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The Independent Newspaper - U.K.
UNANSWERED QUESTIONS:
THE MYSTERY OF FLIGHT 93
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/story.jsp?story=323958
John Carlin reports from
Shanksville,
Pennsylvania.
13 August 2002
We
all know the inspiring story of Flight 93,
of the heroic passengers who forced the hijacked
plane to the ground, sacrificing themselves
to save the lives of
others. The only trouble is: it may simply
not be true.
The fate of United Airlines
Flight 93, the last of the four hijacked
planes to go down in
the United States on 11 September, holds no
mystery for Lee
Purbaugh. He saw what happened with his own
eyes. He was the only
person present in the field where, at
10.06am, the aircraft hit the ground.
"There was an incredibly
loud rumbling sound and there it was, right
there, right above my
head – maybe 50ft up," says Purbaugh, who
works at a scrapyard
overlooking the crash site. "It was only a
split second but it
looked like it was moving in slow motion,
like it took forever. I saw it rock from side to side then,
suddenly, it dipped and dived, nose first,
with a huge
explosion, into the ground. I knew
immediately that no one could possibly have survived."
Apart from, here and there,
a finger, a toe or a tooth, all that
remained of the 44
souls aboard, churned into the soil or
hanging from the branches of nearby trees, were small
pieces of tissue and bone. The plane was
also pulverised,
reduced to tiny fragments of metal. Wally
Miller, the local
coroner in what used to be a forgotten
corner of rural Pennsylvania, was the man charged by law with
collecting the human remains and
establishing the
causes of death. "I issued the death
certificates," says Miller, who is also the local undertaker. "I put
down 'murdered' for the 40 passengers and crew; 'suicide' for the four
terrorists."
But Miller, who worked
closely with the FBI during the 13 days that
they investigated the
crash site, admits that, in the end, he
cannot prove what
happened; he can only infer it. Neither he
nor anybody else knows what exactly caused Flight 93 to
go down and, as Miller puts it, "bring the
world's troubles
crashing down on our doorstep". Or, if there
are people who do
know, they are not telling.
The shortage of available
facts did not prevent the creation of an
instant legend – a
legend that the US government and the US
media were pleased to
propagate, and that the American public have
been eager, for the most part, to accept as fact. The
legend goes like this: the passengers on the hijacked United flight,
alerted on their mobile phones to the news
of the other three
hijacked planes, decide that if they are not
going to save
themselves at least they will do the
patriotic thing and spare the lives of those who are the
terrorists' intended targets; so they charge
down the aisle, storm
the cockpit, where a terrorist is at the
controls, and, in the
ensuing struggle, force the plane down.
President George Bush,
Attorney General John Ashcroft, the head of
the FBI Robert
Mueller, and numerous other senior
government officials who have saluted the "heroes" of
Flight 93, have consistently, and
repeatedly, advanced
this version of events. So have the big
national newspapers and all the big national
television stations. The New York Times,
normally a model of
legalistic precision, published this
extraordinarily woolly sentence on 22 September upon
learning, from unnamed "official" sources,
that the plane's
cockpit voice-recorder had registered "a
desperate and wild
struggle" aboard. "And while it [the
recorder] did not provide a clear or complete picture," The New
York Times read, "it seemed certain that
there was a chaotic
confrontation that apparently led to the
crash of the jet."
Vanity Fair magazine, going
on little more information than was
available to The New
York Times, went ahead and published a
highly detailed story on Flight 93, which, the
magazine said, "may be remembered as one of
the greatest tales of
heroism ever told". Vanity Fair did
recognise, though, that any suggestions as to what
actually happened to force the plane down
had to be, by
necessity, "pure conjecture".
Two months later, Newsweek
got hold of what it was told was a partial transcript of the
voice-recorder and, upon that basis,
narrated the story of
"the Heroes of Flight 93" in even more
vivid, drum-rolling, Hollywoodesque detail than Vanity Fair had
done. The passengers were "citizen
soldiers... who rose
up, like their forefathers, to defy
tyranny", intoned Newsweek. "In daring and dying, the passengers
and crew of Flight 93 found victory for us
all."
The transcript that Newsweek
obtained did indicate that fighting had
taken place aboard,
curses had been uttered, prayers raised up
both to the Muslim
and the Christian god. But for all the drama
of the story, Newsweek did not draw attention to
the fact that, in truth, they were guessing
as to how or why the
plane had crashed; that they did not know
whether the
passengers had even made it into the
cockpit; that they had no clue what happened during Flight 93's
decisive, desperate last eight minutes.
Which is not to assert that
the "hero" story is untrue, or even
implausible. Maybe
the legend does indeed correspond perfectly
to the facts. And
certainly, based on the records of telephone
calls made from the plane, there is no disputing that a
number of the passengers did indeed intend
to carry out actions
of great courage. But what those actions
actually turned out
to be is not known – or known only to a
small group of people with a clear picture of what
happened in the skies over Shanksville on
the morning of 11
September, people in the US military who
tracked the plane's last moments as well as people
familiar with, but unwilling to reveal, the
full contents of the
material gleaned from the cockpit voice-
recorder, which was
retrieved in perfect working order after the
crash.
The absence of official
information has led to lively and often
well-informed debate
in the unofficial medium of the internet
(see
www.flight93crash.com) But there are also a number
of individuals in the aviation industry
convinced that there
do exist other plausible interpretations of
what actually happened. Because there are, most
certainly, a number of important unanswered questions – questions based
on evidence, as well as on a manifest absence of candour on the
part of the authorities – which the national US media, typically so
sceptical and inquisitive, have shown a
curious reluctance to
ask.
The alternative theories,
both of which have been denied by the US
military and the FBI,
are a) that Flight 93 was brought down by a
US government plane;
and b) that a bomb went off aboard
(passengers had said in phone calls that one of the
hijackers had what appeared to be a bomb
strapped to him). If
doubts remain despite the denials, if
theories flourish, it is in large part because of
the authorities' failure to address head-on questions centring on the
following four conundrums.
1. The wide displacement of
the plane's debris, one explanation for
which might be an
explosion of some sort aboard prior to the
crash. Letters –
Flight 93 was carrying 7,500 pounds of mail
to California – and other papers from the plane were found
eight miles (13km) away from the scene of
the crash. A sector
of one engine weighing one ton was found
2,000 yards away.
This was the single heaviest piece recovered
from the crash, and the biggest, apart from a piece
of fuselage the size of a dining-room table.
The rest of the
plane, consistent with an impact calculated
to have occurred at
500mph, disintegrated into pieces no bigger
than two inches long. Other remains of the plane were
found two miles away near a town called
Indian Lake. All of
these facts, widely disseminated, were
confirmed by the coroner Wally Miller.
2. The location of US Air
Force jets, which might or might not have
been close enough to
fire a missile at the hijacked plane. Live
news media reports on
the morning of 11 September conflict with a
number of official
statements issued later. What the government
acknowledges is that the first fighters with the
mission to intercept took off at 8.52am;
that another set of
fighters took off from Andrews Air Force
base near Washington at 9.35am – precisely the time
that Flight 93 turned almost 180 degrees off course towards Washington
and the hijacker pilot was heard by
air-traffic
controllers to say that there was "a bomb
aboard". Flight 93, whose menacing trajectory was made
known by the broadcast media almost immediately, did not go down
for another 31 minutes. Apart from the
logical conclusion
that at least one Air Force F-16 – 125 miles
away in Washington at
9.40am, meaning 10 minutes away from Flight
93 (or less if it flew at supersonic speed) – should
have reached the fourth of the "flying
bombs" well before
10.06am, there is this evidence from a
federal flight controller published a few days later
in a newspaper in New Hampshire: that an
F-16 had been "in hot
pursuit" of the hijacked United jet and
"must have seen the
whole thing". Also, there was one brief
report on CBS television before the crash that two F-16
fighters were tailing Flight 93.
Vice-President Dick
Cheney acknowledged five days later that
President Bush had authorised the Air Force pilots to
shoot down hijacked commercial aircraft.
3. One telephone call from
the doomed plane whose contents do not entirely tally with the hero
legend and which is accordingly omitted in
the Independence
Day-type dramas favoured by the US media.
The Associated Press
news service reported on 11 September that
eight minutes before the crash, a frantic male
passenger called the 911 emergency number.
He told the operator,
named Glen Cramer, that he had locked
himself inside one of
the plane's toilets. Cramer told the AP, in
a report that was widely broadcast on 11 September, that the
passenger had spoken for one minute. "We're being hijacked, we're being
hijacked!" the man screamed down his mobile phone. "We confirmed that
with him several times," Cramer said, "and
we asked him to
repeat what he said. He was very distraught.
He said he believed
the plane was going down. He did hear some
sort of an explosion
and saw white smoke coming from the plane,
but he didn't know where. And then we lost contact
with him."
According to the information
that has been made known, this was the last of the various phone calls
made from the aeroplane. No more calls were received from the plane in
the eight minutes that remained after the
man in the toilet
said that he had heard an explosion.
4. Eyewitness accounts of a
"mystery plane" that flew low over the
Flight 93 crash site
shortly after impact. Lee Purbaugh is one of
at least half a dozen
named individuals who have reported seeing a
second plane flying low and in erratic patterns, not
much above treetop level, over the crash
site within minutes
of the United flight crashing. They describe
the plane as a small,
white jet with rear engines and no
discernible markings. Purbaugh, who served three years in the US
Navy, said he did not believe it was a
military plane. If it
indeed was not, one suggestion made in the
internet discussion
groups is that US Customs uses planes with
these characteristics to interdict aerial drug
shipments. Either way, the presence of the
mystery jet remains a
puzzle.
How has the US government
and its various agencies responded to doubts raised by the
above questions? In the following ways:
1. The paper debris eight
miles away, the FBI says, was wafted away by
a 10mph wind; the
jet-engine part flew 2,000 yards on account
of the savage force
of the plane's impact with the ground. The
FBI conclusion: "Nothing was found that was
inconsistent with the plane going into the
ground intact."
Aviation experts I have contacted are very
doubtful about this. One expert expresses astonishment at
the notion that the letters and other papers would have remained airborne
for almost one hour before falling to earth.
2. The Air Force jets were
on their way but failed to make it on time, according to General Richard
Myers, chairman of the joint chiefs of
staff. Fighters did
finally approach Flight 93, he acknowledges,
"moments" before it
crashed, but did not shoot it down. Which
begs the question why they were unable to arrive sooner
to intercept an aircraft that clearly had
terrorists aboard and
that was flying straight for Washington more
than one hour after
another United Airlines plane had crashed
into the second World Trade Centre tower. The report in
the New Hampshire newspaper, and the one on CBS, have not been
explained, and the air-traffic controllers
in Cleveland who
tracked the last minutes of Flight 93 on
radar have been forbidden by the authorities to speak
publicly about what they saw on their
screens.
3. Neither the FBI nor
anyone else in authority has explained the
reported 911 phone
call from the plane toilet, even though it
appears to be the last of the phone calls made from
the plane and even though it conveys the far from insignificant claim
that there was an explosion on board. The
FBI has confiscated
the tape of the conversation and the
operator Glen Cramer has received orders not to speak
to the media any more.
4. The explanation furnished
by the FBI for the mystery plane, whose existence it initially
denied, serves less to reassure than to
reinforce suspicions
that a cover-up of sorts is under way, that
the government is
manipulating the truth in a manner it
considers to be palatable to the broader US public. The FBI
has said, on the record, that the plane was
a civilian business
jet, a Falcon, that had been flying within
20 miles of Flight 93
and was asked by the authorities to descend
from 37,000ft to 5,000ft to survey and transmit the
co-ordinates of the crash site "for
responding emergency
crews". The reason, as numerous people have
observed, why this
seems so implausible is that, first, by
10.06am on 11 September, all non-military aircraft in US
airspace had received loud and clear orders
more than half an
hour earlier to land at the nearest airport;
second, such was the
density of 911 phone calls from people on
the ground, in the Shanksville area, as to the location of
the crash site that aerial co-ordinates
would have been
completely unnecessary; and, third, with
F-16s supposedly in the vicinity, it seems
extraordinarily unlikely that, at a time of
tremendous national
uncertainty when no one knew for sure
whether there might be any more hijacked aircraft still
in the sky, the military would ask a
civilian aircraft
that just happened to be in the area for
help.
Most suspicious of all,
perhaps, has been the failure of the FBI or anybody else to identify the
pilot or the passengers of the purported Falcon, and their own
failure to come forward and identify
themselves.
There was one other plane, a
single-engine Piper, in the air as Flight 93 headed to its doom. The
pilot, Bill Wright, said that he was three
miles away and so
close he could see the United markings on
the plane. Suddenly he received orders to get away
from the hijacked plane and to land
immediately. "That's
one of the first things that went through my
mind when they told us to get as far away from it
as fast as we could," Wright later told a
Pittsburgh TV
station, "that either they were expecting it
to blow up or they were going to shoot it down – but
that's pure speculation."
Everything is speculation –
that is the problem with the story of Flight
93. And unless the US
government reveals more of what it knows,
provides a detailed
account of the last 10 minutes in the life
of Flight 93 and the 44 people who were aboard,
there will not only be scope but sound
reasons for the
conspiracy theorists to continue to
speculate as to what really happened in those last few minutes
before the plane plunged into the earth; to
cast doubts on the
soft-focus legend that the traumatised
American public has
seized upon so gratefully.
Some say that the plane was shot down by a missile, perhaps a
heat-seeking missile that honed in on one of
the plane's engines –
a theory possibly substantiated by the
2,000yd flight of the
1,000lb engine part, but arguably refuted by
consistent eye-witness accounts, including Lee
Purbaugh's, that when last sighted the plane was not emitting smoke.
Others might say, as they
have done about a TWA flight that fell to
the sea in 1996 after
taking off from New York, that the plane was
a victim of
electromagnetic interference. In the case of
the TWA flight, the argument, put forward in a series of
exhaustive articles written in the New York
Review of Books by
the Harvard academic Elaine Scarry, is that
it happened
accidentally. However, as Scarry's articles
relate, documentation abounds showing that the Air Force
and the Pentagon have conducted extensive research on "electronic
warfare applications" with the possible
capacity
intentionally to disrupt the mechanisms of
an aeroplane in such a way as to provoke, for example, an
uncontrollable dive. Scarry also reports
that US Customs
aircraft are already equipped with such
weaponry; as are some
C-130 Air Force transport planes. The FBI
has stated that, apart from the enigmatic Falcon business
jet, there was a C-130 military cargo plane
within 25 miles of
the passenger jet when it crashed. According
to the Scarry
findings, in 1995 the Air Force installed
"electronic suites" in at least 28 of its C-130s – capable, among
other things, of emitting lethal jamming
signals.
In decades to come,
film-makers, future Oliver Stones, may come up with theories of their
own, and the story of Flight 93 may come to acquire the morbid
mystique of the Kennedy assassination.
None of which is to question
the bravery of passengers such as Todd Beamer, who left behind a
pregnant widow and two children aged two and three; or Tom Burnett, who
had three small daughters and told his wife Deena over the phone, in the
face of her anguished protests, that he and his fellow-passengers were
"going to do something" because if not the terrorists were "going to
run this plane into the ground". Evidently,
as the Newsweek
article relates, there was fighting of some
kind, but as to whether the terrorists held off the
passengers or the passengers seized control
of the plane, and
perhaps even made an attempt to fly it
themselves (one
passenger aboard was a qualified pilot of
small planes), nobody knows – or is willing to admit
that they know.
If evidence does exist
further substantiating the hero narrative,
it would be a surprise if the
authorities had not released it. Bravery,
though, there undoubtedly was. This we do
know. As Lee Purbaugh says, and it would be churlish to disagree, "they
were heroes on that plane". Such a consensus has been built around this
view that the crash site at Shanksville – an anonymous-looking field save
for the American flags that flutter all
around, the crosses, the pictures of
the dead passengers, the messages of
goodwill and of good cheer ("Don't
mess with the US!") – that it has become a
place of pilgrimage, much as has
happened with ground zero in New York but on a smaller scale, attracting
some 150 visitors from all over the US every
day. "In truth," said Wally
Miller, who as coroner remains legally in
charge of the site, "that field is a
cemetery. It should be treated with due
respect."
What does Miller think
happened? Did he attach any credence to the stories doing the rounds, to
those – including a number in Shanksville – who dissent from the
official version of events? Miller, who has
seen as much evidence as anybody at
the scene of the crash, does not dismiss the dissidents out of hand. He
keeps an open mind. "The order had been
given to bring the airplane down,"
he said. "I do not rule anything out."
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We
all know the inspiring story of Flight 93,
of the heroic passengers who forced the hijacked
plane to the ground, sacrificing themselves
to save the lives of
others.
The only trouble is: it may simply
not be true.
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http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/story.jsp?story=323958
THE 9-11 DECEPTION
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