Air Force Vet Breaks Silence on What Hit Pentagon on 9-11
• James P. Tucker, Jr.A veteran Air Force mechanic called to help clean up the Sept. 11, 2001
explosion at the Pentagon says the U.S. government’s blaming a plane
for the damage makes no sense. The evidence was staged, he said.
He
agreed to a face-to-face interview with AFP on condition he not be
identified for obvious reasons: the Air Force would punish him severely
(the same military harshness that gagged survivors of the 1967 USS
Liberty attack for many years).
The airman, a tech sergeant, is
richly experienced in hazardous waste cleanup, having been deployed
twice to Afghanistan in the first Persian Gulf war under President Bush
the Elder and, later, under George the Younger. He has 17 years of Air
Force service.
The scene at the Pentagon “doesn’t look right,”
the airman said. “There was only a piece of engine and sections of
landing gear on the ground. It was like they were placed there. Where
were the wings? Tail section? We expected to find a lot of deb