March 27, 2007
Professor David Ray Griffin is the
nemesis of the official 9/11 conspiracy theory. In his latest
book, Debunking 9/11 Debunking, Griffin destroys the
credibility of the National Institute of Standards and
Technology (NIST) and Popular Mechanics reports,
annihilates his critics, and proves himself to be a better
scientist and engineer than the defenders of the official story.
Griffin’s book is 385 pages divided into four chapters and
containing 1,209 footnotes. Without question, the book is the
most thorough presentation and examination of all known facts
about the 9/11 attacks. Griffin is a person who is sensitive to
evidence, logic, and scientific reasoning. There is no
counterpart on the official side of the story who is as fully
informed on all aspects of the attacks as Griffin.
At the outset, Griffin points out that the reader’s choice is
between two conspiracy theories: One is that Muslim fanatics,
who were not qualified to fly airplanes, defeated the security
apparatus of the US and succeeded in three out of four attacks
using passenger jets as weapons. The other is that security
failed across the board, not merely partially but totally,
because of complicity of some part of the US government.
Griffin points out that there has been no independent
investigation of 9/11. What we have are a report by a political
commission headed by Bush administration factotum Philip Zelikow,
a NIST report produced by the Bush administration’s Department
of Commerce, and a journalistic account produced by Popular
Mechanics. Various scientists who work for the federal
government or are dependent on government grants have issued
speculative statements in behalf of the official conspiracy
theory, but have not produced meaningful evidence in its
behalf.
The relevant skeptics of the official story are approximately
100 independent researchers consisting of experts and professors
whose careers have required them to deal with evidence and its
analysis. Their individual contributions to 9/11 analysis can
be found online.
Griffin has undertaken to absorb the arguments and evidence for
the official account and the arguments and evidence against it.
In his latest book, which has just been released, he presents
the case for the official account and its evidential failure.
Polls show that 36% of Americans do not believe the official
story. Setting aside the 25% of the public that is so
uninformed or uninvolved as to believe that Saddam Hussein was
responsible for the 9/11 attack, leaves 39% of the public who
believe the official story. However, this 39% is essentially
relying on the mainstream media’s endorsement of the official
story. Griffin believes, perhaps naively, that truth can
prevail, and it is his commitment to truth that has motivated
him to shoulder the enormous task.
Everyone who believes in the integrity of the US government or
the Bush administration will find Griffin’s book to be
disturbing. Readers will have to confront such issues as why US
authorities seized the forensic evidence resulting from the
destruction of the three World Trade Center buildings, the
attack on the Pentagon and the crashed airliner in Pennsylvania
and prevented any forensic examination of any part of the 9/11
attacks.
Despite widespread belief that Osama bin Laden was responsible
for the attack, the evidence we have is a suspect video declared
to be "bogus" by Bruce Lawrence, perhaps the leading American
expert on bin Laden. The US government has never produced the
promised report on bin Laden’s responsibility. When the Taliban
offered to hand over bin Laden on presentation of evidence, the
US government had no evidence to deliver; thus the invasion of
Afghanistan.
The fragility of the NIST report is astonishing. The report
succeeded because people accepted its assurances without
examination.
Griffin shows that the Popular Mechanics report consists
of special pleading, circular reasoning, appeals to the
authority of the NIST report, straw men, and internal
contradictions in the report itself.
There is not space in a review to present the evidence Griffin
has mustered. A few highlights should suffice to alert readers
to the possibility that the Bush administration has lied about
more than Saddam Hussein’s weapons of mass destruction.
The two WTC towers did not collapse. They blew up and
disintegrated, as did WTC 7. There is an enormous energy
deficit in every account that rules out the use of explosives.
Gravitational energy is insufficient to explain the
pulverization of the buildings and contents and the severing of
the 47 massive center core steel columns in each of the towers
into convenient lengths to be picked up and loaded onto trucks;
much less can gravitational energy account for the pulverization
of the top floors of the towers and ejection of steel beams
hundreds of feet horizontally just prior to the disintegration
of the floors below.
Damage caused by airliners and short-lived limited fires cannot
explain the disintegration of the buildings. The massive steel
skeletons of the towers comprised a gigantic heat sink that
wicked away whatever heat the limited fires produced.
NIST’s final report stated that of the steel available to it for
examination, "only three columns had evidence that the steel
reached temperatures above 250 degrees Celsius" (482 degrees
Fahrenheit). The self-cleaning ovens in our home kitchens reach
temperatures higher than this, and the ovens do not melt or
deform.
Steel begins to melt at 1,500 degrees C or 2,800 degrees F.
Temperatures of 250 degrees C would have no effect on the
strength of steel. The explanation that the buildings collapsed
because fire weakened the steel is speculative. Open air fires
do not produce temperatures sufficient to deprive steel of its
structural integrity. Steel framed buildings have burned 22
hours in raging infernos, and the steel skeletons remained
standing. The WTC fires in the towers lasted about one hour and
were limited to a few floors. Moreover, it is impossible for
fire to account for the sudden, total and symmetrical
disintegration of powerfully constructed buildings, much less at
free fall speeds that are obtainable only with controlled
demolition.
Griffin provides quotes from firefighters, police, and tenants,
who heard and experienced a series of explosions prior to the
disintegration of the towers. Such witness testimony is
generally ignored by defenders of the official conspiracy
theory.
Molten steel was found in underground levels of the WTC
buildings weeks after the buildings’ destruction. As everyone
agrees that the fires did not approach the melting point of
steel, a possible explanation is high explosives used in
demolitions that produce 5,000 degree temperatures. The
possibility that explosives were used remains unexamined except
by independent researchers.
Contradictions in the official conspiracy theory leap off the
pages and hit the reader in the face. For example, the evidence
that Flight 77, a Boeing 757, crashed into the Pentagon is the
government’s claim to have obtained from the wreckage enough
bodies and body parts to match the DNA for each person on the
passenger list and flight crew. Simultaneously, the absence of
passenger luggage, fuselage, wing and tail sections--indeed the
absence of a 100,000 pound airliner--is attributed to the
vaporization of the airplane due to the high speed crash and
intense fire. The incompatibility of vaporized metal but
recovered flesh and blood stood unnoticed until Griffin pointed
it out.
Another striking inconsistency in the official conspiracy theory
is the difference in the impact of airliners on the Pentagon and
the WTC towers. In the case of the Pentagon, the emphasis is on
why the airliner caused so little damage to the building. In
the case of the WTC towers, the emphasis is why the airliners
caused so much damage.
Perhaps it is merely a coincidence that just prior to 9/11
Cathleen P. Black, who has family connections to the CIA and
Pentagon and is president of Hearst Magazines, the owner of
Popular Mechanics, fired the magazine’s editor-in-chief and
several senior veteran staff members and installed James B.
Meigs and Benjamin Chertoff, a cousin of Bush administration
factotum Michael Chertoff. It was Meigs and Benjamin Chertoff
who produced the Popular Mechanics report that Griffin
has eviscerated.
In his conclusion Griffin reminds us that the 9/11 attack has
been used to start wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, to plan an
attack on Iran, to curtail constitutional protections and civil
liberties in the US, to radically expand US military budgets and
the power of the executive, and to enrich entrenched vested
interests. Griffin is definitely correct about this regardless
of whether a believable case can ever be made for the
government’s version of the 9/11 conspiracy.
Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in
the Reagan administration. He was Associate Editor of the Wall
Street Journal editorial page and Contributing Editor of
National Review. He is coauthor of The Tyranny of Good
Intentions.