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by David
Ray Griffin
Late in the day on 9/11, CNN
put out a story that began: “Barbara Olson, a conservative commentator
and attorney, alerted her husband, Solicitor General Ted Olson, that the
plane she was on was being hijacked Tuesday morning, Ted Olson told
CNN.” According to this story, Olson reported that his wife had “called
him twice on a cell phone from American Airlines Flight 77,” saying that
“all passengers and flight personnel, including the pilots, were herded
to the back of the plane by armed hijackers. The only weapons she
mentioned were knives and cardboard cutters.” [2]
Ted Olson’s report was very
important. It provided the only evidence that American 77, which was
said to have struck the Pentagon, had still been aloft after it had
disappeared from FAA radar around 9:00 AM (there had been reports, after
this disappearance, that an airliner had crashed on the Ohio-Kentucky
border). Also, Barbara Olson had been a very well-known commentator on
CNN. The report that she died in a plane that had been hijacked by Arab
Muslims was an important factor in getting the nation’s support for the
Bush administration’s “war on terror.” Ted Olson’s report was important
in still another way, being the sole source of the widely accepted idea
that the hijackers had box cutters. [3]
However, although Ted Olson’s
report of phone calls from his wife has been a central pillar of the
official account of 9/11, this report has been completely undermined.
Olson’s Self-Contradictions
Olson began this process of
undermining by means of self-contradictions. He first told CNN, as we
have seen, that his wife had “called him twice on a cell phone.” But he
contradicted this claim on September 14, telling Hannity and Colmes
that she had reached him by calling the Department of Justice collect.
Therefore, she must have been using the “airplane phone,” he surmised,
because “she somehow didn’t have access to her credit cards.” [4]
However, this version of Olson’s story, besides contradicting his first
version, was even self-contradictory, because a credit card is
needed to activate a passenger-seat phone.
Later that same day, moreover,
Olson told Larry King Live that the second call from his wife
suddenly went dead because “the signals from cell phones coming from
airplanes don’t work that well.” [5] After that return to his first
version, he finally settled on the second version, saying that his wife
had called collect and hence must have used “the phone in the
passengers’ seats” because she did not have her purse. [6]
By finally settling on this
story, Olson avoided a technological pitfall. Given the cell phone
system employed in 2001, high-altitude cell phone calls from airliners
were impossible, or at least virtually so (Olson’s statement that “the
signals from cell phones coming from airplanes don’t work that well” was
a considerable understatement). The technology to enable cell phone
calls from high-altitude airline flights was not created until 2004. [7]
However, Olson’s second story,
besides being self-contradictory, was contradicted by American Airlines.
American Airlines
Contradicts Olson’s Second Version
A 9/11 researcher, knowing
that AA Flight 77 was a Boeing 757, noticed that AA’s website indicated
that its 757s do not have passenger-seat phones. After he wrote to ask
if that had been the case on September 11, 2001, an AA customer service
representative replied: “That is correct; we do not have phones on our
Boeing 757s. The
passengers on flight 77 used their own personal cellular phones to make
out calls during the terrorist attack.” [8]
In response to this revelation,
defenders of the official story might reply that Ted Olson was evidently
right the first time: she had used her cell phone. However, besides the
fact that this scenario is rendered unlikely by the cell phone
technology employed in 2001, it has also been contradicted by the FBI.
Olson’s Story Contradicted
by the FBI
The most serious official
contradiction of Ted Olson’s story came in 2006 at the trial of Zacarias
Moussaoui, the so-called 20th hijacker. The evidence presented to this
trial by the FBI included a report on phone calls from all four 9/11
flights. In its report on American Flight 77, the FBI report attributed
only one call to Barbara Olson and it was an “unconnected call,” which
(of course) lasted “0 seconds.” [9] According to the FBI, therefore, Ted
Olson did not receive a single call from his wife using either a cell
phone or an onboard phone.
Back on 9/11, the FBI itself
had interviewed Olson. A report of that interview indicates that Olson
told the FBI agents that his wife had called him twice from Flight 77.
[10] And yet the FBI’s report on calls from Flight 77, presented in
2006, indicated that no such calls occurred.
This was an amazing
development: The FBI is part of the Department of Justice, and yet its
report undermined the well-publicized claim of the DOJ’s former
solicitor general that he had received two calls from his wife on 9/11.
Olson’s Story Also Rejected
by Pentagon Historians
Ted Olson’s story has also been
quietly rejected by the historians who wrote Pentagon 9/11, a treatment
of the Pentagon attack put out by the Department of Defense. [11]
According to Olson, his wife
had said that “all passengers and flight personnel, including the
pilots, were herded to the back of the plane by armed hijackers.” [12]
This is an inherently implausible scenario. We are supposed to believe
that 60-some people, including the two pilots, were held at bay by three
or four men (one or two of the hijackers would have been in the cockpit)
with knives and boxcutters. This scenario becomes even more absurd when
we realize that the alleged hijackers were all small, unathletic men
(the 9/11 Commission pointed out that even “[t]he so-called muscle
hijackers actually were not physically imposing, as the majority of them
were between 5’5” and 5’7” in height and slender in build” [13]), and
that the pilot, Charles “Chic” Burlingame, was a weightlifter and a
boxer, who was described as “really tough” by one of his erstwhile
opponents. [14] Also, the idea that Burlingame would have turned over
the plane to hijackers was rejected by his brother, who said: “I don’t
know what happened in that cockpit, but I’m sure that they would have
had to incapacitate him or kill him because he would have done anything
to prevent the kind of tragedy that befell that airplane.” [15]
The Pentagon historians, in
any case, did not accept the Olson story, according to which Burlingame
and his co-pilot did give up their plane and were in the back with the
passengers and other crew members. They instead wrote that “the
attackers either incapacitated or murdered the two pilots.” [16]
Conclusion
This rejection of Ted
Olson’s story by American Airlines, the Pentagon, and especially the FBI
is a development of utmost importance. Without the alleged calls from
Barbara Olson, there is no evidence that Flight 77 returned to
Washington. Also, if
Ted Olson’s claim was false, then there are only two possibilities:
Either he lied or he was duped by someone using voice-morphing
technology to pretend to be his wife. [17] In either case, the official
story about the calls from Barbara Olson was based on deception.
And if that part of the
official account of 9/11 was based on deception, should we not suspect
that other parts were as well?
The fact that Ted Olson’s
report has been contradicted by other defenders of the official story
about 9/11 provides grounds for demanding a new investigation of 9/11.
This internal contradiction is, moreover, only one of 25 such
contradictions discussed in my most recent book,
9/11 Contradictions: An Open Letter to Congress and the Press.
NOTES
1 This essay is based on
Chapter 8 (“Did Ted Olson Receive Calls from Barbara Olson?”) of David
Ray Griffin, 9/11 Contradictions: An Open Letter to Congress and the
Press (Northampton: Olive Branch, 2008).
2 Tim O’Brien, “Wife of
Solicitor General Alerted Him of Hijacking from Plane,” CNN, September
11, 2001 (http://archives.cnn.com/2001/US/09/11/pentagon.olson).
3 This was pointed out in
The 9/11 Commission Report, 8.
4 Hannity & Colmes, Fox News, September 14, 2001
(http://s3.amazonaws.com/911timeline/2001/foxnews091401.html).
5 “America’s New War:
Recovering from Tragedy,” Larry King Live, CNN, September 14,
2001 (http://edition.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0109/14/lkl.00.html).
6 In his “Barbara K. Olson
Memorial Lecture,” delivered November 16, 2001
(http://www.fed-soc.org/resources/id.63/default.asp),
Olson said that she “somehow managed . . . to use a telephone in the
airplane to call.” He laid out this version of his story more fully in
an interview reported in Toby Harnden, “She Asked Me How to Stop the
Plane,” Daily Telegraph, March 5, 2002
(http://s3.amazonaws.com/911timeline/2002/telegraph030502.html).
7 I discussed the technical
difficulties of making cell phone calls from airliners in 2001 in
Debunking 9/11 Debunking: An Answer to Popular Mechanics and Other
Defenders of the Official Conspiracy Theory (Northampton: Olive
Branch, 2007), 87-88, 292-97.
8 See the submission of 17
February 2006 by “the Paradroid” on the Politik Forum (http://forum.politik.de/forum/archive/index.php/t-133356-p-24.html).
It is quoted in David Ray Griffin, 9/11 Contradictions: An Open
Letter to Congress and the Press (Northampton: Olive Branch, 2008),
75.
9 United States v. Zacarias
Moussaoui, Exhibit Number P200054 (http://www.vaed.uscourts.gov/notablecases/moussaoui/exhibits/prosecution/flights/P200054.html).
These documents can be more easily viewed in “Detailed Account of Phone
Calls from September 11th Flights”
(http://911research.wtc7.net/planes/evidence/calldetail.html).
10 FBI, “Interview with
Theodore Olsen [sic],” “9/11 Commission, FBI Source Documents,
Chronological, September 11,” 2001Intelfiles.com, March 14, 2008,
(http://intelfiles.egoplex.com:80/2008/03/911-commission-fbi-source-documents.html).
11 Alfred Goldberg et al.,
Pentagon 9/11 (Washington DC: Office of the Secretary of Defense,
2007).
12 O’Brien, “Wife of Solicitor
General Alerted Him of Hijacking from Plane.”
13 9/11 Commission Staff
Statement 16
(http://www.9-11commission.gov/staff_statements/staff_statement_16.pdf).
14 Shoestring, “The Flight 77
Murder Mystery: Who Really Killed Charles Burlingame?” Shoestring911,
February 2, 2008
(http://shoestring911.blogspot.com/2008/02/flight-77-murder-mystery-who-really.html).
15 “In Memoriam: Charles ‘Chic’
Burlingame, 1949-2001,” USS Saratoga Museum foundation (available at
http://911research.wtc7.net/cache/planes/analysis/chic_remembered.html).
16 Alfred Goldberg et al.,
Pentagon 9/11 (Washington DC: Office of the Secretary of Defense,
2007), 12.
17 Of these two possibilities,
the idea that Ted Olson was duped should be seriously entertained only
if there are records proving that the Department of Justice received two
collect calls, ostensibly from Barbara Olson, that morning. Evidently no
such records have been produced.
This article is based on
Chapter 8 of Dr. Griffin’s new book, “9/11 Contradictions: An Open
Letter to Congress and the Press,” (Northampton: Olive Branch, 2008).
This book reframes the central
events of 9/11 as a series of 25 internal contradictions. The only way
that its readers will be able to continue to accept the official story
is to accept mutually contradictory accounts.
“9/11 Contradictions” may have
the best chance of any of DRG’s books (or indeed any book) of opening up
a new investigation into 9/11.
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