Who Killed 120 Civilians? The US Says It's Not a Story
Herat is cut off from the rest of the planet. This was once one of the great cities of the world, an imperial capital drawing its wealth from trade along the Silk Road with Iran, the rest of Afghanistan and central Asia. Above the 800-year-old mosque in the city centre are minarets covered in blue and green mosaics which soar above one of the most magnificent monuments of the Islamic world.
But today Herat is cut off even from the rest of Afghanistan. I flew there because it was too dangerous to come by road. We turned right out of the battered-looking airport because, had we turned left down the main road towards Kandahar, we would soon have been in Taliban-controlled territory. The road going east to Bamyan and Kabul is risky for the same reasons.
Herat itself is peaceful compared to the rest of Afghanistan. There are police in their dark grey uniforms and forage hats checking cars, but they are relaxed and don't look as if they are expecting trouble. There are more new buildings than in Kabul, but on many construction sites work seems to have stopped.
I met Obaidullah Sidiqi, a local businessman, at a picnic lunch in a well-watered orchard, full of mulberry and apple trees and honeysuckle, which he owns not far from the airport road. An attractive aspect of Afghanistan never mentioned in war reporting is the Afghan love of flowers. Even in front-line positions soldiers dig small trenches, fill them with water and plant geraniums.
Mr Sidiqi, after 16 years in construction, part of it for the Save the Children Fund and partly on his own account, explained that business in Herat faces unique difficulties. For instance, last year he had contracts under way which he could only visit in disguise. One was for the construction of a school in Shindand district in the south of Herat province, a Pashtun area where the Taliban are strong. Mr Sidiqi, like most people in Herat, is a Tajik. Overall, the Taliban rebellion is confined to the Pashtun, the community to which 42 per cent of Afghans belong, while in the past the Tajiks, who make up 27 per cent of the population, have been the core of the anti-Taliban opposition.
"I wanted to see how work was going at the school, but I did not dare go as myself," Mr Sidiqi told me. "So I grew my beard longer and pretended to be one of my drivers." He also had to go disguised to visit a road his company is building in Badghis province to the north-east of Herat, again in an area where the Taliban are strong. In fact, not all the danger comes from the Taliban - though it is always blamed on them - as there are plenty of bandit gangs in the mountains.
Overall, Mr Sidiqi said this year was better than last, though he did not sound completely confident that it was going to stay that way. He said that 200 local factories had shut, and Iran, where so many Afghans used to go to work, was issuing very few visas. Within Afghanistan there was pervasive corruption with the award of a contract usually determined by the size of the bribe offered to the officials in charge.
I was sympathetic to Mr Sidiqi's difficulties in moving around the country except by plane, because I faced the same problem. I had gone to Herat because last Monday US aircraft had attacked several villages in the Bala Baluk district of Farah province, which is immediately to the south of Herat. The local governor and surviving villagers said that more than 120 civilians had been killed. The US military denied that anything like that number had died and, if they had, it was the Taliban who had done it by hurling grenades into houses.
The problem was that Bala Baluk is in a Pashtun area where the Taliban are reputed to be strong. Back in Kabul Pashtuns told me that it was unfair to equate them with the Taliban, but in reality there are few Taliban who are not Pashtun. It was too dangerous to go directly to Bala Baluk, so the next best thing was to find a survivor or an eyewitness. I thought that some of the worst injured might be in Herat hospital, as the best in the area. But there turned out to be only 14 wounded and these were in Farah hospital. This could have meant that there were fewer dead than the Afghans were saying, or that the bombardment was so intense that all had been killed.
I did not meet survivors but I did talk to a reliable witness, a radio reporter called Farooq Faizy, who had gone to Bala Baluk soon after the attack happened. He said that police and soldiers nearby were frightened of the Taliban and told him it was too dangerous to go on, but he spoke to some village elders, telling them: "Talk to us and we will tell the world." He says he was none too sure who was in control of the three villages - Gerani, Gangabad and Khoujaha - that had been hit and he was careful about what he said. But he did take some 70 or 80 photographs and they bore out the villagers' story: there were craters everywhere; the villages had been plastered with bombs; bodies had been torn to shreds by the blasts; there were mass graves; there were no signs of damage from bullets, rockets or grenades.
I suspected that the US military's claim that the Taliban had run through the village hurling grenades, supposedly because they had not been paid their cut of profits from the opium poppy crop, was just a delaying tactic. Usually the US military delays admission of guilt until a story has gone cold and the media is no longer interested. "First say 'no story'," runs an old PR adage, "and then say 'old story'." By the end of the week the US was admitting that the grenade-throwing Taliban story was "thinly sourced".
Another thesis was that fighting had taken place 500 metres from the villages, and the Taliban had retreated through them, leading to the airstrikes. Farooq Faizy said he had seen signs of fighting in the shape of two burned-out Afghan army or police vehicles and a destroyed US Humvee, but they were seven or eight kilometres away from the site of the bombing. He had taken photographs of them showing the destroyed Afghan vehicles - Ford pick-ups with a machine gun mount over the bonnet. It seemed likely that this was the fight that had led to the Afghan army and their US advisers asking for air support. What the Americans never explain in Afghanistan or Iraq is why they are using weapons designed for world war three against villages that have not left the Middle Ages - which makes heavy civilian casualties inevitable.
Back in Herat, Mr Sidiqi was none too sympathetic about what had happened to the people of Bala Baluk. Like many Afghans, he felt that it was the weakness of the government, not the strength of the Taliban, which was the problem. Furthermore he felt, and this is surely true, that "neither Pakistan nor Iran wants a strong Afghanistan".
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42 Comments so far
Show AllThanks, Siouxrose and others for your comments. The government urges us to send in our opinions and concerns to Mr. Obama. It implies, but doesn't say that he will listen or respond, but if he were getting bombarded with thousands of letters and e-mails from We the People every day, perhaps something might happen. However, I fear it is like hollering into a rainbarrel, listening for an echo.
More and more, the spinmeisters are bombarding the Sheeple with propaganda as to how torture saved us, and that the Afghan peasants are going to attack us here if we don't kill them over there (remember the vietcong planning to invade us in their sampans?)
God! It never ends, and We the Sheeple seem to go along with it for the most part. I often think of two of the most despicable humans to walk the earth in my lifetime (before BushCo). Goebbels and Goering both hit the nail on the head. We should all be aware of this, but for the most part, we aren't and so it goes on. I'm sure the Oligarchy have it engraved upon their hearts. (if any)
“If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State.”
Joseph Goebbels
29 October 1897 – 1 May 1945
"Naturally the common people don't want war: Neither in Russia, nor in England, nor for that matter in Germany. That is understood. But, after all, it is the leaders of the country who determine the policy and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy, or a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the peacemakers for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same for any country."
Herman Goering to Gustave Gilbert at Nuremberg, 18 April, 1946
We should remember this, and fight it with the truth, every day, and in any way we can.
Siouxrose May 11th, 2009 10:05 am,
Good points or pointers!
There doesn't seem to be a lack of rather critical issues to be fittingly addressed to the Obomba administration. Unfortunately.
Anyone US kills deserves to die.
USA USA USA
Kill Kill Kill
KILL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
US Monster On The Loose
Kill Kill Kill
Steal Steal Steal
Torture Murder Steal
USA USA USA
Excellent article or investigative report by Patrick Cockburn.
============================
minitrue May 11th, 2009 1:32 am,
Excellent letter to the Obama administration! The rest of the population should be grateful that you composed and sent this letter, which "hits" on several or more important, relevant, current, ... points. The message needed by the Administration couldn't be more clearly stated.
============================
"Humbaba May 11th, 2009 12:37 am
Who Killed 120 Civilians? The US Says It's Not Sorry"
Well, we know who killed these Afghan civilians.
As for the US claiming "it's not sorry", I haven't read the article yet and would need to find it again, but it was entitled saying that the Obama administration and therefore Obama has [no] intention of stopping (or reducing use of?) air strikes in Afghanistan (and, surely by extension, Pakistan).
Well, that's one ugly (hell of a) way of confirming that they are certainly not sorry.
============================
"jimmyjazz May 10th, 2009 10:57 pm
... I wish that there was a discussion board for Common Dreams posters instead of just this format of commenting on articles. Someone with the technical know-how should do it."
I mentioned this (minus the second quoted sentence) several times at CD over the past couple of years, but ceased repeating it sometime last year. There's the technical know-how that can be, if not is, an issue, but there are also costs; such as, for hardware, perhaps office space, and, possibly anyway, for "man"-power, like for an administrator or two, and (maybe) moderators. I believe moderators of discussion forums often aren't paid members of the team or persons providing the websites, but believe administrators would usually be paid contributors; esp. if the providers wanted a DF that ran reliably, with as little down-time as possible, upgrades made promptly, .....
Whatever the number of people make up the team providing CD, I doubt they are more than few. CD is regularly asking for donations and I don't know what it has received as of lately, but doubt it's much; esp. with the U.S. economy on the downward, crashing trend that it's been on for ... a while now.
When the story first broke here on CD, I sent the following letter off to Mr. Obama. No response to date.
--------------------------------------------------
I wrote this to Mr. Obama after reading the following article. I guess we’ve got to keep trying.
"Red Cross Confirms Dozens Dead in Afghan Air Strikes"
Mr. Obama,
I do not understand what is going on. When you inherited the White House, did you also inherit the bubble that your predecessor lived in?
You campaigned for change. We the People, after eight years of Cheney/Bush flouting the Constitution, causing a million or more deaths in their endless search for oil, thought we might have a new broom in Washington that would sweep these people into the dustbin of history and reverse the draconian laws that were put in effect.
Instead, what do we see? On the home front, the billionaires get richer and the poor, the retired, the workers whose jobs have been outsourced are winding up living in the streets. There is more surveillance, more restrictions on our individual lives. Habeas corpus is still a corpse, NorthCom’s combat brigades are still getting intensive training on suppressing civilian unrest. Now you want to keep the Military Commissions for Gitmo because, apparently, the fear is that the civil courts might not allow hearsay evidence, and evidence obtained by torture into their courts, and that the attorneys might have the right to cross examine witnesses, or actually see the evidence!
Our endless wars, which we thought would finally end, are expanding. Iraq gets a change of occupiers from combat troops to “advisors.” Same troops, different name.
We are upping the killing in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Every time we bomb a village full of civilians on the off chance of killing what we term insurgents, we create still more Afghan and Pakistani patriots yearning for the end to occupation, as I hope we would if we were occupied. What we consider insurgents, they consider freedom fighters trying to rid their country of yet another foreign invader,
Look at the number of bases we have worldwide. We cannot spread ourselves over the earth like peanut butter on a slice of bread. Especially if the jar is getting moldy.
We have horrible problems here in the US to deal with, yet you sidestep any suggestion that those who committed unconstitutional actions such as violating the treaties which we have signed and which are therefore the Law of the Land (read the Constitution) against torture, indefinite imprisonment, and treatment of prisoners, should be tried and punished. These people were not ignorant, they knew what they were doing and that, if the United States ever became a Constitutional Republic again, tthey would face trial and punishment. According to you, they will not, but their victims, here and abroad, will continue to suffer.
We are still dealing ineffectively from the effects of Katrina, yet we can continue to allow misappropriation of funds and no-bid or fixed contracts with the big money contributors. Veterans, destroyed mentally or physically, and their families, are living in the streets. Runaway inflation and the depression are destroying the lives of retirees.
The Military Industrial Complex has billions and billions in war profits. Can’t you stop feeding them and start caring for We the People who elected you? So far, all that those of us below the rank of Congressman or CEO have seen is Bush Lite and Bush style lies.
Please! Show enough gumption to get rid of these old parasites and turn the country around. We the People will be glad to help. That’s what we elected you for!
Sincerely,
Steve and Adrienne Osborn
--------------------------------------------------
No reply, no change in policy, and I'll bet we were not the only ones to write. And so it goes in the Obamanation.
Sioux Rose
MINITRUE: A great letter. At least you know you tried! I think we could even add to this letter regarding energy policy, the pass to Israel, and the extent to which the bankers are running the DC agenda. Thanks for sharing it.
Who Killed 120 Civilians? The US Says It's Not Sorry
no the mainstream media is not ignoring the story, it's headlines news at yahoo and your fellow-Americans are cheering on the slaughter
http://buzz.yahoo.com/article/1:y_news:5b8ef63bfe2503bab0a2db560d820d91/Concerns-white-phosphorus-used...
The Comments there unbelievable with some 50 to one cheering on such attacks and wanting more.
Is THAT mainstream America?
"What the Americans never explain in Afghanistan or Iraq is why they are using weapons designed for world war three against villages that have not left the Middle Ages - which makes heavy civilian casualties inevitable."
And we Americans never demand an answer to that question, either.
Oh, right... terror terror terror!
Seems that whenever our military or one of our police departments are accused of murdering innocent civilians, their first reaction is to say, "We're unable to comment on these charges until our investigation is completed as to what actually took place." Then a few days later the military/PD release a statement clearing their rank and file of any wrongdoing, either by blaming the victim(s), or, as in this latest mass murder of Afghan civilians, by pinning the blame on the designated enemy (ie.the Taliban). Which is not surprising, being that these so-called investigations are as trustworthy as the one about having the foxes look into the murder of hens in the hen-house. Why does the military/PD persist is these coverups? Because they know they can get away with it, that's why.
The victims are unpeople, a category that western politicians and most of the American public apply to the majority of the human race. Only when we acknowledge their essential humanity will the moral calculus change.
What part of the US is the greatest purveyor of violence does Obama not understand? He jokes w/corporate mass media as third world poor die at the hands of our tax-bought death technology. Join me in bombarding whitehouse.gov. Or, does Emanuel deep six them all! And yes, I guess it's time (tho I'm actually sick of it) of seripous street action.
This is why American newspapers are deservedly dying. Good riddance to these "Family Newspaper" parasites who haven't got the balls to say anything but what they're told by power.
Yes, the denials of responsibility for this massacre by the United States seems even more reactionary and more absurd than the handling of such matters by the Bush administration.
We may have to realize that our hopes for Obama are Kennedyesque in the sense that he is just another imperialist icon and leader and perhaps a more deadly one than his predecessor.
Does anyone anticipate victory in Afghanistan for the United States and Karzai?
If so, when?
American forces could be routed in both Afghanistan and Iraq within a year. Of course there is some discussion about how the fake withdrawal won't happen on schedule whatever that means due to weak puppet troops.
Sounds more like Vietnam as it grinds into year seven, is it?, and then you have to count the anti-Soviet war too, it's already been decades of American warfare in Afghanistan with a few years to allow the warlords to run riot.
It would be wise to let these nations settle their own affairs and to return our troops to the homeland. Homeland or bust!
Coincidentally, the TAPI (Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India) pipeline runs right through Herat and Kandahar to the Baluchi Port of Gwadar.
Baluchistan's capital, Quetta, is the Taliban "capital". The whole stretch, from Herat to Quetta, is controlled by Pashtuns and the Taliban.
The original wet dream of US imperialists was the pipeline to Gwadar. The west had plans to build another Dubai in Baluchistan.
Gwadar is also a key node on the Iran-Pakistan-India pipeline. The idea here is to pump a major amount of gas from the Irani South Pars field. There is even a plan to pump gas from Gwadar through the northern territories of Pakistan to China.
Watch as the US military begins massive air raids alone the pipeline corridor with the stated intention of destroying poppy in Helmand Province.
Are we killing civilians to stop the Taliban and control poppy or are we in the process of building a pipeline to Gwadar?
And with the pipeline to Gwadar, we "gain" a base on the Indian Ocean, next to Iran and controlling the Arabian Sea south of Iran and Pakistan and on the west coast of India. Occupation of Gwadar is just a matter of time.
And once we control Gwadar, we stop the Irani gas flow and we sideline the Chinese who originally built Gwadar for their pipeline.
Don't let the sideshow of civilian deaths fool you. We are about to make a power move and we will justify it as a fight against poppy and a fight against the Taliban
Vietnam was child's play, compared to the power grab in south Asia and the poor villagers of Afghanistan are just the latest casualties in this grab.
Although I had basic knowledge of the pipeline plans, I had never heard of Gwadar before. Thank you ducksawce. What you say makes sense. I will be monitoring the news for mention of Gwadar.
Joe
Sioux Rose
DUCKSAWCE: You nailed something powerful. I just hope your concluding statement does not prove prophetic.
Here's another "non-story" for us in the U.S. to ignore:
http://www.truthout.org/051009B
US Soldiers, Attacked, Kill a 12-Year-Old Boy
Saturday 09 May 2009
by: Ali Abass and Jack Dolan, McClatchy Newspapers
Naturally, the first thing the military did was to lie about what had happened.
I read that too. The U.S. claims he threw a grenade, even though all the witnesses said he was a fruit juice vendor. My God, will it ever end?
How many left until our genocide is complete?
I'm no Patton or Eisenhower, but even I know you can't fight an elusive enemy, hiding behind rocks, with air power. You only kill innocents and make more enemies. Besides, we have no more business being in Afghanistan than we do in Iraq.
The United States of Shamerica is drunk on its own power, its ability to kill people at will the world over. Her officials in the military and the Government are absolutely shameless in their excess. Like a Caligula, they feel that as living GODS with the divine right over life and death, their word must never be questioned no matter how big or shameless the lie no matter the obscenity of their crimes.
Absolute power has lead to absolute corruption. Any that believe their lies are particpants in their crimes.
On another post a comment was made that we,as Americans,are shitheads and I commended him/her on that observation and yet sancho makes a good point also in that we are the latest in a long line of bully's on the world stage. We may speak about corporations running the governments of the world but it is ultimately people that run the corps. or governments and so do "we the people" band together and expose the leaders or do we hire our own james bond? Many of us get on here to vent because none want to do the violence thing. Solutions not sniping is what we need. Ideas,ideas,ideas; there are so many voices here on CD and Huff Post with a great deal of intelligence lets use it. Tony
I agree. I wish that there was a discussion board for Common Dreams posters instead of just this format of commenting on articles. Someone with the technical know-how should do it.
One good thing you could do is to build links with other progressives in your area, find some local military recruiters and figure out when and where they do their work, and engage in counter-recruitment. They frequently target kids in schools, especially in poorer neighborhoods; and of course you can always just go hang out outside their office. Be ready with a flyer that specifically refutes the lies they tell you inside. Tell these kids about the possibility of stop-loss, which essentially means that in the contract they're about to sign with the government, only they (and not the government) are actually bound by it. That's sure to give a person pause.
If you google "beyond elections get serious about politics", the top return is an Amazon list of books that has some good counter-recruitment resources.
I think that if the anti-war movement had been an anti-recruitment movement since the moment after the invasion happened, the military recruitment crisis that started a few years ago would have gone from bad-yet-manageable to a true crisis that might have actually forced a reduction of numbers in Iraq. I'm sure it would have made a lot more difference than the useless marches do (although I think people should still march, but they should also be honest that it doesn't really do anything).
You can join the US military and take orders from idiots, and come back home a hero. It doesn't matter what the orders accomplished, positive or negative. What matters is that you have these open arms awaiting you back home. You get to exchange war stories with fellow warriors for the rest of your lives, and your spouses will view you properly, as the testosterone-laden half of the partnership, doing just what men do. Your reward is assured. Your kids are likely to idolize you even after their exposure to the truth. All that and a big 3.5 ton SUV and man you got a life.
As for Tony's quest for ideas, try listening to your own nature. It will tell you to get your food wild, from the woods, and stay away from the elite establishment. That is the solution. Oh, not so thrilled about it? Ok! Please come this way, we're going to have 10,000 pastry and ice cream flavors to choose from and a new SUV every year!
Stalin once said something like this: The death of one person is a tragedy. The death of millions is a statistic. Brock Alabama now presides over the USA, the Union of Stalinist Assassins. And we will eventually go the same way as the Soviet Union.
Yes...we have been slaughtering innocents since 1492. You'd think we'd be tired of it already.
NASCAR, baseball, and the boob tube seem to be far more important. That's who we are - the most terroristic culture ever to inhabit this planet. Killing for the sake of killing, or maybe not --- killing to increase weapons manufacturers profits. Maybe 60 Minutes tonight will give some accurate info on the Reaper - or maybe not.
And as Shakespeare put it, blood will have blood.
That story is not written yet. It is still ongoing.
The American sheeple are the new good Germans. What could be more evil than the American military killing and maiming innocent Afghan, civilians to back Karzi, a corrupt U.S. drug dealer, puppet and dictator that is owned lock,stock, and barrel by big oil interests! A reporter for McClatchy News was just run out of Afghanistan and threatened for try ing to do an article on Karzi's brothers drug traffic and dealing as he is known as a drug kingpin. Karzi is the good thug and the Taliban is the bad thug and they are both egregious, in my view, but the only difference is the Taliban will not cooperate with the MIC.
What could be more evil? Americans doing all of the above for Christ!
See http://www.democracynow.org/2009/5/6/the_crusade_for_a_christian_military
I like that Amerikan Sheeple!!! That could not discribe the slobs living in the usa better. We have often said that the Amerikans will never revolt as long as they have a big screen and a six pack. They just do not care. Could go on about this but every one here understands.
"I like that Amerikan Sheeple!!!"
It is not at all a new expression...
And whether it is the big screens and six-packs or not (I drink a lot beer - albeit not the tasteless watery crap the sheeple drink). The ultimate problem is a sort of stunning lack of curiosity, ability to use their senses except as mass-media interfaces, and a flat-out inability to think.
And, what percentage of the US population has even heard of this massacre? I don't recall seeing it mentioned in my local newspaper or on it's web site.
SaboCat
My local newspaper buried it on the bottom of page A8 where a tiny article had a headline that claimed that the Afghans were exaggerating the number of civilians who were slaughtered by American bombs. But this information is not new to the mainstream media who should be grilling Obama and his press secretary about this latest atrocity perpetrated by the United States. But it is highly unlikely unlikely that they will do this.
Herat is cut off from the rest of the planet.
I initially read this line as "HEART is cut off from the rest of the planet." When I look at it that way, it's at least as meaningful a way to introduce the story.--although it being Mother's Day (of the HOWE sort....not the Hallmark) makes me miss my mom who passed away about a year after the 'Shock and Awe' bombings that broke her heart, I have to say I'm glad she's not around to have seen this....the continuance of such a bloody and hideous and hypocritical 'war' (I never know quite how to use that word, with its full load of murderous meaning)...supposedly a war 'on terror', so mindbendingly Orwellian in its implications. What a homicidal, suicidal, MATRI(as in Gaia)-cidal species we are...or, at least certainly SEEM to be.
To the author: please PLEASE post those 70 or 80 pictures that bore out the story. We need the pictures. The world needs to SEE.
That means the USA killed those innocent people.
Otherwise, the USA would be spewing the usual demented yip yap about "terrorists."
ohh noo...
no more terrorists...
Bisnis Internet
Internet Marketing
I met a young man on his way back to Afghanistan. He said that they get the orders to kill the terrorists, "I don't know if they are terrorists or not,so I go out and follow my orders. But if I kill innocent civilians, I get kicked out and nobody who gave the orders gets punished."
That was President Obama's decision to attack that village and continue air attacks on villages just because they are Taliban villages.......The Taliban did not attack the United States.....The United States attacked the homeland of the Taliban....It is time to get the 9/11 story straightened out.....Thermite was found in the ashes of the World Trade Center........Neither the Taliban nor the Iraqis were the enemy.
The United States has gone from attacking Al Qaeda (The CIA's database)to attacking the Taliban.....
Herbert C.
One of the best documentaries on what happened on Sept.11, 2001 is an Italian made documentary that came out last year called Zero: an Investigation into 09/11. Over 400 people were involved in this film and features such people as Gore Vidal and one of the foremost experts concerning this seminal event, David Ray Griffin, who has written, among other things, The New Pearl Harbor and Debunking 09/11 Debunking which refutes Popular Mechanics and its claims that the World Trade Center and Building 7 could not have come down without the use of explosives. The DVD also wonders why NORAD did not scramble its jets on that fateful day until almost an hour and a half after the planes had crashed into the WTC. It is presented in a calm, rational manner while offering indisputable evidence, for example, that explosives and, as you mention, thermite, were indeed used to bring down those buildings. The film inquires as to why no wreckage was ever found of the plane that was supposed to have hit the Pentagon. Yet the mainstream media is most reluctant to ask probing questions that the 09/11 Commission refused to ask of its participants.
A film that all thinking Americans should be encouraged to see.