Okay, if you insist:
Commentary on slide 17 is unambiguously incorrect on you own evidence presented:
Slide 10 shows the line of view from the cab to the edge of the Pentagon. As a straight line it subtends an angle of around 60 degrees from the x-axis formed by the road going under the bridge.
So far so good?
Now look at slide 15. This is a tight telephoto shot taken some distance back from the cab, looking towards the burning Pentagon. You can tell this is the case because of the foreground-background compression (a characteristic of longer telephoto lenses, combined with both the foreground and background being in focus. Without knowing the actual camera used I can't be more specific, but you have a fairly narrow angle of view.
Furthermore, you can calculate roughly where the photographer was standing by doing a conical projection back from how much of the Pentagon face you can see to the 12 foot width of view at the cab, back to the photographer's feet. This places the photographer adjacent the point marked TA2, on the grass.
If pole A were in the shot it would have been a fake. You cannot take a telephoto shot as shown and have both the cab and the Pentagon in shot with the light poles shown, yet still include pole A - it's several degrees to the right of the field of view of the photo.