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Are We Boiling Frogs?

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  Langley, Virginia; the World Trade Center in

  New York; the Sears Tower in Chicago; the

  Transamerica Tower in San Francisco; and

  the White House in Washington, DC… I

  submitted my findings to NBI officials, who

  most certainly turned over the report (and

  the computer) either to then Senior

  Superintendent Avelino Razon of the

  [Philippine National Police] or to Bob Heafner

  of the FBI… I have since had meetings with

  certain US authorities and they have

  confirmed to me that indeed, many things

  were done in response to my report.”

  Sam Karmilowicz, a security official at the U.S. embassy in

  Manila said, just before Murad's extradition to the U.S, he

  picked up an envelope, containing the Philippine

  government's and Mega Group's evidence, and sent it to the

  U.S. Justice Department office in New York City.

  So it seems clear, following the GIA hijacking and Bojinka

  investigation, by 1995, Western security services were aware

  of the potential for Islamists to use planes as missiles. Some

  Islamist terrorists had already attempted to do so, and

  others were apparently considering the idea.

  In 1999, the British military intelligence’ Secret Intelligence

  Service (MI6) handed a report to the U.S. alerting them to a

  potential plot. The reports stated that al Qaeda had plans to

  use “commercial aircraft' in 'unconventional ways......possibly

  as flying bombs.” [143] Again, in 2001, British intelligence

  sent a report to Prime Minister Tony Blair warning that al

  Qaeda was in “the final stages” of preparing a terrorist attack

  against the West. MI6 reported the warning was based upon

  intelligence gathered by GCHQ and from U.S. agencies,

  including the CIA and the NSA. They confirmed the sharing

  of intelligence with their U.S. partners, adding that the

  warning had been corroborated through surveillance of al

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  Qaeda prisoner Khalid al Fawwaz.[144]

  In July 2001, weeks before the attacks, the German

  intelligence agency the BND informed their U.S, UK and

  Israeli counterparts that terrorists were “planning to hijack

  commercial aircraft to use as weapons to attack important

  symbols of American and Israeli culture.” The BND uncovered

  this information through their communication

  eavesdropping system called 'Echelon.'[145]

  In August 2001 President Bush was given an intelligence

  report entitled 'Bin Laden Determined To Attack The U.S.'

  The report was focused solely upon a suspected, imminent

  major attack by al Qaeda on the U.S. mainland.[146] In

  addition, prior to the 9/11, the U.S. intelligence agencies

  received warnings from the governments of Russia, Pakistan,

  Israel, France, Italy, Argentina, Jordan, Egypt, India,

  Morocco, Afghanistan and the Cayman Islands.[147]

  After 9/11 the scope and accuracy of this intelligence was

  down played by White House officials. White House Press

  Secretary, Ari Fleischer, told a press conference:

  “All appropriate action was taken based on

  the threat information we had. The

  president did not — not — receive

  information about the use of airplanes as

  missiles by suicide bombers.”

  The conspiracists think the evidence strongly indicates

  otherwise. They suggest the proof of foreknowledge, based

  upon intelligence reports, is so overwhelming only two

  conclusions are plausible. Either, both the U.S. intelligence

  agencies and the administration were criminally negligent, or

  they were lying. Given the numerous training exercises

  conducted, which precisely mimicked the use of airliners to

  attack buildings (some on 9/11 itself[148]); that intelligence

  agencies the world over were warning of impending airborne

  attacks, the conspiracy theorists think 'lying' is the most

  likely explanation.

  However, while this evidence may tentatively suggest

  culpability, one strand of inquiry, in particular, renders any

  resistance to a further investigation untenable. 'Operation

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  Able Danger' clearly indicates 9/11 was an inside job.

  Writing in 2005, FBI Director Louis Freeh questioned why

  the 9/11 Commission had apparently ignored vital

  intelligence.[149] Able Danger was a Pentagon run data

  mining operation which uncovered a number of terrorist

  cells operating both within the U.S. and overseas. This

  included identification of Mohammad Atta (the 9/11 lead

  hijacker) and three other 9/11 terrorists, operating in the

  U.S. in early 2000.

  The Able Danger operatives claimed they tried, on three

  separate occasions, to alert the FBI about Atta and his

  cohorts, but were repeatedly blocked by the Clinton

  Administration. After the 9/11 Commission Report was

  published one of them, Lt. Col. Anthony Shaffer, blew the

  whistle and went public.

  Shaffer received support from Congressman Curt Weldon

  (Vice Chairman of the House Armed Services and Homeland

  Security Committees,) who joined him and Freeh in calling

  for a new independent inquiry. Rallying support from both

  sides of the house, Weldon built Congressional pressure to

  try to force Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld to allow

  “former participants in the intelligence program-known as

  Able Danger-to testify in an open hearing before the United

  States Congress.”

  This was opposed by some members of the 9/11

  Commission. Slade Gorton stated there was nothing to the

  reports about Able Danger, and they weren't “important

  enough” to consider further action. Another Commission

  member Tim Roemer said Able Danger presented “no helpful

  information for the 9/11 Commission to consider.”

  Former FBI Director Freeh reacted strongly to the 9/11

  Commission’s treatment of Able Danger intelligence and its

  total exclusion from the report. He accused them of ignoring

  “the most critical evidence that could have prevented the

  horrible deaths of 3,000 of our fellow citizens.” Freeh could

  not understand why the 9/11 Commission had been

  resistant to considering “undoubtedly the most relevant fact

  of the entire post-9/11 inquiry.”

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  A less restrained Congressman Weldon added:[150]

  “There’s a cover-up here. It’s clear and

  unequivocal”

  What was revealed by Able Danger that nobody was allowed

  to know?

  Aside from Osama bin Laden, Mohammad Atta was the evil

  face 9/11 horror. His photograph circulated the planet in the

  winter of 2001 and has remained one of the enduring images

  of 9/11. He was described by the 9/11 Commission as the

  “tactical leader of the 9/11 plot.” and the “commander of the

  operation in the United States.” Handpicked to slaughter

  thousands by Osama bin Laden himself (who they say he

  met,)
Atta represented the 'fear' of Islamist extremism and

  was one of the leading poster boys that launched the global

  'war on terror.' There was no doubt, according to all official

  sources, Atta was the operational leader of the worst terrorist

  atrocity ever committed.

  The evidence, revealed by Able Danger, also suggests

  Mohammad Atta was connected to a top secret operation of

  the Pentagon’s Special Operations Command (SOCOM.)

  Schaffer alleged that it was SOCOM, the Pentagon in other

  words, who protected Atta in the lead up to 9/11.[151]

  Of course, many will point out that allegations alone prove

  nothing. So let's look at the evidence.

  The Able Danger leadership team were:

  · Navy Captain Scott Phillpott (the head of Able

  Danger)

  · US Army Lt. Col. Anthony E. Shaffer (on loan

  from the Defense Intelligence Agency)

  · Erik Kleinsmith (Army Major and the Chief of

  Intelligence of the Land Information Warfare Activity)

  · James D. Smith (a civilian defence contractor

  from Orion Scientific Systems)

  · Dr Eileen Preisser (Dual PhD, analytical lead,

  from the Land Information Warfare Activity)[152]

  Able Danger members were called to testify at a Senate

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  Judiciary Committee hearing on September 21st 2005 and

  also provided statements to the Armed Services Committee,

  US House of Representatives, on February 15th 2006. The

  day before the 2005 Senate Judiciary Committee hearing

  was due to convene, the key witnesses, Shaffer, Phillpott and

  Smith, were placed under a gagging order by the Defense

  Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.[154] This appeared to be a

  desperate measure as the trio had already submitted written

  statements.

  Brian Whitman, a Department of Defense (DOD) spokesman,

  later said that open testimony “would not be appropriate”

  adding, “We have expressed our security concerns and

  believe it is simply not possible to discuss Able Danger in any

  great detail in an open public forum.” [155] Rumsfeld was not

  able to stop Kleinsmith giving testimony. He testified that he

  was ordered to erase all 2.5 terabytes of the Able Danger

  data, destroying all the vital intelligence (and evidence) that

  could potentially have averted the attack, three months

  before 9/11.[156]

  According to the 9/11 Commission “American intelligence

  agencies were unaware of Mr Atta until the day of the

  attacks.” Yet Captain Scott Phillpott (the head of Able

  Danger) testified to the Commission in 2004. So why, just as

  they had with many other witnesses, did they ignore his

  testimony?

  The Commission Chair, Thomas Kean, said Captain

  Phillpot's “knowledge and credibility” were not “sufficiently

  reliable.” They also concluded that Able Danger was not

  “historically significant.”

  Captain Scott Phillpott had been the holder of four US Naval

  commands prior to being selected by the Pentagon to lead its

  top secret surveillance operation.[157] The Commission did

  apparently ask for documents relating to Able Danger but

  recorded “none of the documents turned over to the

  Commission mention Mohamed Atta or any of the other future

  hijackers.” Seeing as Kleinsmith had been ordered to destroy

  everything before 9/11, perhaps that's not surprising.

  As far as the 9/11 Commission, the Department of Defense

  and senior Pentagon officials were concerned, Able Danger

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  was a waste of money. It's highly qualified operatives were all

  useless, none of them had anything of value to say about the

  alleged hijackers or their infamous leader. Should we take

  this opinion at face value? Before we decide, perhaps we

  should consider what the Able Danger team had to say and

  examine any corroborating evidence.

  By January 2000 they had identified a terrorist cell working

  out of Brooklyn, New York. Mohammad Atta among them.

  Schaffer recommended to Phillpott that they work with the

  FBI to take the cell out. However, Pentagon SOCOM lawyers

  stopped the team passing the vital information to the FBI.

  Following 9/11 the Able Danger team were horrified when

  they realised the men they were tracking, who SOCOM were

  apparently protecting, apparently committed murder on an

  unimaginable scale.

  In 2003 Lt.Col. Schaffer was stationed in Afghanistan and,

  when 9/11 Commission Executive Director Philip Zelikow

  visited Bagram Air Force Base, he informed him that Able

  Danger had identified Atta as early as January 2000. In an

  hour long meeting Schaffer told Zelikow everything he knew.

  Only a few months later, Schaffer's Defense Intelligence

  Agency security clearance was revoked and he was unable to

  access any further documentation.

  Following their identification of Atta, the Able Danger team

  drew up a wall chart of the terrorists and their suspected

  network.[158] In 2005, Congressman Weldon showed the

  chart to the House of Representatives. During his address he

  asked:

  “Why is there no mention, Mr. Speaker, of a

  recommendation in September of 2000 to

  take out Mohammad Atta’s cell which would

  have detained three of the terrorists who

  struck us? We have to ask the question,

  why have these issues not been brought

  forth before this day?

  I had my Chief of Staff call the 9/11

  Commission staff and ask the question: Why

  did you not mention Able Danger in your

  report? The Deputy Chief of Staff

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  [Christopher Kojm] said, well, we looked at

  it, but we did not want to go down that

  direction.

  So the question, Mr. Speaker, is why did

  they not want to go down that direction?

  Where will that lead us? Who made the

  decision to tell our military not to pursue

  Mohamed Atta?”

  By 2005 the Able Danger senior operations team had gone

  public. Speaking to the Armed Services Committee in 2006,

  civilian defence contractor James D. Smith testified that he

  was absolutely positive that Atta was on the chart and that

  he had given a copy to Pentagon officials in 2000.[159]

  Able Danger clearly placed Mohammad Atta, the 9/11

  monster, in New York in early 2000. The Pentagon were

  aware of his presence but the Pentagon’s Special Operations

  Command stopped the security services from detaining him.

  When the Able Danger team tried to tell the 9/11

  Commission, the Bush administration attempted to silence

  them and the Commission simply dismissed their testimony.

  When asked why they had done so, Deputy Chief of Staff

  Christopher Kojm replied, “It did not fit with the story we

  wanted to tell.” [160]

  The Able Danger team’s assertion that Atta was in the U.S.,

  long before the official narrative claimed, was also
<
br />   corroborated by a number of independent witnesses.

  In defiance of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's orders for

  her to stay silent, Johnelle Bryant, from the USDA, told ABC

  news that Atta had tried to secure a loan from her to buy a

  small aircraft. She said ATTA came to her office sometime

  between the end of April and the middle of May 2000. Bryant

  reported that when she wrote down his name she spelled it

  A-T-T-A-H, leading him to say: “No, A-T-T-A, as in 'atta

  boy!'” [161]

  A library worker reported that Atta repeatedly used the

  computers in the Portland Maine Public Library In April

  2000.[162] A federal investigator reported that Atta, and

  another hijacker, rented rooms in Brooklyn in the spring of

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  A Dangerous Ideology

  2000 and a senior Justice Department official reported that

  Atta’s trail in Brooklyn began with a parking ticket issued to

  a rental car he was driving in 2000. Yet despite the fact that

  numerous independent corroborative witnesses are usually

  good enough to substantiate testimony in a court of law, the

  Pentagon's Inspector General’s 2006 summary report stated:

  “We concluded that prior to September 11,

  2001, Able Danger team members did not

  identify Mohammad [sic] Atta or any other

  9/11 hijacker. While we interviewed four

  witnesses who claimed to have seen a chart

  depicting Mohammad Atta and possibly

  other terrorists or ‘cells’ involved in 9/11,

  we determined that their recollections were

  not accurate.”

  Is it reasonable for to ask what this determination was based

  upon?

  Conspiracy theorists submit the evidence is persuasive. It is

  not irrational to hypothesise that elements within the U.S.

  government were behind the 9/11 attacks. The links

  between the intelligence agencies and senior al Qaeda figures

  were known. Al Qaeda itself was created as part of U.S.

  covert operations in Afghanistan; its co-founder Ayman al

  Zawahiri was possibly a NATO operative, working with

  Western intelligence; the lead hijacker Mohammad Atta

  appeared to have been protected by the Pentagon and the

  instant blaming of Osama bin Laden, and subsequent

  falsifying of evidence in an attempt to prove his guilt, seems

  to have been deliberate misdirection.

  What's more, conspiracy theorists claim they can

  demonstrate that senior figures within the Bush

  administration openly discussed their need for 'a new Pearl

 

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