Osama tape appears to be fake, experts conclude
Added: (Sun May 28 2006)
The latest audio tape attributed to Osama bin Laden appears to be one more installment in a succession of evidence fabricated by the US government to deceive the American people, according to Scholars for 9/11 Truth. "This tape is only the latest in a series of fabrications intended to mislead the American people," said James H. Fetzer, the society's founder. "The closer we get to revealing he truth about 9/11, the more furiously the government
fights to conceal it!" He said members of Scholars and other experts had detected evidence of fakery.
In this new recording, a voice attributed to Osama bin Laden asserts
that Zacarias Moussaoui was not involved in 9/11, which he knew to be
the case because he had personally assigned the 19 hijackers involved
in those events. The Osama of this tape thereby implicitly confesses
his responsibility for orchestrating the attacks. However, in a tape released on December 27, 2001, the authenticity of which is not in doubt, Osama denied having had anything to do with 9/11. "Moreover," Fetzer added, "some of the 19 hijackers he 'personally assigned' have turned up alive and well."
To be sure, this new tape is not the first one in which bin Laden
appears to take responsibility for the attacks. As David Ray Griffin,
a prominent member of Scholars, points out, "The Osama on the video
tape that appeared on December 13, 2001, confessed to planning the 9/11
attacks. But he is far darker and much heavier than the real Osama bin
Laden. People can see the difference by looking up 'The Fake bin Laden
Video Tape' on google."
Griffin's point is supported by a work-in-progress by members of
Scholars for 9/11 Truth, which appears on its web site under the
heading, "9/11: Have we been lied to?" It offers evidence of fakery
in some of the videos based upon various physical properties of the
figures that are presumed to be Osama, pointing out that there are
differences in the ears, cheeks, eyebrows, length of the nose and shape
of the nostrils. "The use of computer analysis can 'fine tune' these
questions of facial characteristics," Fetzer said, "but the gross
differences already show they are not the same."
Content Inconsistencies
"Another problem with the video of December 13, 2001," Griffin pointed
out, "was that its stocky bin Laden praised two of the alleged
hijackers, Wail M. Al-Shehri and Salem al-Hazmi, by name, and yet both
the London Telegraph and the Saudi embassy reported several days after
9/11 that al-Hazmi was still alive and working in Saudi Arabia. Given
the fact that the earlier video in which Osama confessed was clearly a
fake, we should be suspicious of this latest apparent confession."
A professor at Duke, Bruce Lawrence, who has published Messages to the
World: The Statements of Osama bin Laden, expressed profound
skepticism about a tape that was released January 17, 2006, in a report
that appeared two days later. "There's nothing in this from the
Koran," Lawrence said. "He's, by his own standards, a faithful Muslim
who quotes scripture in defense of his actions. There's no quotation
from the Koran in the excerpts we got, no reference to specific events,
no reference to past atrocities." Lawrence also observed the tape ran
only 10 minutes, whereas the shortest previous tape, at 18 minutes, was
nearly twice as long.
Fetzer noted that many of the same anomalous properties are found in
the latest tape. "Compared to Osama's past performances," he observed,
"this message is too short, too direct, and full of falsehoods. It was
even described on CBS News by Bob Schieffer as 'almost American'." A
translation of the text of the tape has also been released by
IntelCenter, a private company that does contract work for the US
government. "I suppose I would be accused of being a 'conspiracy
theorist' to suggest there is any connection," Fetzer added.
Authentic Voice/Fake Content
Informed that Reuters news agency has reported confirmation that the
voice on the tape is indeed that of Osama bin Laden, Fetzer replied,
"The fact that the voice is his does not prove that the tape is
authentic. We have had phony tapes before using voices that were
authentic. Mark Bingham, a passenger on Flight 93, is supposed to have
called his mother and said, 'Hi, Mom, this is Mark Bingham!' His
mother confirmed it was his voice, but does anyone seriously believe
that Mark Bingham would have used his last name in identifying himself
to his mother?"
Griffin agreed, adding, "Back in 1999, William Arkin published an
article entitled, 'When Seeing and Hearing isn't Believing' (which can
also be accessed on google). Describing the new technology of 'voice
morphing' (or 'voice synthesizing'), Arkin explained that, if audio
technicians have a recording of your voice, then they can create a tape
in which your voice�your authentic voice!�says anything they wish."
In a press release on April 22, 2006, the Scholars observed that a tape
played at the trail of Zacarias Moussaoui included discussion among the
passengers about using a drink cart to break down the cabin door
alleged to have been picked up on a cockpit voice recorder, which does
not record conversations in the passenger cabin. "This is not the
first and certainly will not be the last time that the American
government plays the American people for suckers," Fetzer said.
"We have just acquired new evidence that the Pentagon video tapes were
processed and manipulated in an apparent effort to distort or conceal
what happened there on 9/11," Fetzer observed. "Apparently, whenever
the government feels the need to bolster the official myth about 9/11,
it simply fabricates a new tape! Anybody who wants to keep score
should visit our web site."
Scholars for 9/11 Truth is a non-partisan society of experts and
scholars dedicated to exposing falsehoods and establishing truths about
the events of 9/11. It maintains a web site at st911.org, where it
archives its studies, documents, records and evidence.
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