MR. CHENEY'S COVER
STORY
Part 1, Section 2 of
'GUILTY FOR 9-11: BUSH, RUMSFELD,
MYERS'
by Illarion Bykov and Jared Israel
[Posted 20 November 2001]
From The Emperors New
Clothes, www.tenc.net
[From The Wilderness
encourages you to visit the tenc web site and support this
incredible reporting]
Dedicated to
the firemen of New York.
========================
In Part 1,
Section 1 we demonstrated that Andrews Air Force base,
10 miles from the Pentagon, had combat-ready
fighter squadrons on September 11th. Why didn't jets scramble
from Andrews until after the Pentagon was hit?
http://emperors-clothes.com/indict/indict-1.htm
LIE # 2: PRESIDENTIAL
AUTHORIZATION WAS NEEDED TO SCRAMBLE JETS TO INTERCEPT FLIGHT
77
On Sunday, September 16th,
Vice-President Richard Cheney was interviewed on NBC TV's
'MEET THE PRESS.' During that interview he made the claim
that the military needed authorization from President George
W. Bush before scrambling fighter jets to intercept American
Airlines Flight 77.
Mr. Cheney did not present
this lie in a straightforward manner. He did not say, "A
commercial airliner can't be intercepted without presidential
approval." Instead, he spoke as if the need for presidential
authorization were a commonly accepted fact; and then, based
on this false foundation, he emitted a fog of emotional
misinformation to confuse the millions of Americans who
had asked themselves: why didn't jet fighters intercept
Flight 77 before it crashed into the Pentagon? Doesn't the
U.S. have radar and an Air Force anymore?
It is common for officials
attempting to cover-up a capital crime to put the blame
on a subordinate. However Mr. Cheney used a different approach
on 'MEET THE PRESS.' Relying on his skills in public deception,
Cheney tried to create the impression that nothing improper
had occurred. But as soon as one sees through his lies,
one realizes Mr. Cheney has placed the responsibility for
the failure to intercept on George W. Bush.
Here is the excerpt from
'MEET THE PRESS' where Richard Cheney puts forward his intercept
lie:
MR. RUSSERT: "What's
the most important decision you think he made during the
course of the day?
VICE PRES. CHENEY: "Well,
the--I suppose the toughest decision was this question of
whether or not we would intercept incoming commercial aircraft."
MR. RUSSERT: "And you decided?"
VICE PRES. CHENEY: "We
decided to do it. We'd, in effect, put a flying combat air
patrol up over the city; F-16s with an AWACS, which is an
airborne radar system, and tanker support so they could
stay up a long time...
"It doesn't do any
good to put up a combat air patrol if you don't give them
instructions to act, if, in fact, they feel it's appropriate.
MR. RUSSERT: "So if the
United States government became aware that a hijacked commercial
airliner was destined for the White House or the Capitol,
we would take the plane down?"
VICE PRES. CHENEY: "Yes.
The president made the decision...that if the plane would
not divert...as a last resort, our pilots were authorized
to take them out. Now, people say, you know, that's a horrendous
decision to make. Well, it is. You've got an airplane full
of American citizens, civilians, captured by...terrorists,
headed and are you going to, in fact, shoot it down, obviously,
and kill all those Americans on board?
"...It's a presidential-level
decision, and the president made, I think, exactly the right
call in this case, to say, "I wished we'd had combat
air patrol up over New York."
--NBC, 'Meet
the Press' 16 September 2001 (1)
* * *
Note that Mr. Cheney has
performed a sleight of hand here.
First he said, "the
toughest decision was...whether we would intercept incoming
commercial aircraft."
Later he said, "The
president made the decision... that if the plane would not
divert as a last resort, our pilots were authorized to take
them out..." that is, "shoot it down."
But "intercept":
and "shoot it down" do not mean the same thing.
"intercept
"intercept (nter-spt) verb, transitive
intercepted, intercepting, intercepts
"1. a. To stop, deflect,
or interrupt the progress or intended course of"
(From 'American Heritage Dictionary' --AHD)
"shootdown
"shootdown (shtdoun) noun
"Destruction of a flying aircraft by a missile attack
or gunfire."
(From 'American Heritage Dictionary' --AHD)
Mr. Cheney deliberately
confused these terms to stop people from asking: why weren't
the hijacked jets intercepted?
Since "stopping, deflecting,
or interrupting the progress or intended course of"
a hijacked airplane does not necessarily involve violence,
there could be no moral obstacle to scrambling fighter jets
to intercept Flight 77. Therefore Mr. Cheney shifted quickly
to the morally charged question of whether to shoot down
"an airplane full of American citizens". By creating
this emotional link between interception (not necessarily
violent) and shooting down a commercial jet (very violent),
Cheney hoped to create sympathy for a President forced to
make this "horrendous" choice: to intercept or
not to intercept. By confusing the issues of "intercepting"
vs. "shooting down" after the Pentagon was hit,
Cheney was trying to get his listeners to forget that in
fact nothing had been done before the Pentagon was hit.
Mr. Cheney attempted to
smooth over the jump from "intercept" to "shoot
down" by inserting the following connecting sentence:
"It doesn't do any
good to put up a combat air patrol if you don't give them
instructions to act, if, in fact, they feel it's appropriate."
This is disinformation.
Mr. Cheney was treating his viewers like fools.
First, as anyone with a
computer and basic knowledge of the Internet can find out,
Air Traffic Controllers request military jets to intercept
commercial aircraft on a routine basis. Sometimes the purpose
is to tell a commercial pilot that his plane has gone off
course; other times the interceptor goes up in order to
observe the situation directly - for instance, to see who
is flying the plane. None of this requires presidential
approval.
Second, military interceptors
(or 'escorts') already have clear "instructions to
act." These instructions can be read online in detailed
manuals from the FAA and the Department of Defense. The
instructions cover everything from minor emergencies to
hijackings. If a problem is serious, high-ranking military
officers from the National Military Command Center in the
Pentagon (NMCC) can take charge.
Let us consider the procedures
used in intercepting commercial aircraft.
An Air Traffic Controller
(ATC) may request military jets to intercept (or 'escort')
a commercial aircraft in response to any serious problem
which the Air Traffic Controller cannot solve through radio
contact. Perhaps the most common problem is that a commercial
jet has deviated from its authorized flight path.
Every commercial jet is
required to follow IFR, or Instrument Flight Rules. IFR
requires pilots to file a flight plan with the Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) before takeoff.
(FAA Order 7400.2E 14-1-2)
(2)
"Commercial flights
fly according to predefined flight plans. These flight plans
are intended to provide quick routes that take advantage
of favorable winds while avoiding the routes traveled by
other aircraft. The usual flight plan is a series of three
connected routes: a standard instrument departure (SID)
route, an en route path, and a standard instrument arrival
(STAR). Each route consists of a sequence of geographic
points, or fixes, which, when connected, form a trajectory
from the point of departure to the point of arrival."
--'Direct-To
Requirements' by G. Dennis & E. Torlak (3)
If a plane deviates from
its flight plan, or makes the wrong turn at one of its 'fixes,'
an Air Traffic Controller (ATC) contacts the pilot. If the
ATC cannot make contact, he or she will request an escort
- that is, a military jet - to scramble and check out the
situation. This is called 'interception.'
As you can see, interception
is not necessarily an aggressive act. Usually it is requested
because routine communication has become impossible.
For example, when the Lear
jet chartered by Payne Stewart, the famous golf pro, went
off course, and the pilot did not respond by radio, the
FAA immediately contacted the military:
"Several Air Force
and Air National Guard fighter jets, plus an AWACS radar
control plane, helped the Federal Aviation Administration
track the runaway Learjet and estimate when it would run
out of fuel."
--'CNN,'
26 October 1999 (4)
The FAA online manual describes
how an escort (i.e., a fighter jet) might communicate with
a commercial airliner which fails to respond to radio contact.
The FAA has a chart entitled:
"INTERCEPTING SIGNALS
"Signals initiated by intercepting aircraft and responses
by intercepted aircraft."
According to the chart,
which is available
on-line, if a commercial jet is intercepted in daytime,
the escort fighter jet may communicate by:
"...Rocking wings
from a position slightly above and ahead of, and normally
to the left of, the intercepted aircraft..."
This conveys the message,
"You have been intercepted." The commercial jet
should respond by rocking its wings, indicating it will
comply.
The escort then makes a
"slow level turn,
normally to the left, on to the desired heading [direction]."
The commercial jet is supposed
to respond by following the escort.
(FAA 'AIM' 5-6-4)
(5)
When a commercial jet deviates
from its approved flight path, it creates a potentially
deadly hazard: it could collide with another jet. It is
therefore reassuring that the FAA has an exacting standard
for what constitutes an emergency:
"Consider that an
aircraft emergency exists ... when: ...There is unexpected
loss of radar contact and radio communications with any
...aircraft."
--FAA Order 7110.65M 10-2-5
(6)
And:
"EMERGENCY DETERMINATIONS
"If ... you are in
doubt that a situation constitutes an emergency or potential
emergency, handle it as though it were an emergency."
--FAA Order 7110.65M 10-1-1-c
(7)
A high-ranking FAA official
- called an Air Defense Liaison Officer (ADLO)
- is stationed in the headquarters of NORAD, the North American
Aerospace Defense Command. The purpose: to help the FAA
and the military work together to handle emergencies as
quickly as possible. (8) Escorts are usually scrambled from
NORAD bases, such as the Otis Air Force Base on Cape Cod,
Massachusetts, or the air base at Langley, Virginia. But
not always:
"Normally, NORAD escort
aircraft will take the required action. However, for the
purpose of these procedures, the term "escort aircraft"
applies to any military aircraft assigned to the escort
mission. "
--FAA Order 7610.4J 7-1-2
(9)
Thus when Payne Stewart's
Lear jet went off course:
"First, a fighter
jet from Tyndall, Fla., was diverted from a routine training
flight to check out the Learjet. Two F-16s from another
Florida base then picked up the chase, later handing it
over to two Air National Guard F-16s from Oklahoma, which
handed it over to two F-16s from Fargo, North Dakota."
--'ABC
News,' 25 October 1999 (10)
During a serious emergency,
or if there is any possibility that a hijacking has occurred:
"The escort service
will be requested by the FAA hijack coordinator by direct
contact with the National Military Command Center (NMCC)."
--FAA Order 7610.4J 7-1-2
(9)
A Defense Department manual
makes the same point:
"In the event of a
hijacking, the NMCC will be notified by the most expeditious
means by the FAA. The NMCC will, with the exception of immediate
responses...forward requests for DOD [Department of Defense]
assistance to the Secretary of Defense for approval."
--CJCSI 3610.01A,
1 June 2001 (11)
Located in the Pentagon,
the NMCC can tap into radar stations and thus monitor dangerous
emergencies and hijackings. For example, during the Payne
Stewart incident:
"...officers on the
Joint Chiefs were monitoring the Learjet on radar screens
inside the Pentagon's National Military Command Center."
--'CNN,'
26 October 1999 (4)
When dealing with potentially
hostile situations, escorts can adopt aggressive behavior:
"Small Private Plane
Ordered to Land in Vicinity of Bush Ranch
"A small private plane
flying unauthorized in the vicinity of President Bush's
ranch near Crawford was ordered by the military to land
Thursday, a sheriff's deputy said....
"The Federal Aviation
Administration declared that the plane was unauthorized
and ordered its occupants detained, Plemons said. At that
point military officials, flying in two jets beside the
plane, got on the pilot's radio frequency and ordered the
Cessna to land...
"The plane landed
on a private landing strip near State Highway 6, about eight
miles from the Bush ranch near Crawford....
"In [a second incident,
in] Wood County, Sheriff's senior Dispatcher Rodney Mize
said a private plane was forced down by two military pilots
in A-10 Warthog jets about 11:30 a.m. The jets flew one
above and one below until the private plane's pilot landed
at Wisener Field near Mineola."
--'AP,'
13 September 2001 (12)
The 'Boston Globe' reported
that:
"[Marine Corps Major
Mike] Snyder, the NORAD spokesman, said its fighters routinely
intercept aircraft.
"When planes are intercepted,
they typically are handled with a graduated response. The
approaching fighter may rock its wingtips to attract the
pilot's attention, or make a pass in front of the aircraft.
Eventually, it can fire tracer rounds in the airplane's
path, or, under certain circumstances, down it with a missile."
--'Boston
Globe,' 15 September 2001 (13)
Now, let us return to Mr.
Cheney and his interview on 'MEET THE PRESS.'
As you will recall, he
said:
"It doesn't do any
good to put up a combat air patrol if you don't give them
instructions to act, if, in fact, they feel it's appropriate."
Mr. Cheney is attempting
to misinform by pretending that intercept pilots need 'instructions'
from the President, when he knows perfectly well that clear
instructions and a whole organizational network exist to
handle intercept emergencies.
Moreover, Mr. Cheney's
implicit argument - that there is no point in sending up
an escort unless the pilot has clearance to shoot down a
commercial jet - is absurd. Why would such a decision have
to be made in advance of scrambling the escort? Even if
an airliner has been taken over by a terrorist with a suicide
mission, how could Mr. Cheney, Mr. Bush or anyone else other
than God Himself possibly predict how the hijacker would
respond to an intercept by military jets? Even if a hijacker
were ready to die for the glory of crashing into the Pentagon,
does that mean he would also be ready to die for the glory
of ignoring a military pilot's order to land?
So even if the military
had no authority to shoot down Flight 77, why not send up
escorts planes? Isn't that in fact how police and the military
routinely handle hijack situations - by mobilizing a potentially
overwhelming force in the hope of getting the hijacker to
surrender?
Why, as Mr. Cheney
claims, would there have been "no point" in trying
this tactic in the case of Flight 77? Weren't many human
lives at stake? Isn't that "a point"?
A DEFENSE THAT
BACKFIRES
What
about the rest of Mr. Cheney's remarks, his contention that
only President Bush could authorize the military to actually
shoot down a hijacked plane? In all probability this is
true. But as we shall see in a later section, this comment,
as well as other things Mr. Cheney said on 'MEET THE PRESS,'
will prove damning to George W. Bush when he goes on trial
for treason.
FOOTNOTES:
For a map of Washington showing
the distance from Andrews Air Force base to the Pentagon
go to:
http://emperors-clothes.com/indict/andrewsmap.htm
(1) 'NBC, Meet the Press'
(10:00 AM ET) Sunday 16 September 2001.
Full transcript at:
http://stacks.msnbc.com/news/629714.asp?cp1=1
Backup transcript at:
http://emperors-clothes.com/9-11backups/nbcmp.htm
(2) Regarding rules governing
IFR requirements, see FAA Order 7400.2E 'Procedures for
Handling Airspace Matters,' Effective Date: December 7,
2000 (Includes Change 1, effective July 7, 2001), Chapter
14-1-2.
Full text posted at:
http://www.faa.gov/ATpubs/AIR/air1401.html#14-1-2
(3) For a clear and detailed
description of flight plans, fixes, and Air Traffic Control,
see: 'Direct-To Requirements' by Gregory Dennis and Emina
Torlak at:
http://sdg.lcs.mit.edu/atc/D2Requirements.htm
(4) 'CNN,' 26 October 1999
"Pentagon never considered downing Stewart's Learjet,"
Web posted at: 8:27 p.m. EDT (0027 GMT)
Full text posted at:
http://www.cnn.com/US/9910/26/shootdown/
Backup at:
http://emperors-clothes.com/9-11backups/cnnlearjet.htm
(5) FAA 'Aeronautical Information
Manual: Official Guide to Basic Flight Information and Air
Traffic Control (ATC) Procedures,' (Includes Change 3 Effective:
July 12, 2001) Chapter 5-6-4 "Interception Signals"
Full text posted at:
http://www.faa.gov/ATpubs/AIM/Chap5/aim0506.html#5-6-4
(6) FAA Order 7110.65M 'Air
Traffic Control' (Includes Change 3 Effective: July 12,
2001), Chapter 10-2-5 "Emergency Situations"
Full text posted at:
http://www.faa.gov/ATpubs/ATC/Chp10/atc1002.html#10-2-5
(7) FAA Order 7110.65M 'Air
Traffic Control' (Includes Change 3 Effective: July 12,
2001), Chapter 10-1-1 "Emergency Determinations"
Full text posted at:
http://www.faa.gov/ATpubs/ATC/Chp10/atc1001.html#
10-1-1
(8) FAA Order 7610.4J 'Special
Military Operations' (Effective Date: November 3, 1998;
Includes: Change 1, effective July 3, 2000; Change 2, effective
July 12, 2001), Chapter 4, Section 5, "Air Defense
Liaison Officers (ADLO's)"
Full text posted at:
http://www.faa.gov/ATpubs/MIL/Ch4/mil0405.html#
Section%205
(9) FAA Order 7610.4J 'Special
Military Operations' (Effective Date: November 3, 1998;
Includes: Change 1, effective July 3, 2000; Change 2, effective
July 12, 2001), Chapter 7, Section 1-2, "Escort of
Hijacked Aircraft: Requests for Service"
Full text posted at:
http://faa.gov/ATpubs/MIL/Ch7/mil0701.html#7-1-2
(10) 'ABCNews,' 25 October
1999 "Runaway Plane Crashes in S.D.; Golfer, at Least
Four Others Killed," by Geraldine Sealey
Full text posted at:
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/us/DailyNews/
plane102599.html
Backup at:
http://emperors-clothes.com/9-11backups/abclearjet.htm
(11) 'Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff Instruction 3610.01A,' 1 June 2001,
"Aircraft Piracy (Hijacking) and Destruction of Derelict
Airborne Objects," 4.Policy (page 1)
PDF available at:
http://www.dtic.mil/doctrine/jel/cjcsd/cjcsi/3610_01a.pdf
Backup at:
http://emperors-clothes.com/9-11backups/3610_01a.pdf
(12) 'The Associated Press
State & Local Wire' 13 September 2001, Thursday, BC
cycle, "Small private plane ordered to land in vicinity
of Bush ranch"
Full text posted at:
http://emperors-clothes.com/9-11backups/bushranch.htm
(13) 'The Boston Globe,' Saturday
15 September 2001 Third Edition Page A1, "Facing Terror
Attack's Aftermath: Otis Fighter Jets Scrambled Too Late
to Halt The Attacks" by Glen Johnson.
Full text posted at:
http://emperors-clothes.com/9-11backups/bg915.htm
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