Responsibility
There were erroneous reports that the Palestinian group DFLP (Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine) took responsibility for the crashes, but this was denied by a senior officer of the group soon after. There were reports of celebrations on the West Bank, but according articles in the German magazine Stern and the Swedish daily newspaper Dagens Nyheter at least one of them was staged. It is now accepted that there was the use of archive film footage showing Palestinian civilians in a celebratory steet scene, unrelated by both time and circumstance to the Sept 11 attacks. The broadcast of this 'uncredited' archive footage was responsible for this 'misunderstanding' and it is certain that there is no known authentic timelined footage showing any nationality 'celebrating' the attacks. A persistent series of reports does, however, mention US law enforcement arresting several middle eastern men of Jewish extraction, who were seen video-taping the burning towers, and dancing, on a nearby rooftop. This, along with other references to strange behaviours from this demographic group, have been noticeably absent since early in the reportage. Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat denounced the attacks, correctly stating that it was counter-productive to any peace between Israelis and Palestinians. It was, however, quite productive for the government in Tel Aviv: Asked what the WTC attack meant for relations between the United States and Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, the former prime minister, replied, "It's very good." Then he edited himself: "Well, not very good, but it will generate immediate sympathy". And certainly the huge groundswell of public support for America's attitude to "terrorism" made the job of the Tel Aviv government a great deal easier when it came to managing their own public-relations nightmare in Palestine. Although bin Ladin's Al-Qaida organization has never explicitly claimed responsibility, it has praised the attacks and hinted that it was behind them and planning more. The group's spokesman, Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, said in a video sent to al-Jazeera and broadcast in October 2001: "Americans should know, the storm of the planes will not stop. ... There are thousands of the Islamic nation's youths who are eager to die just as the Americans are eager to live." Furthermore, intelligence experts speak of a "short list" of prime suspects -- groups that possess both the means and the motive to carry out the crime. It appears certain that all hijackers have Arabic origins, and none are Afghani; moreover, both in their immense scale, careful planning and refraining from claiming responsibility, the attacks are reminiscent of Al-Qaida's previous attacks. It is curious and instructive to note that a full majority of the hijackers that are claimed to have been on the planes were from Saudi Arabia, yet no serious attention has been focused on this country of origin. It is also instructive to note that shortly after the list of hijackers names was made public, several of these men were self-declared alive and well and still living in their country of origin and peacefully going about their business. One would ask why the names used on the passenger manifests for the hijacked flights did not contain any Arabic names at all, and how any passenger of clear Arabic descent, who was found boarding a plane with a distinctly non-Arabic name on his documents, could not be treated with utmost caution.... LET ALONE four or five of these hybrids PER FLIGHT. Something is definitely wrong with this picture. Virtually all world leaders, including traditional enemies of the United States such as Libyan president Qadhafi, Palestinian leader Arafat, Iranian president Khatami and the Afghanistan Taliban government, denounced the attacks and expressed sympathy for the American people. An exception was Saddam Hussein, the ruler of Iraq who called the attacks the fruits of U.S. crimes against humanity. The White House has subsequently used the events of Sept 11th 2001 to build a case for regime change in Iraq - despite there being absolutely no connections in any manner between the homocidal secular Baathist regime of Sadaam Hussein and the collective known as Al-Qaida. The use of the attacks on the WTC by the Bush White House and the GOP machine to generate support and sympathy for their agenda is now seen as deeply offensive, and has regrettably led the American people to accept a terrifying loss of privacy and freedom, as well as the desecration of the historic foundation principles of the nation. Various Arab- and Muslim-world news sources carried opinion pieces and articles that pointed to some form of Zionist conspiracy to frame the Arab world to the benefit of Israel. It is interesting to note that in a Gallup survey of 10,000 inhabitants of sample countries with a Muslim majority, only 18% believed that Arabs were responsible. Worldwide, a significant minority see the attack as an outcome of past United States involvement in the Middle East and surrounding area, and fear that a violent response will only continue the cycle. The majority worldwide viewpoint is that such acts of terrorism are only to be expected given the economic and cultural imperialism of the United States and the multinational corporations which are identified with it. The creation of pockets of hatred, according to this viewpoint, is an inevitable consequence of the overwhelming outside economic pressure placed on poor countries with minimal control of their political destiny. Notwithstanding this, the majority of people in most nations also believe that terrorism is an absolute evil, that cause does not equal justification.
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