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What We Now Know About the Alleged 9-11 Hijackers

In: The Hidden History of 9-11-2001

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  • Jay Kolar

Abstract

Inconsistencies and contradictions in the US government's story of hijackers and their masterminds are examined to account for what happened on 9-11. A little-known initial FBI list of 19, scrutinized for four names not on its final list, calls into question the FBI naming process. We discovered 11 of the FBI-named finalists could not have been on those planes, with 10 still alive and another's identity improvised by a double. The Dulles videotape, essentially the government's case that hijackers boarded the 9-11 flights, is found to have serious problems including authentication, as does the so-called bin Laden “confession” video. Were “hijackers” known to be in the US before intelligence alleges it knew? Evidence is examined which shows that they were closely monitored by agencies which denied this knowledge; in particular, an undercover FBI agent lived with them the prior year. Noting government refusal to disclose evidence called for by investigators, we find some pieces altered or fabricated and others confiscated or destroyed. Other revelations point to hijackers with national security overrides, protection in their alternate roles as drug traffickers, and deep political connections with government elites. We investigate patterns, reminiscent of historical intelligence involvement, revealing the presence of a covert intelligence operation disguised as an outside enemy attack.

Suggested Citation

  • Jay Kolar, 2006. "What We Now Know About the Alleged 9-11 Hijackers," Research in Political Economy, in: The Hidden History of 9-11-2001, pages 3-45, Emerald Group Publishing Limited.
  • Handle: RePEc:eme:rpeczz:s0161-7230(06)23001-3
    DOI: 10.1016/S0161-7230(06)23001-3
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