Former Joint Chiefs chairman, Richard Myers, remembers 9/11

Is this a new claim about how the hijackers were identified? Richard Clarke said the FBI identified them by the airline passenger lists.

http://www.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123115461

Former Joint Chiefs chairman remembers 9/11

by 1st Lt. Brad Kimberly
Air University Public Affairs

9/16/2008 - MAXWELL AIR FORCE BASE, Ala. (AFPN) -- Sept. 11 was a day of remembrance across the country as Americans reflected on the events that occurred that day in 2001.

Gen. Richard B. Myers, the now-retired chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, traveled to Maxwell to speak at the Air Force Wargaming Institute. While here he shared his unique perspective of what happened that day and offered his outlook on the continuing war on terrorism.

At the time, General Myers was serving as the vice-chairman of the Joint Chiefs, but recently had been nominated by President George W. Bush for chairman. That nomination kept the general away from the Pentagon as the attacks began.

"I think a lot of people remember exactly where they were on 9/11," General Myers said. "I was on Capitol Hill about ready to meet with Sen. Max Cleland, the former senator from Georgia, in preparation for my confirmation hearing."

Working out issues with senators before the confirmation hearings is standard practice, he said. His meeting was set for 9 a.m.

"By the time I got to the office, the first tower had been hit," he said. "I went into the meeting with [Senator Cleland]. The second tower was hit. We knew we had something going besides an airplane running into a building."

General Myers knew immediately after the second crash that the United States was under attack. On the way out of the Capitol, he spoke to the commander of Northern Aerospace Defense Command, who had ordered the grounding of all flights.

"I started to race back to the Pentagon," General Myers said.

While on his way to the Pentagon, he receives word that it also had been hit.

Very quickly, the government discovered who had carried out the attacks.

CIA officials had identified several people on airport surveillance video boarding the aircraft, he said. They had known associations with al-Qaida.

The following day, President Bush toured the Pentagon site and retreated inside to confer with senior leaders. It was the first meeting with all the Joint Chiefs.

"The president was very serious and very somber," General Myers said. "I think he felt like, 'okay, I let the country down. One of my primary jobs is to protect the American citizens. I have failed.' He took that very personally."

President Bush told them what he was thinking, he said. However, there was very little discussion in the meeting.

"This was way before we had any idea what we were going to do about it," the general said. "I think the thing that came out of that [meeting] was that we were under a serious threat, that it had reached beyond the oceans that we thought protected us, and that we were going to have to take some action. Some military action would probably be part of that, and we had better start thinking."

Since then, U.S. forces have seen combat in both Afghanistan and Iraq. As for finding Osama Bin Laden, General Myers offered a view of how the al-Qaida leader could be caught.

"It's not going to be force that finds Osama Bin Laden," he said. "It's going to be intelligence."

According to the general, the integration of technical intelligence, human intelligence and other resources to find al-Qaida has dealt devastating blows to the terrorist organization.

He said one of the top security challenges for the next White House administration is preventing chaos in Iraq and Afghanistan.

"The countries cannot be allowed to descend into chaos," General Myers said. "If there's chaos in both those countries, then the probability of another 9/11 goes up, not just for us, but for our friends and allies."

Adm. Michael G. Mullen, the current chairman of the Joint Chiefs, testified before the House Armed Services Committee on Sept. 10 and described the keys to victory.

"We can't kill our way to victory, and no armed force anywhere, no matter how good, can deliver these keys alone," Admiral Mullen said. "It requires teamwork and cooperation."

General Myers agreed with the admiral's assessment.

"I think he hit it right on the head," General Myers said. "I don't think you're ever going to have a peaceful Iraq without somehow controlling Iran's appetite for influence. The same thing for Afghanistan. You're not going to have a peaceful Afghanistan without some control over the ability of the Taliban and al-Qaida to use Pakistan as a safe haven and for other support. So, we have to do what we've always done ... work with the Pakistani government to try to get their support for this."

General Myers served as chairman of the Joint Chiefs from Oct. 1, 2001, until his retirement on Oct. 1, 2005. Since then, he regularly has been asked to speak on leadership and the war on terrorism.

Crikey

Two obvious points there. Richard Myers and his changing alibi. Now he tends to stick the story he told here, but just after 9/11 he had a somewhat different version of the events:

" I remember it was like watching a bad movie. I was on Capitol Hill. I was about ready to meet with Senator Cleland. I was meeting with him in preparation for my hearing, my confirmation hearing to be the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. And I remember before we walked in there was a TV that was playing and somebody has said, "An airplane has hit one of the World Trade Center towers." They thought it was an airplane, and they thought it was a small airplane or something like that. So we walked in and we did the office call with Senator Cleland. Sometime during that office call the second tower was hit. Nobody informed us of that. But when we came out, that was obvious. Then right at that time somebody said the Pentagon has been hit. I immediately, somebody handed me a cell phone, and it was General Eberhart out at NORAD in Colorado Springs talking about what was happening and the actions he was going to take. We immediately, after talking to him, jumped in the car, ran back to the Pentagon."
http://web.archive.org/web/20011118060728/http://www.dtic.mil/jcs/chairm...

Summary here:
http://www.historycommons.org/context.jsp?item=a903myerslearns&scale=0#a...

The CIA video thing is bizarre. Allegedly there were video cameras at only two of the airports the hijackers used that day (Portland and Dulles), and it was the FBI who went to Dulles to get the tape (and amazingly found the hijackers on tape immediately. See here:
http://www.historycommons.org/context.jsp?item=aafter1000fbitapedulles&s...

Two of the hijackers identified on the Dulles video (Almihdhar and Nawaf Alhazmi) were well known to the CIA, who had been busting a gut to stop the FBI arresting them in the run-up to the attacks.

Never bought that "nobody informed us of that" bs from Myers

"General Myers knew immediately after the second crash that the United States was under attack. On the way out of the Capitol, he spoke to the commander of Northern Aerospace Defense Command, who had ordered the grounding of all flights.

"I started to race back to the Pentagon," General Myers said.

While on his way to the Pentagon, he receives word that it also had been hit. "

OR

"Sometime during that office call the second tower was hit. Nobody informed us of that. But when we came out, that was obvious. Then right at that time somebody said the Pentagon has been hit. I immediately, somebody handed me a cell phone, and it was General Eberhart out at NORAD in Colorado Springs talking about what was happening and the actions he was going to take. We immediately, after talking to him, jumped in the car, ran back to the Pentagon."

Which is it, General?

“On the altar of God, I swear eternal hostility against all forms of tyranny over the mind of man."--Thomas Jefferson