NOVANEWS
“We have come to be one of the worst ruled, one of the most completely controlled and dominated Governments in the world – no longer a Government of free opinion, no longer a Government by conviction and vote of the majority, but a Government by the opinion and duress of small groups of dominant men.” – Woodrow Wilson
by Eileen Fleming
Middle East correspondent of The Independent, Robert Fisk recently wrote:
“By their books, ye shall know them…In the years since, of course, we’ve been deluged with a rich literature of post-9/11 trauma, from the eloquent The Looming Tower of Lawrence Wright to the Scholars for 9/11 Truth, whose supporters have told us that the plane wreckage outside the Pentagon was dropped by a C-130, that the jets that hit the World Trade Centre were remotely guided, that United 93 was shot down by a US missile, etc. Given the secretive, obtuse and sometimes dishonest account presented by the White House – not to mention the initial hoodwinking of the official 9/11 commission staff – I am not surprised that millions of Americans believe some of this, let alone the biggest government lie: that Saddam was behind 9/11. Leon Panetta, the CIA’s newly appointed autocrat, repeated this same lie in Baghdad only this year.
“But I’m drawn to Anthony Summers and Robbyn Swan whose The Eleventh Day confronts what the West refused to face in the years that followed 9/11. ‘All the evidence … indicates that Palestine was the factor that united the conspirators – at every level,’ they write. One of the organisers of the attack believed it would make Americans concentrate on ‘the atrocities that America is committing by supporting Israel’. Palestine, the authors state, ‘was certainly the principal political grievance…’
“The motivation for the attacks was ‘ducked’ even by the official 9/11 report, say the authors. The commissioners had disagreed on this ‘issue’– and its two most senior officials, Thomas Kean and Lee Hamilton, were later to explain: ‘This was sensitive ground …Commissioners who argued that al-Qa’ida was motivated by a religious ideology – and not by opposition to American policies – rejected mentioning the Israeli-Palestinian conflict… In their view, listing US support for Israel as a root cause of al-Qa’ida’s opposition to the United States indicated that the United States should reassess that policy.’” [1]