Why were the 9/11 tapes destroyed?
By Paul Craig Roberts
Online Journal Guest Writer
Feb 5, 2008, 00:10
Many Americans are content with the 9/11 Commission Report,
but the two chairmen of the commission, Thomas Kean and Lee Hamilton are not.
Neither was commission member Max Cleland, a US senator who resigned from the
9/11 Commission, telling the Boston
Globe (November 13, 2003): "This investigation is now
compromised." Even former FBI director Louis Freeh wrote in the Wall Street Journal
(Nov. 17, 2005) that there are inaccuracies in the commission’s report and
"questions that need answers."
Both Kean and Hamilton have twice stated publicly, once in
their 2006 book, Without
Precedent: The Inside Story of the 9/11 Commission,
and again in the January 2, 2008, New
York Times, that there are inaccuracies in their report and unanswered -- or
mis-answered -- questions.
On the second day of this New Year, Kean and Hamilton
accused the CIA of obstructing their investigation: "What we do know is
that government officials decided not to inform a lawfully constituted body,
created by Congress and the President, to investigate one of the greatest
tragedies to confront this country. We call that obstruction."
In their book, Kean and Hamilton wrote that they were unable
to obtain "access to star witnesses in custody who were the only possible
source for inside information about the 9/11 plot."
The only information the commission was permitted to have
about what was learned from interrogations of alleged plot ringleaders, such as
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, came from "thirdhand" sources. The commission
was not permitted to question the alleged plotters in custody or even to meet
with those who interrogated the alleged plotters. Consequently, write Kean and
Hamilton, "We had no way of evaluating the credibility of detainee
information" that was fed to them by third party hands. "How could we
tell if someone such as Khalid Sheikh Mohammed was telling us the truth?"
The fact that videotapes of the interrogations existed was
kept secret from the 9/11 Commission.
The videotapes have since been destroyed. The destruction of
the videos has become an issue because of White House involvement in the
decision to destroy the tapes and because the videos are believed to have been
destroyed because they reveal methods of torture that the Bush administration
denies using.
According to President Bush, the US does not practice
torture even though he and his Department of Justice [sic] assert the
right to torture.
Is the torture issue a red herring? The 9/11 Commission was
not tasked with investigating interrogation methods or detainee treatment. The
commission was tasked with investigating al Qaeda’s participation in the 9/11
attack and determining the perpetuators of the terrorist event. There was no
reason to withhold from the commission video evidence of confessions
implicating al Qaeda and Osama bin Laden.
Was the video evidence withheld from the 9/11 Commission
because the alleged participants in the plot did not confess, did not implicate
al Qaeda, and did not implicate bin Laden? Does anyone seriously believe that
evidence of confession would not have been revealed -- evidence that could have
foreclosed what has become a massive industry of 9/11 truth seekers involving
large numbers of highly credible persons?
There is no reason for the Bush administration to fear the
torture issue. The Justice Department’s memos have legalized the practice, and
Congress has passed legislation, signed by President Bush, giving retroactive
protection to US interrogators who tortured detainees. The Military Commissions
Act passed in September 2006 and signed by Bush in October 2006 strips
detainees of protections provided by the Geneva Conventions: "No alien unlawful
enemy combatant subject to trial by military commission under this chapter may
invoke the Geneva Conventions as a source of rights." Other provisions
of the act strip detainees of speedy trials and of protection against torture
and self-incrimination. The law has a provision that retroactively protects
torturers against prosecution for war crimes.
Did the Bush administration cleverly take advantage of the
torture claims in order to spin the destruction of the CIA videotapes as a
"torture story." It is much more likely that the tapes were destroyed
because they reveal the absence of confession to the plot. As Kean and Hamilton
ask, without evidence how do we know the truth? All we have is the word of the
administration that told us Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction and
that, while sitting on a NIE report that concluded that Iran had terminated its
weapons program in 2003, told us that Iran had an ongoing nuclear weapons
program and was close to having a nuclear weapon.
What about the bin Laden videotape in which he takes credit
for the 9/11 attack? Every indication is that the tape is a fake. The bin Laden
in the Nov. 9, 2001, "confession video" looks nothing like the bin
Laden in the last confirmed video of December 2001.
Recently, the Italian newspaper, Corriere Della Sera, reported that the former president of
Italy, Francesco Cossiga, said that Italian intelligence had concluded that the
bin Laden confession video was a fake.
William Arkin in the online Washington
Post, Feb. 1, 1999, described a
voice-morphing technology developed at the government’s Los Alamos laboratory.
Arkin reported that digital morphing, including appearance, "has come of
age, available for use in psychological operations."
Investigative reporter Kristina Borjesson reminds us that
"six days after 9/11, CNN reported that bin Laden had sent a statement to
Al Jazeera denying that he had been involved." She also reminds us that
the FBI says it has no hard evidence that bin Laden was responsible for 9/11.
The FBI wants Osama for the 1998 bombings of US embassies in Tanzania and
Kenya, not for 9/11. Borjesson also reports that in the "confession
video" bin Laden is revealed writing with his right hand, but is known to
be left-handed.
If the bin Laden "confession video" is indeed a
fake, as it appears to be, why run the risk of creating such a video if the CIA
has on videotape the confessions of the alleged al Qaeda participants in the
9/11 plot?
Why destroy such evidence, especially when torture has been
given a green light by the DOJ and US Congress?
Paul
Craig Roberts [email him] was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the
Reagan Administration. He is the author of Supply-Side
Revolution : An Insider's Account of Policymaking in Washington; Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and Meltdown:
Inside the Soviet Economy, and is the
co-author with Lawrence M. Stratton of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and Bureaucrats Are Trampling the
Constitution in the Name of Justice. Click here for Peter
Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the recent epidemic of
prosecutorial misconduct.
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