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Last fall, Brigham Young University physics professor Steven E. Jones
made headlines when he charged that the World Trade Center collapsed because
of "pre-positioned explosives." Now, along with a group that calls
itself "Scholars for 9/11 Truth," he's upping the ante.
"We believe that senior government officials have covered up crucial
facts about what really happened on 9/11," the group says in a statement
released Friday announcing its formation. "We believe these events may
have been orchestrated by the administration in order to manipulate the American
people into supporting policies at home and abroad."
Headed by Jones and Jim Fetzer, University of Minnesota Duluth distinguished McKnight
professor of philosophy, the group is made up of 50 academicians and others.
They include Robert M. Bowman, former director of the U.S. "Star Wars"
space defense program, and Morgan Reynolds, former chief economist for the Department
of Labor in President George W. Bush's first term. Most of the members are less
well-known.
The group's Web site (www.ST911.org) includes
an updated version of Jones's paper about the collapse of the Twin Towers and
a paper by Fetzer that looks at conspiracy theories. The government's version
of the events of 9/11 — that the plane's hijackers were tied to Osama
bin Laden — is its own conspiracy theory, says Fetzer, who has studied
the John F. Kennedy assassination since 1992.
"Did the Bush administration know in advance about the impending attacks
that occurred on 9/11, and allow these to happen, to provoke pre-planned wars
against Afghanistan and Iraq? These questions demand immediate answers,"
charges a paper written collectively by Scholars for 9/11 Truth. The group plans
to write more papers, and present lectures and conferences.
"We have very limited resources and no subpoena powers," Fetzer said.
"What you have is a bunch of serious scholars taking a look at this and discovering
it didn't add up. We don't have a political ax to grind."
Fetzer has doctorates in the history and philosophy of science. "One of the
roles I can play here," he said, "is to explain why a certain line of
argument is correct or not."
In his original message to potential members last month, Fetzer warned that joining
the group might make them the subject of government surveillance and might get
them on various lists of "potential terrorists."
The group's charges include:
• Members of the Bush administration knew in advance that the 9/11
attacks would happen but did nothing to stop them.
• No Air Force or Air National Guard jets were sent to "scramble"
the hijacked planes, which were clearly deviating from their flight plans,
although jet fighters had been deployed for scramblings 67 times in the year
prior to 9/11. The procedure for issuing orders for scrambling was changed
in June 2001, requiring that approval could only come from the Secretary of
Defense, but Donald Rumsfeld was not alerted soon enough on 9/11, according
to Scholars group.
• The video of Osama bin Laden found by American troops in Afghanistan
in December 2001, in which bin Laden says he orchestrated the attacks, is
not bin Laden. The Scholars for 9/11 Truth compared the video with a photo
of the "real" bin Laden and argue that there are discrepancies in
the ratio of nose-length to nose-width, as well as distance from tip-of-nose
to ear lobe.
The Scholars group hopes that media outlets around the world will ask experts
in their areas to examine the group's findings and assertions. If this were
done, they argue, "one of the great hoaxes of history would stand naked
before the eyes of the world."
The group also asks for an investigation of the collapse of the World Trade
Center buildings, following up on points made in Jones's paper, "Why
Indeed Did the WTC Buildings Collapse?" That paper, recently updated,
has been posted on Jones's BYU Web site since last November.
Jones argues that the WTC buildings did not collapse due to impact or fires
caused by the jets hitting the towers but collapsed as a result of pre-positioned
"cutter charges." Proof, he says, includes:
• Molten metal was found in the subbasements of WTC sites weeks after
9/11; the melting point of structural steel is 2,750 degrees Fahrenheit and
the temperature of jet fuel does not exceed 1,800 degrees. Molten metal was
also found in the building known as WTC7, although no plane had struck it.
Jones's paper also includes a photo of a slag of the metal being extracted
from ground zero. The slag, Jones argues, could not be aluminum from the planes
because in photographs the metal was salmon-to-yellow-hot temperature (approximately
1,550 to 1,900 degrees F) "well above the melting temperatures of lead
and aluminum," which would be a liquid at that temperature.
• Building WTC7 collapsed in 6.6 seconds, which means, Jones says,
that the steel and concrete support had to be simply knocked out of the way.
"Explosive demolitions are like that," he said. "It doesn't
fit the model of the fire-induced pancake collapse."
• No steel-frame, high-rise buildings have ever before or since been
brought down due to fires. Temperatures due to fire don't get hot enough for
buildings to collapse, he says.
• Jones points to a recent article in the journal New Civil Engineering
that says WTC disaster investigators at NIST (the National Institutes of Standards
and Technology) "are refusing to show computer visualizations of the
collapse of the Twin Towers despite calls from leading structural and fire
engineers."
Neither Jones nor other members of the Scholars group suggests who would have
planted the explosives, but they argue that the devices could have been operated
by remote control.
Jones says he has received thousands of e-mails from people around the world
who either support his ideas or think he's "nutty," and he still gets
about 30 e-mails a day on the topic.
He continues to do research on cold fusion, which he prefers to call metal-catalyzed
fusion "to distinguish it from the claims" of former University of
Utah chemistry professors B. Stanley Pons and Martin Fleishmann, "which
we do not accept as verified." He reports that his metal-catalyzed fusion
work is going well, with three scientific papers published last year.
Jones will present a talk entitled "9/11 Revisited: Scientific and Ethical
Questions" at Utah Valley State College at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 1.