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The Strip Club 'Extremists'
According to well-informed police sources in New Jersey, on the evening of
September 10, 2001, the four men who would, the following morning, hijack United
Flight 93 en route from Newark Liberty International Airport to San Francisco,
were living it up in a Wayne, New Jersey strip club called "Lace."
The four
hijackers, Ziad Jarrah (Lebanese), the pilot, and three Saudis: Ahmed
al-Haznawi, Ahmed al-Nami, and Saeed al-Ghamdi were later pegged by U.S.
authorities as extreme Wahhabi Muslim followers of Osama bin Laden. However, the
security videotape from "Lace" showed the four to be far from pious followers of
Wahhabism. In what seemingly appears to be an attempt by the Bush administration
to keep the myth alive that the hijackers were fanatic Muslims, the FBI
confiscated the security tape from "Lace" and it was never identified or
discussed in the official 911 Commission report.'
That security video tape joins
a number of others -- including those from the area around the Pentagon showing
the impact of American Airlines 77 into the building and a Jersey City video
rental store across Kennedy Boulevard from the El Salaam Mosque -- that have
been confiscated by the FBI.
The El Salaam Mosque is where both the 1993 and
2001 World Trade Center attackers were active prior to each attack. The Kennedy
Boulevard video store video tapes showing Saudi hijackers and Israeli Urban
Moving Systems Israeli agents patronizing the store were seized as evidence by
the FBI and the store's computer hard drive, with the names, addresses, and
phone numbers of video rental customers, was stolen in a "black bag" operation
believed to have been carried out by the FBI.
A warehouse located at 3 West 18th Street in Weehawken, New Jersey, where a
group of Israeli intelligence agents operating under cover as movers and staged
a series of false flag operations on the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, attracted
the constant attention today of a roving Weehawken police cruiser. The
warehouse, which was leased to Urban Moving Systems, an Israeli-owned firm, was
discovered to have contained pipes, wires, detonators, blasting caps,
fertilizer-fuel compounds, and traces of anthrax by the FBI after an Urban
Moving Systems van with five Israelis, spotted earlier photographing the World
Trade Center before the first plane struck the North Tower, was stopped by East
Rutherford, New Jersey police. Dressed as Arabs and seen by witnesses
celebrating the attacks, the five Israelis earned the nickname, "the dancing
Israelis."
The East Rutherford police stopped the Israeli van based on an FBI national
"Be On Lookout" (BOLO) notice issued earlier on the morning of 911. When asked
if he recalled the incident, the Weehawken police officer told WMR that the
local police had no role in the investigation of the warehouse after the FBI
stepped in to assert Federal jurisdiction in the case. The FBI permitted the
owner of Urban Moving Systems, Dominick Suter, known to be a Mossad agent, to
flee the country after his five employees were arrested for suspicion of
involvement with the 911 attack.
Suter's name also showed up on a U.S.
government watch list of 911 suspects that also contained the names of the
hijackers and several of their interlocutors. After being held in the
Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn for 71 days, the Israelis were
permitted to fly home to Israel, a decision prompted -- over the objection of
the CIA -- by pressure being applied on the Bush administration by
then-Jerusalem Mayor Ehud Olmert and New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani. WMR has
reported that Suter later re-entered the United States and was working for a
Florida-based aircraft parts supply company.
Source: http://www.waynemadsenreport.com/
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