Tag: 9/11stealth ,
Bush ,
Cheney ,
Rumsfeld ,
PNAC ,
Impeach ,
BlackOps ,
PsyOps ,
Cofer ,
Cambone ,
CIA ,
NSA ,
FBI ,
Rice ,
Rove ,
Terrorizers ,
NWO ,
Lies Description: From "The 9/11 Commission Report," presented at the "History Channel," we see Keane declaring that George W. Bush told the Commission that he had communication failure from "Air Force One;" however, the footage from CNN, "America Remembers" shows that apart of Bush, there was a team of reporters on his plane.
Bush want us to be so dumb as to think that U93 and the others made a lot of phone calls by cell phones and that Bush himself, even with those reporters broadcasting him from his plane, was unable to communicate...
Bob Woodward in his book "Bush at War" describes some of those who Bush called from his plane:
"The president's motorcade raced to the Sarasota Bradenton International Airport. He dashed up the steps and into his private front cabin and office on Air Force One... Bush strapped in, and the plane accelerated down the runway, almost standing on its tail as it climbed rapidly... IT WAS 9:39 A.M. when American Airlines Flight 77, a Boeing 757, slammed into the Pentagon. Five minutes later,
BUSH REACHED HIS VICE PRESIDENT, DICK CHENEY,
who had been whisked from his West Wing office by the Secret Service to the Presidential Emergency Operations Center, or PEOC, the emergency bunker beneath the White House grounds. "We're at war," Bush said, and told Cheney to give the congressional leadership a briefing... Soon
CHENEY WAS ON THE PHONE AGAIN
to the president urging that he authorize U.S. military aircraft to shoot down any additional commercial airliners that were controlled by hijackers... "You bet," Bush said. He gave the authority. AT ABOUT 10:30 A.M.
CHENEY REACHED BUSH AGAIN ON AIR FORCE ONE,
which was still on its way to Washington...
CARD REPORTED THAT
First Lady Laura Bush was in a secure location with the Secret Service and that his daughters had been removed to safer locations.
A few minutes later,
CHENEY WAS BACK ON THE PHONE
urging that the president not return to Washington. "There's still a threat," he said... Bush recalled, "HE WAS THE MAN ON THE TELEPHONE who said, 'Do not come to Washington.'"
The president agreed to divert to Barksdale Air Force Base in Louisiana. Shortly after, those on the plane could feel it bank suddenly and sharply to the left in a westerly direction.
At 10:52 A.M. BUSH SPOKE WITH HIS WIFE.
... Bush reluctantly acquiesced and reboarded Air Force One, which shortly after 1:30 P.M. zoomed into the western sky, this time for Offutt Air Force Base in Nebraska. Offutt is home to the Strategic Command, which controls the United States's nuclear weapons, and the base has a facility to protect the president. He could also meet with his National Security Council over a secure video link.
FROM THE PLANE, BUSH REACHED HIS SECRETARY OF DEFENSE, DONALD H. RUMSFELD.
... At Offutt Air Force Base in Nebraska, President Bush convened the first meeting of the National Security Council for the terrorist crisis at 3:30"P.M...
"I'm coming back," Bush said.
Stafford was surprised.
About 4:30 P.M. THE PRESIDENT REACHED HIS WIFE ON THE PHONE.
"I'm coming home," he said. "See you at the White House. Love you, go on home."
...There had been some doubt as he had hopscotched most of the day from Air Force base to Air Force base.
About 6:30 P.M., the president was finally back at the White House dealing with the speech draft in the small study off the Oval Office."
The guy that was "cut-out" was Colin Powell: "Reports were swamping the system saying that future targets included the White House, the Capitol and the State Department [and] CIA headquarters... Powell then raced to the airport for the seven-hour flight. Once the plane took off, Powell found that he couldn't talk to anybody because his communications were connected to the system in the U.S., which was swamped. Without a phone or his e-mail, he was like a man without a country."
Later Woodward declared: ""We need to stress homeland defense," the president said. "One, we need an early blueprint for response." He assigned that task to Cheney. "Have to coordinate public affairs," he agreed. "Have to update our communications." For months Bush had been complaining about crappy communications systems, which had deteriorated in recent years from lack of investment. On the morning of September 11, the phones didn't work well."