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US invented air attack on Pentagon, claims French book

vngelis | 01.04.2002 18:53

DID PLANES CRASH ON S11?

US invented air attack on Pentagon, claims French book

Jon Henley in Paris
Monday April 1, 2002
The Guardian

A bizarre book claiming that the plane that ploughed into the
Pentagon on September 11 never existed, and that the US establishment
itself was at the heart of the New York and Washington attacks, has
shot to the top of the French bestseller lists to indignation on both
sides of the Atlantic.
The Frightening Fraud, by Thierry Meyssan, sold out its original run
of 20,000 copies within two hours of going on sale. "We've sold 2,500
copies in 10 days, when a blockbuster novel sells maybe 1,500 in a
month," a spokesman at Fnac Les Halles, one of France's biggest
bookshops, said. "It's a phenomenon."

Mr Meyssan's conspiracy theory argues that American Airlines flight
77, which killed 189 people when it smashed into the headquarters of
the US defence department, did not exist, and that the whole disaster
was a dastardly plot dreamed up and implemented by the US government.

The French media has been quick to dismiss the book's claims, despite
the fact that Mr Meyssan is president of the Voltaire Network, a
respected independent thinktank whose left-leaning research projects
have until now been considered models of reasonableness and
objectivity.

"This theory suits everyone - there are no Islamic extremists and
everyone is happy. It eliminates reality," said Le Nouvel
Observateur, while Libération called the book "The Frightening
Confidence Trick... a tissue of wild and irresponsible allegations,
entirely without foundation".

A Pentagon spokesman, Glen Flood, said the book was "a slap in the
face and real offence to the American people, particularly to the
memory of victims of the attacks". He said he had not read it and had
no intention of doing so.

Mr Meyssan's argument, which started out as a rumour on the internet
and has risen to prominence largely thanks to the author's reputation
and chatshow appearances, suggests that the plane could not have
existed because eye-witness statements are contradictory, there are
suspiciously few photographs of the catastrophe and none of them
shows any wreckage. Even the rescue workers' accounts, published on
the Pentagon website, are not convincing, he says.

He also asks why the facade of the Pentagon did not immediately
collapse from the shock of the impact, and questions the fate of the
plane's passengers. "What became of the passengers of American
Airlines flight 77? Are they dead?"

Both Libération and Le Monde set out to disprove his theory, tracking
down photographs that do show debris, and speaking to victims'
relatives.

But Le Monde admitted that the information made public by Washington
did not entirely add up. "There is no official account of the crash.
The lack of information is feeding the rumour," it complained.

Special report on the events of September 11 at
guardian.co.uk/september11

vngelis

Comments

Display the following 3 comments

  1. see same story downwire — dh
  2. April Fool? — pir
  3. Meyssan's responds to critics — Jean