicity on the part of the U.S.
government in their execution."

I won't argue that the U.S. government does not engage in brutal, murderous
skulduggery from time to time. But the notion that the U.S. government
either detected the attacks but allowed them to occur, or, worse, conspired
to kill thousands of Americans to launch a war-for-oil in Afghanistan is
absurd. Still, each week emails passing on such tripe arrive. This crap is
probably not worth a rational rebuttal, but I'm irritated enough to try.

It's a mug's game to refute individual pieces of conspiracy theories. Who
can really know if anything that bizarre happened at a Dubai hospital? As
for the man jailed in Canada, he was being held on a credit card fraud
charge, and the only source for the story about his warning was his own
word. The judge in his case said, "There is no independent evidence to
support his colossal allegations." But a conspiracy-monges can reply,
wouldn't you expect the government and its friends in Canada to say that?

So let's start with a broad question: would U.S. officials be capable of
such a foul deed? Capable -- as in able to pull it off and willing to do so.
Simply put, the spies and special agents are not good enough, evil enough,
or gutsy enough to mount this operation. That conclusion is based partly on,
dare I say it, common sense, but also on years spent covering national
security matters. (For a book I wrote on the CIA, I interviewed over 100 CIA
officials and employees.)

Not good enough: Such a plot -- to execute the simultaneous destruction of
the two towers, a piece of the Pentagon, and four airplanes and make it
appear as if it all was done by another party -- is far beyond the skill
level of U.S. intelligence. It would require dozens (or scores or hundreds)
of individuals to attempt such a scheme. They would have to work together,
and trust one another not to blow their part or reveal the conspiracy. They
would hail from an assortment of agencies (CIA, FBI, INS, Customs, State,
FAA, NTSB, DOD, etc.).

Yet anyone with the most basic understanding of how government functions (or
does not function) realizes that the various bureaucracies of Washington --
particularly those of the national security "community" -- do not work well
together. Even covering up advance knowledge would require an extensive
plot. If there truly had been intelligence reports predicting the 9/11
attacks, these reports would have circulated through intelligence and
policymaking circles before the folks at the top decided to smother them for
geopolitical gain. That would make for a unwieldy conspiracy of silence. And
in either scenario -- planning the attacks or permitting them to occur --
everyone who participated in the conspiracy would have to be freakin' sure
that all the other plotters would stay quiet.

Not evil enough. This is as foul as it gets -- to kill thousands of
Americans, including Pentagon employees, to help out oil companies. (The
sacrificial lambs could have included White House staff or members of
Congress, had the fourth plane not crashed in Pennsylvania.) This is a
Hollywood-level of dastardliness, James Bond (or Dr. Evil) material.

Are there enough people of such a bent in all those agencies? That's
doubtful. CIA officers and American officials have been evildoers. They have
supported death squads and made use of drug dealers overseas. They have
assisted torturers, disseminated assassination manuals, sold weapons to
terrorist-friendly governments, undermined democratically-elected
governments, and aided dictators who murder and maim. They have covered up
reports of massacres and human rights abuses. They have plotted to kill
foreign leaders.

These were horrendous activities, but, in most instances, the perps
justified these deeds with Cold War imperatives (perverted as they were).
And to make the justification easier, the victims were people overseas.
Justifying the murder of thousands of Americans to help ExxonMobil would
require U.S. officials to engage in a different kind of detachment and an
even more profound break with decency and moral norms.

I recall interviewing one former CIA official who helped manage a division
that ran the sort of actions listed above, and I asked him whether the CIA
had considered "permanently neutralizing" a former CIA man who had revealed
operations and the identities of CIA officers. Kill an American citizen? he
replied, as if I were crazy to ask. No, no, he added, we could never do
that. Yes, in the spy-world some things were beyond the pale. And, he
explained, it would be far too perilous, for getting caught in that type of
nasty business could threaten your career. Which brings us to....

Not gutsy enough. Think of the danger -- the potential danger to the
plotters. What if their plan were uncovered before or, worse, after the
fact? Who's going to risk being associated with the most infamous crime in
U.S. history? At the start of such a conspiracy, no one could be certain it
would work and remain a secret. CIA people -- and those in other government
agencies -- do care about their careers.

Would George W. Bush take the chance of being branded the most evil
president of all time by countenancing such wrongdoing? Oil may be in his
blood, but would he place the oil industry's interests ahead of his own? (He
sure said sayonara to Kenneth Lay and Enron pretty darn fast.) And Bush and
everyone else in government know that plans leak. Disinformation specialists
at the Pentagon could not keep their office off the front page of The New
York Times. In the aftermath of September 11, there has been much
handwringing over the supposed fact that U.S. intelligence has been too
risk-averse. But, thankfully, some inhibitions -- P.R. concerns, career
concerns -- do provide brakes on the spy-crowd.

By now, you're probably wondering why I have bothered to go through this
exercise. Aren't these conspiracy theories too silly to address? That should
be the case. But, sadly, they do attract people.

A fellow named Michael Ruppert, who compiled that timeline mentioned above,
has drawn large crowds to his lectures. He has offered $1000 to anyone who
can "disprove the authenticity of any of his source material." Well, his
timeline includes that Canadian prisoner's claim and cites the Toronto Star
as the source. But Ruppert fails to note that the Star did not confirm the
man's account, that the paper reported some observers "wonder if it isn't
just the ravings of a lunatic," and that the Star subsequently reported the
judge said the tale had "no air of reality." Does that disprove anything?
Not 100 percent. There's still a chance that man is telling the truth,
right? So I'm not expecting a check.

Conspiracy theories may seem more nuisance than problem. But they do compete
with reality for attention. There is plenty to be outraged over without
becoming obsessed with X Files-like nonsense. Examples? There's the
intelligence services's failure to protect Americans and the lack of
criticism of the CIA from elected officials. Or, General Tommy Franks, the
commander of military operations in Afghanistan, declaring the commando
mis-assault at Hazar Qadam, which resulted in the deaths of fifteen to
twenty local Afghans loyal to the pro-U.S. government, was not an
intelligence failure. (How can U.S. Special Forces fire at targets they
wrongly believe to be Taliban or al Qaeda fighters, end up killing people
they did not intend to kill, and the operation not be considered an
intelligence failure?) More outrage material? A few months ago, forensic
researchers found the remains of people tortured and killed at a base the
CIA had established in the 1980s as a training center for the contras. The
U.S. ambassador to Honduras at the time is now the U.S. ambassador to the
United Nations, John Negroponte.

There are always national security misdeeds to be mad about. They may not be
as cinematic in nature as a plot in which shady, unidentified U.S. officials
scheme to blow up the World Trade Towers to gain control of an oil pipeline
in Central Asia. But dozens of dead Hondurans or twenty or so Afghans
wrongly killed ought to provoke anger and protest. In fact, out-there
conspiracy theorizing serves the interests of the powers-that-be by making
their real transgressions seem tame in comparison. (What's a few dead in
Central America, compared to thousands in New York City? Why worry about
Negroponte, when unidentified U.S. officials are slaughtering American
civilians to trigger war?)

Perhaps there's a Pentagon or CIA office that churns out this material. Its
mission: distract people from the real wrongdoing. Now there's a conspiracy
theory worth exploring. Doesn't it make sense? Doesn't it all fit together?
I challenge anyone to disprove it.

David Corn is the Washington editor of The Nation.



© 2006 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/12536/




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