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Aftermath: Unanswered questions from 9/11
An investigative documentary by Guerilla News Network (GNN)
www.gnn.tv
By Marge Holland
30 April 2003
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Aftermath: Unanswered questions from 9/11, shown April 21,
2003 at the Herbst Theatre, San Francisco, sponsored by www.deceptiondollar.com
Much to the surprise of the events sponsors, the 928-seat
Herbst Theatre in San Francisco was full, with standing room only,
at the showing of the film Aftermath: Unanswered Questions
from 9/11.
This film is a documentary questioning the official version
of the events of September 11, 2001 that has been promulgated
by the Bush administration through its willing mouthpieces, the
corporate media. It was produced by Guerilla News Network (GNN),
a group founded by Steve Marshall and Josh Shore, who first collaborated
at MTV to bring more relevant content to television.
The documentary asks 11 questions that have gone unasked by
not only the media, but also by Congressquestions that remain
unanswered by the Bush administration after more than a year and
a half. The film is narrated by Hip-Hop performer and political
protester Paris, whose music comprises the soundtrack. Pariss
latest CD, Sonic Jihad, has been effectively suppressed
in the United States due to the fact that no US distributor will
market it because of its anti-government content.
Aftermath uses various quick-cut and video montage methods,
in accordance with its origins in the music video genre. The scene
shifts from pictures of firemen clearing the World Trade Center
rubble to pictures of soldiers, politicians, etc.
Spoken words flash across the screen as they are being spoken.
The people featured responding to the questions are shot in extreme
close-up. Pariss music throbs in the background, while his
voice asks 11 questions relating to the suicide hijackings, such
as:
* To what extent should airlines have been prepared for 9/11?
* What did the Bush administration know and when?
* Why did the US military not intercept the hijacked planes?
* How did the administration respond to the failures of the
military and intelligence agencies?
* What ties, if any, did the US government and intelligence
agencies have with the terrorists and their supporters?
* Were there plans for a war in central Asia prior to September
11?
* Is there evidence to suggest that the government used the
9/11 attacks to justify its war in Central Asia?
* How has the governments reaction to the terrorist attacks
affected the rule of law in the United States?
* How has recent legislation like the Patriot Act and the Homeland
Security bill affected the lives of American people?
Answers to these questions are solicited from a diverse group,
including George Soros (billionaire), Mary Schiavo (aviation disaster
attorney), Michael Ruppert (well-known ex-cop and publisher of
From the Wilderness), Nafeez Ahmed (author of The War
on Freedom), and Riva Enteen (executive director of the San
Francisco National Lawyers Guild), among others.
Regarding the first of the 11 questions asked by the filmmakers,
attorney Schiavo comments on airline preparedness in light of
lawsuits that have been filed by families of victims of the hijackings.
She adds, however, that the very first claims for damages and
protection came from the airlines themselves, on September
11, 2001, while, she picturesquely adds, the bodies
were still burning at Ground Zero.
There follows discussion of what the administration knew, and
when, involving questions that have been asked repeatedly by many,
including the World Socialist Web Site, since the date
of the suicide hijackings. This leads to the question of why the
air force failed to scramble its fighter jets as soon as it received
news that four planes had been hijacked.
Nafeez Ahmed reiterates what is standard operating procedure
following the report of a plane that leaves its flight path and
fails to respond to air traffic control. Air force planes should
be in the air within 10 minutes, but on 9/11 the planes werent
ordered into the air for more than half an hour. Ahmed
adds that this sort of delay can only occur if it is so ordered.
Former CIA analyst, David McMichael, deals with the official
response to the failures of the military and intelligence agencies
by noting that, far from losing their jobs or being reprimanded,
the top officials were actually promoted after the events
of 9/11, and their agencies received an increase in funding.
The answers to the rest of the questions cover familiar ground,
including the plans of the United States government to gain access
to the oil and gas of the Caspian basin by using the war
on terror as an excuse for invading Afghanistan and establishing
a military presence in other Central Asian countries. There are
also references to prior US attempts to use the excuse of defending
the nation against threats to its safety to attack and invade
other countries, such as the sinking of the battleship Maine in
Havana Harbor, which set off the Spanish-American War, and Project
Northwoods, in which it was proposed that the US government instigate
terror against American citizens and blame it on the Cubans.
On the question of the links, if any, between the US government
and its intelligence agencies on the one hand, and terrorists
or their supporters on the other, the Pakistan connection turns
out to be the murkiest. It ties together the US, the Saudis, Osama
bin Laden and the CIA-funded mujahedin. But, again, these allegations
and connections are not new.
The most practical discussion was that of Enteen on the dismantling
of the US Constitution and Bill of Rights by the provisions of
the Patriot Act and the Homeland Security Bill, although these
comments could be called preaching to the choir, given the audience
present in the hall. Her comments included practical advice on
how to behave when arrested, for instance.
Ruppert and Enteen participated in a discussion panel that
took place after the showing of the film. With them were Peter
Dale Scott (emeritus professor of English at University of California
Berkeley, author of the book Drugs and Oil, and researcher
of US covert operations and their impact on democracy at home
and abroad, including the JFK assassination) and moderator Barrie
Zwicker, Canadian media criti,c producer of a weekly current affairs
program for Canadian television, and founder of Sources,
a free information web site for journalists, writers, editors
and researchers.
This discussion was disappointing. The statements made by the
panelists were pretty much what one has come to expect. There
was much talk from Scott and Ruppert about the CIA, double and
triple agents, and other intricacies of global skullduggery in
service of national entities in the struggle for markets and resources.
As fascinating as these stories may be to conspiracy fans and
followers of the covert world, they did not offer any new insights
into the US drive for global hegemony, its causes, aims or consequences.
There was a great deal of imputation (what the government knew,
did, or did not do), disputation (whether anti-government demonstrations
and protests constitute a real motor for change in government
policy or whether it might be more helpful to change ones
Internet provider or bank to those that dont feed the corporate
coffers) and confirmation of all of our worst fears about the
security state. All of this, however, was merely skirting the
issue of the underlying engine driving this burning buscapitalism.
While a gathering of a large audience of people to discuss
what the media will not discuss is to be welcomed, the ultimate
goals of the forces gathered remained unclear. There were representations
from all sorts of organizations and tendenciesenvironmental
activists, Kennedy assassination specialists and the like, nearly
all of whom had literature on offer in the front lobbybut
no unifying force amongst them that would seem to outline a way
forward. Although the panelists, Ruppert in particular, several
times expressed the need to get down to the root cause
of all of the factors behind the 9/11 attacks, the Iraq war, and
the ever more militaristic and unilateral direction of the US
government under the Bush regime, none of them discussed the political
history, particularly that of the twentieth century, which has
produced the policies we are seeing enacted today.
For instance, while making fun of a George Bush speech wherein
Bush was attempting to list the three most dangerous ideas of
the twentieth century, one of the panelists quoted him as starting,
Communism, Nazism and... The pause was Bush searching
for the third dangerous idea. That word was fascism.
But the filmmaker and panelists were themselves guilty of omitting
a crucial word: after an entire evening of accusations and revelations
of the effects of capitalism, there was no mention of capitalism
itself, and no delving into the intricacies of its history
and record in the last century.
David North of the WSWS Editorial Board has related how the
movements for social change in the United States are often afraid
of using what he referred to as the S word, and even
more so, the C wordin this case, C
for communism. But the participants in last nights discussion
were more afraid of the biggest C word of all timecapitalism.
While the history of the oil industry, the rise and fall of
Enron, and the machinations of the CIA and other national security
services were traced and related to the outcome of that history,
there was no equivalent history of the rise of the modern capitalist
class. Its rapacious scouring of the planet, its indifference
to everything other than acquiring vast wealth, and its chipping
(frequently gouging) away of hard-won rights of the working class
of this country and others were not discussed. In other words,
there was no questioning of the capitalist system itself.
Ultimately, Aftermath is worth seeing for the sheer
fact that it asks the questions that it asks. But the most important
question in the end, and the one that will lead to the answers
to the others, is the question that was not asked.
See Also:
Was the US government
alerted to September 11 attack?
[A four-part series]
Cover-up and conspiracy:
The Bush administration and September 11
[18 May 2002]
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