Thursday, July 14, 2016

The Twenty Eight Pages

The 28 redacted pages of the Congressional 9/11 Report (not the 9/11 Commission as commonly misunderstood) has been under discussion for several months, now it appears it may finally be released.

Twenty-eight pages of a 2002 Congressional report on the September 11, 2001 terror attacks -- a section which contains information regarding alleged Saudi ties -- will soon be released, a Democratic source confirms to CBS News.
The Obama administration must first decide whether or not to declassify the material, according to the office of House Speaker Paul Ryan. But House and Senate leadership then decides whether or not to release the material, and -- if they do decide to do so -- when and how it will be distributed.
Ranking member of the House Intelligence Committee, Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff of California, weighed in on the possibility that the White House could declassify the previously redacted pages within the next couple of days.
My prediction. These pages will shockingly show that Islamists on the Arabian Peninsula were behind the 9/11 attacks.

5 Comments:

At 15 July, 2016 20:42, Blogger Unknown said...

Looks like the FBI's senior management was deaf to the field office in San Diego. Bandar has some 'splaining to do.

The report is a lot more comprehensive than we've been led to believe, but many of the links to Saudi Intelligence and the Saudi Royal family are tenuous at best. Too bad they did push for a follow up back in 2003 (or maybe they did. The Saudis cleaned house, but now I wonder who they really silenced).

What I get from the report is that the Saudi-US relationship is too one sided, and the Saudis don't have our best interest at heart. Just the opposite in fact. Why else would FBI HQ ignore memos out of California accusing Osama Bassnan being Saudi Intelligence?

The other thing I found interesting was bin Laden's brother, and how we seemed to ignore his connections to terror groups while living inside the US.

An interesting question is did this section get redacted to allow the FBI and CIA time to conduct surveillance, and investigate targets mentioned in this report? I wish I could say yes.

 
At 16 July, 2016 09:22, Blogger Pat said...

Lots of occurrences of "may" and "might" and "possibly" in the report.

 
At 17 July, 2016 01:23, Blogger Paolo Attivissimo said...

I've prepared a full transcript for easy searching and reference.

 
At 21 July, 2016 15:38, Blogger Unknown said...

Why can I not find a copy of Screw Loose Change anywhere for love nor money?!?!?!

Little help please???

 
At 22 July, 2016 18:15, Blogger James B. said...

A copy? This is a blog. You talking about some other medium?

 

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