The Lies They Told
By JACOB HEILBRUNN
Published: November 12, 2009
When Sept. 11, 2001, dawned, the Northeast Air
Defense Sector in Rome, N.Y., went on full alert — to prepare for a
training exercise that envisioned a sneak attack by Russian planes
flying over the North Pole to bomb the United States, a prospect that
Defense Secretary
Robert McNamara had dismissed as outdated in 1966. Later that morning, after
American Airlines Flight 11 and
United Airlines
Flight 175 had hit the World Trade Center and American Airlines Flight
77 the Pentagon, three F-16 fighter jets were scrambled from Langley
Air Force
Base to form a combat air patrol over Washington. But degraded radio
transmission quality meant that the pilots were left clueless about the
nature of their mission. On seeing the Pentagon in flames, the lead
fighter pilot later explained, “I reverted to the Russian threat. . . .
I’m thinking cruise missile threat from the sea. You know, you look
down and see the Pentagon burning, and I thought the bastards snuck one
by us. . . . You couldn’t see any airplanes, and no one told us
anything.”
For all the trillions of
dollars lavished on it, for all the talk about confronting new security
threats, for all the exhortations to reinvent government, America’s
defense establishment, as John Farmer reminds us in “The Ground Truth,”
continued to fight the cold war more than a decade after it had ended.
Preoccupied with building a costly missile defense system to counter a
spurious menace from Russia and with maintaining “full spectrum
dominance” over the rest of the globe, most Bush administration
officials blithely ignored the danger emanating from the caves of
Afghanistan, where
Osama bin Laden
and his acolytes plotted against America. Confronted by a small group
of mostly Saudi nationals armed with box cutters, the central nervous
system of the country’s defense agencies went into a state of
cataleptic shock. The only decisive action taken on 9/11 came not from
the military, but from the courageous passengers who stormed the
cockpit of United Airlines Flight 93, leading the hijackers to crash
the plane over Pennsylvania farmland before it could reach its intended
target in Washington.
As senior counsel to the 9/11 Commission,
Farmer, who was the attorney general of New Jersey and is the dean of
the Rutgers School of Law, investigated the derelict conduct of the
national security apparatus. He was well prepared to do so. In their
valuable account of the commission’s activities, “Without Precedent,”
the commission chairman, Thomas Kean, and the vice chairman, Lee
Hamilton, noted that shortly after the attacks, Farmer — “one of our
most important hires” — established a victims’ assistance center in
New Jersey and helped the
F.B.I. uncover important evidence in garbage at
Newark International Airport.
But the commission’s efforts to reconstruct the tragedy itself were, at
best, resented and, at worst, impeded by the sprawling defense
bureaucracy and the Bush administration, both of which had much to
hide. Even two reports by the inspectors general of the Defense and
Transportation Departments, released in 2006, whitewashed government
failures. Now that numerous transcripts and tapes have been
declassified, however, Farmer draws on them to assail the government’s
official depiction of 9/11 as so much public relations flimflam.
Perhaps
nothing perturbs Farmer more than the contention that high-ranking
officials responded quickly and effectively to the revelation that
Qaeda attacks were taking place. Nothing, Farmer indicates, could be
further from the truth: President
George W. Bush
and other officials were mostly irrelevant during the hijackings;
instead, it was the ground-level commanders who made operational
decisions in an ad hoc fashion. The memoirs of the White House
terrorism expert
Richard Clarke,
which Farmer credits with good faith, make it sound as though a
dramatic videoconference that Clarke led played a crucial role in
organizing a response to the hijackings, but Farmer says that “this
account does not square in any significant respect with what occurred
that morning.”
To bolster such contentions, Farmer focuses
minutely on newly available transcripts from the Federal Aviation
Administration and the North American Aerospace Defense Command
(Norad). He shows that, perversely enough, the one defense agency that
had suffered draconian budget cuts was Norad, which had seen its alert
sites reduced from about two dozen to a pitiful seven and, in any case,
was unable to view large areas of the continental United States owing
to its antiquated radar system.
In addition, local commanders
bypassed established protocols for reporting and requesting assistance
for a hijacking, in part because they had so little time in which to
act. Farmer superbly renders the knuckle-biting tension and confusion
engendered by the hijackings, and says the leadership of the
F.A.A.
and the Defense Department “would remain largely irrelevant to the
critical decision making and unaware of the evolving situation ‘on the
ground’ until the attacks were completed” — thereby making it close to
impossible for the military to intercept any aircraft.
Yet both Deputy Defense Secretary
Paul Wolfowitz and Vice President
Dick Cheney,
Farmer says, provided palpably false versions that touted the
military’s readiness to shoot down United 93 before it could hit
Washington. Planes were never in place to intercept it. By the time the
Northeast Air Defense Sector had been informed of the hijacking, United
93 had already crashed. Farmer scrutinizes F.A.A. and Norad records to
provide irrefragable evidence that a day after a Sept. 17 White House
briefing, both agencies suddenly altered their chronologies to produce
a coherent timeline and story that “fit together nicely with the
account provided publicly by Deputy Defense Secretary Wolfowitz and
Vice President Cheney.”
Farmer further observes that the Bush
administration wrongly asserted that the chain of command functioned on
9/11; that President Bush issued an authorization to shoot down
hijacked commercial flights; and that top officials at F.A.A.
headquarters coordinated their actions with the military. Farmer’s
verdict: “History should record that whether through unprecedented
administrative incompetence or orchestrated mendacity, the American
people were misled about the nation’s response to the 9/11 attacks.”
Farmer
explains that his hope is to lay some conspiracy theories to rest “by
identifying and establishing the deception that actually did occur.”
Surprisingly, however, he contends that the administration’s account of
9/11 “didn’t provide a pretext for aggression, as did the government’s
manipulation of intelligence regarding the existence of weapons of mass
destruction in Iraq.” But this isn’t quite right. There is, in fact, an
intimate connection between the two.
It doesn’t require scouring
the archives to notice that 9/11 was relentlessly exploited by the Bush
administration to serve as the founding myth for the war on terror,
which was seamlessly expanded from Afghanistan to Iraq. In retrospect,
the administration’s public portrayal of itself and the armed forces as
acting heroically on 9/11 can be seen as an integral part of the
selling of the Iraq war.
Farmer also suggests that the cold war
did not come to an end until the 9/11 attacks took place. But this,
too, is questionable. In trumpeting an ill-defined war against
terrorism, Bush simply transposed the bombast of the cold war to the
present to suggest that he was a new Churchill staring down evil and
that America needed to combat a new totalitarian threat emerging from
the Islamic world. Still, Farmer’s accomplishment is to throw 9/11 into
fresh relief. A precise and reliable accounting of what happened has
been absent until now. This is it.

Jacob Heilbrunn is a regular contributor to the Book Review and a senior editor at The National Interest...