9/11Encyclopedia   DeGrandPre,ColonelDonn
HelpContents Search View

From 911Encyclopedia:

A retired Army colonel and author of "A Window on America, Confessions of an Arms Peddler and his latest, Barbarians Inside the Gates". From his report "The enemy is inside the gates", which circulated on the internet since October 2001: "A group of military and civilian US pilots, under the chairmanship of Colonel Donn de Grand, after deliberating non-stop for 72 hours, has concluded that the flight crews of the four passenger airliners, involved in the September 11th tragedy, had no control over their aircraft. Captain Kent Hill (retd.) of the US Air Force, and friend of Chic Burlingame, the pilot of the plane that crashed into the Pentagon, stated that the US had on several occasions flown an unmanned aircraft, similar in size to a Boeing 737, across the Pacific from Edwards Air Force base in California to South Australia. According to Hill it had flown on a pre programmed flight path under the control of a pilot in an outside station. During the press conference Captain Hill maintained that the four airliners must have been choreographed by an Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS). "If there was an AWACS on station over the targeted area, did it have a Global Hawk capability? I mean, could it convert the commercial jets to robotic flying missiles? " Colonel Donn de Grand said that if President Bush is lying it would not be the first time that the American people had been mislead by its government. He cited the recently published official government archives describing President Roosevelt's duplicity in deceiving Americans about the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour, which triggered the US entry into WWll." http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/enemy.html Mirrors: http://www.cyberspaceorbit.com/engt.htm (11/4/01 ) http://www.unsaccodicanapa.com/htmlpages/enemywithin.html http://www.ratical.org/ratville/CAH/911inquiry.txt (01/08/02) http://www.meguiar.addr.com/enemy_is_inside_the_gates.htm


http://www.911review.org:  Home Page, Search.
FindPage Or try one of these actions: LocalSiteMap, of this page (last modified 2003-11-11 05:00:57)