Number Six:
"I'm not offended at the book but rather I'm offended that it went to #1 on the bestseller list.
There's as much conclusive evidence that the 9/11 attacks were carried out by the CIA as there is that they were carried out by the French government, but that doesn't mean a book claiming that the attacks were carried out by the French government should be given any credence, much less go to the top of the bestseller list.
And I think there is a pretty good chance that the US, UK, Afghanistan and lots of other nations knew who carried out the 9/11 soon as they happened."
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Claiming to know isn't the same as having evidence and, for the record, the US Government still does not officially know who carried out the attacks. Most likely (within the official paradigm), they were planned in Malaysia and Hamburg. The important point is that the US and UK killed thousands of people, ostensibly to force the handover of a man against whom they had no evidence. Terrorism, in a word.
An interesting article-
http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/s1125339.htm
quote:
Reuters
Taliban told US it would give up Osama: report
United States and Taliban officials met secretly in Frankfurt almost a year before the September 11 attacks to discuss terms for the Afghans to hand over Osama bin Laden, according to a German television documentary.
No agreement was reached and no further negotiations took place before the suicide hijackings in 2001, which bin Laden subsequently hailed in a videotape as the work of his Al Qaeda network.
ZDF television quoted Kabir Mohabbat, an Afghan-American businessman, as saying he tried to broker a deal between the Americans and the purist Islamic Taliban rulers of Afghanistan, who were sheltering bin Laden.
He quoted Taliban foreign minister Mullah Wakil Ahmed Mutawakil as saying: "You can have him whenever the Americans are ready. Name us a country and we will extradite him".
A German member of the European Parliament, Elmar Brok, confirmed that he had helped Mr Mohabbat in 1999 to establish initial contact with the Americans.
"I was told [by Mohabbat] that the Taliban had certain ideas about handing over bin Laden, not to the United States but to a third country or to the Court of Justice in The Hague," Mr Brok said.
"The message was: 'There is willingness to talk about handing over bin Laden', and the aim of the Taliban was clearly to win the recognition of the American Government and the lifting of the boycott," he said, referring to the international isolation of the Taliban.
Mr Brok said he was not in a position to judge how credible the offer was but he passed it to the US ambassador to Germany, John Kornblum.
He said Mr Mohabbat was then summoned to Washington to be interviewed by US officials.
This led in turn to the German meeting, which ZDF said took place between Taliban ministers and US officials in a Frankfurt hotel in November 2000.
The documentary, broadcast on Thursday evening, said the Afghans put forward "several offers" and there was talk of holding further negotiations at the US embassy in Pakistan on where and when bin Laden would be handed over.
In fact, no more talks took place before September 11.
But negotiations did resume five days after the attacks, in the Pakistani city of Quetta, ZDF said. This meeting has been previously reported in US media.
Mr Mohabbat said the Americans pressed in Quetta for the handover of bin Laden within 24 hours, but the Taliban were unable to meet that demand.
Within weeks, US-led forces intervened in Afghanistan to drive the Taliban from power and kill, capture or disperse Al Qaeda fighters based in Afghan training camps.
Bin Laden still has not been captured.
Mr Brok said he had not personally taken part in either of the reported meetings between the Taliban and the United States but believed there had been a "political decision" not to pursue negotiations after the one in Frankfurt.
He told ZDF: "I have to say that I consider this offer [on bin Laden's handover] very much more seriously with hindsight than I did at the time".
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If the US does know bin Laden was behind them, doesn't there seem to be a rather striking ommission from this (taken from the FBI Ten Most Wanted Site):
'USAMA BIN LADEN IS WANTED IN CONNECTION WITH THE AUGUST 7, 1998, BOMBINGS OF THE UNITED STATES EMBASSIES IN DAR ES SALAAM, TANZANIA, AND NAIROBI, KENYA. THESE ATTACKS KILLED OVER 200 PEOPLE. IN ADDITION, BIN LADEN IS A SUSPECT IN OTHER TERRORIST ATTACKS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD.'
http://www.fbi.gov/mostwant/topten/fugitives/laden.htm
PS: If you do some googling, I think you`ll find that the book you mention ( I assume you mean Thierry Meyssan's book "9/11 The Big Lie"?), only reached number seven in the French bestsellers list. Maybe it wasn`t quite such a "slap in the face" as you and Pentagon spokesman, Glen Flood, say it was.