On 9/11: A Revisit, to The 28 Pages Controversy
"Either this nation shall kill racism, or racism shall kill this nation." (S. Jonas, August, 2018)
"How do you spell ICE? G-E-S-T-A-P-O."
First, they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out because I was not a socialist. Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out because I was not a trade unionist. Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for me and there was no one left to speak for me. Pastor Martin Niemoller (c. 1946)
On this day, he anniversary of one of the worst days in U.S. history, I often revisit a column that I have posted in the past. This column, which indeed I have previously re-posted, goes back to what was/is called "The 28 Pages Controversy." It deals with questions about the attack and its fall-out, literal and figurative, that have still never been answered. And it is likely that they will not be, at least until the principals at the center of the controversy are long dead. The "28 Pages" refers to an unreleased section of the 9/11 Joint Congressional Inquiry. They were excised by Pres. Bush. The excision alone is/was enough to raise doubts about the particular conspiracy theory that was propounded by that Administration and its allies. And so.
The list of important folks who have [or had] doubts includes: 9/11 Commission co-chair Lee Hamilton, 9/11 Commissioner Timothy Roemer (who became very active in urging the release of The 28 Pages, 9/11 Commissioner Max Cleland (who resigned from the Commission in disgust over its refusal to delve deeper into possible alternative explanations other than the one that seemed to be pre-destined to be arrived at), 9/11 Commissioner Bob Kerrey, Senior Counsel to the 9/11 Commission (John Farmer), Daniel Ellsberg, 27-year CIA veteran Raymond McGovern (who handled National Intelligence Estimates at the time), 29-year CIA veteran, former National Intelligence Officer (NIO) and former Director of the CIAs Office of Regional and Political Analysis William Bill Christison, CIA Operations Officer Lynne Larkin, decorated 20-year CIA veteran Robert Baer, Division Chief of the CIAs Office of Soviet Affairs Melvin Goodman, Co-Chair of the Congressional Inquiry into 9/11 and former Head of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Bob Graham, Senator Patrick Leahy, former Republican Congressman Ron Paul, former Democratic Congressman Dennis Kucinich, Republican Congressman Jason Chafetz, former Democratic Senator Mike Gravel, former Republican Senator Lincoln Chaffee, former U.S. Democratic Congressman Dan Hamburg, and former U.S. Republican Congressman and senior member of the House Armed Services Committee, Curt Weldon. All of the above people have raised serious questions about the official conspiracy theory, as have many other current and former intelligence and law enforcement operatives. [Reviewing it again, this is some list!] As it happens, the matter of 9/11 and what really happened periodically appears on the front pages (although less frequently as time passes), because of "The 28 Pages" controversy.
According to a then current The New Yorker article:
"On the bottom floor of the United States Capitol's new underground visitors center, there is a secure room where the House Intelligence Committee maintains highly classified files. One of those files is titled Finding, Discussion and Narrative Regarding Certain Sensitive National Security Matters. It is twenty-eight pages long. In 2002, the Administration of George W. Bush excised those pages from the report of the Joint Congressional Inquiry into the 9/11 attacks. President Bush said then that publication of that section of the report would damage American intelligence operations, revealing sources and methods that would make it harder for us to win the war on terror.
"There's nothing in it about national security, Walter Jones, a Republican congressman from North Carolina who has read the missing pages, contends. It’s about the Bush Administration and its relationship with the Saudis. Stephen Lynch, a Massachusetts Democrat, told me that the document is stunning in its clarity, and that it offers direct evidence of complicity on the part of certain Saudi individuals and entities in Al Qaeda's attack on America. Those twenty-eight pages tell a story that has been completely removed from the 9/11 Report, Lynch maintains. Another congressman who has read the document said that the evidence of Saudi government support for the 9/11 hijacking is very disturbing, and that the real question is whether it was sanctioned at the royal-family level or beneath that, and whether these leads were followed through. At the time, in a rare example of bipartisanship, Jones and Lynch co-sponsored a resolution requesting that the Obama Administration declassify the pages. (It did not.)"
"It is fascinating that the Saudi Royal Family (that is, the government of Saudi Arabia) itself is asking that the document be de-classified and released. Through their decades-long connection with the Bush family, going back to when GHW Bush was the Director of the CIA in the 1970s and they had conjoint corporate interests in something called the Carlyle Group, they likely already know what is in it. Thus, it is likely that it contains nothing too damning about them. The ostensible push from Congress for its release at this time is to enable families of 9/11 victims to sue the Saudi government or individual Saudis who gave money to right-wing Islamic causes and possibly directly to one or more of the high-jackers, for compensation.
"The No response has been very strong, at a senior level, ranging from Richard Haass, former President of the Council on Foreign Relations [and now a regular MSNBC Morning Joe commentator] to Philip Zelikow, who was the Staff Director of the 9/11 Commission (who also happened to have been the staff director for the George W. Bush Presidential Transition Team). Oh such terrible things would happen to our relations with the Saudis, they claim (and do recall that the high-jackers were for the most part Saudis). But if that were the case, why would the Saudi Royal Family be pushing for the documents release? It’s just a police report, a collection of fact and speculation, with no conclusions. Ah well, that's just the point, isn't it?"
Recall the following. From the outset of the post-tragedy period, Bush/Cheney did not want there to be any kind of official investigation of it, and agreed to set up the Commission only under enormous pressure. Bush and Cheney themselves testified before the Commission, but not under oath, and Cheney would not allow Bush to appear by himself. On the other side, there is that long list above of senior people, mainly from the government, who have raised major questions about the Report.
Further, if indeed The 28 Pages are just a police report, that would, if it raised unanswered questions (which apparently it does), provide a strong impetus for reopening the whole investigation. It might also stimulate the formation of a Commission to investigate the completely separate Pentagon disaster, which has never been the subject of a formal inquiry. (I would want such an inquiry to begin with the question: how could a hollow aluminum tube that is an airplane, approximately 14 feet in diameter penetrate two walls of heavily reinforced concrete, and, by-the-by, leave no wreckage along the way?)
In my view, I don't think that the no-sayers about The 28 Pages are really concerned with the possible Saudi reaction, especially since, to repeat, the Saudi Royal Family itself has asked for the text to be released. No. I think that the concern runs much deeper than that, possibly all the way back to Bush/Cheney and their possible role in the disaster. There is not space here to go through the whole collection of evidence that indicates a) that the Commission Report is far from complete or accurate, and b) that indeed the standard conspiracy theory simply does not hold water. But just consider the following collection of facts which could be connected into a very sinister picture. Just sayin.
1)The Bush family had a long-standing relationship with Osama-bin-Laden's father, a major construction magnate in Saudi Arabia. 2) As a young man, Osama bin Laden was a CIA asset, working with the forces that Zbig Brzezinski put together in the late 1970s to overthrow the Soviet-supported government in Afghanistan. 3)The two key Saudi operatives who came to this country to take flying lessons on commercial aircraft with a number of their countrymen spoke no English and apparently had no previous flight experience. 3) Bush, to repeat, did not want to have a Commission, did not testify under oath, did not testify by himself, and ordered the retention of The 28 Pages. 4) New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani made sure that all of the Twin Towers wreckage was scooped up as quickly as possible, and buried in the New Jersey swamps, before any forensic work could be done on it.
Former Florida Governor and Senator Bob Graham, who strongly supported the release, had been concerned about its retention from the time it happened. He often gave the impression (to me at least) that he knew much more about what really happened than he either wanted to reveal or simply cannot, because of some oath or other (or something else?) Again, during the three-day no-fly zone that was created over all of the U.S. immediately after the disaster, 18 (if I recall the number correctly) members of Osama bin Laden's family who were in the United States were flown out on a private jet, before the FBI could have access to them for questioning.
Cheney has never been officially questioned about the stand-down order he may have given that would have over-ridden the standard operating procedure for dealing with high-jacked airplanes, before the actual attack on the buildings, if no response were obtained from them: shoot them down. Nor has he been questioned, under oath, and in depth, about why on that day he took over supreme command of the Defense Department from Bush (somehow displacing the next in-line-of-command, Sec. of Defense Donald Rumsfeld), Bush who was apparently dumb-struck when he was given the news whilst he was reading a children's story at a school. So dumb struck was he, it appeared, that he just kept on reading.
There are just too many un-answered questions about a possible Bush-Cheney connection to the whole horror. (And do recall that Bush ignored a whole series of CIA warnings about a possible al Qaeda/bin Laden attack through the summer of 2001, not just the famous August 6 one). There may or may not have been one. But those forces that do not want The 28 Pages released are certainly concerned that the follow-ups to it might very well lead to that conclusion, with possible political, economic, legal, criminal justice, and family outcomes, some of which are beyond comprehension at this time.
But, to repeat, that is what I thought (then, and still do) think the whole "No Release" movement is all about. Not some concern about suing or not suing various Saudis, within and without the Royal Family, and what consequences that might have down the road for foreigners suing the United States about the legion of damage and death that U.S. foreign and military policies have wreaked around the world for many decades now. It’s all about the 9/11 disaster itself and the possible involvement of U.S. government officials at a very high level in it. Again, just sayin.
Let me repeat, today (just as I have done at the end of previous printings of this column): It's all about 9/11 and the possible involvement of U.S. government officials at a very high level in it. [Still] just sayin'.