Showing posts with label 9/11. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 9/11. Show all posts

Thursday, September 13, 2012

A Short Comment on the Embassy Attacks

Weakness is never a virtue and never, ever respected in the long run. What we are seeing in Libya, Egypt, Tunisia, and Yemen is the end result of trying to appease evil. Nothing good can come of that, so I expect a lot more to happen now that the United State is perceived as weak.

I have always advocated spreading democracy and republicanism to all states on all continents. Once I believed that it would encourage peace, but then I grew up and ceased being a teenager. Now it is because I believe that everyone must have their chance and be judged upon their resulting behavior.

Does that sound ominous? It should.

The Obama state department has been an abject failure since the beginning, insulting allies and cozying up to people who genuinely hate the West. Fear of offending our enemies and a perverse desire to offend friends has been a hallmark of this administration. So it was only a matter of time before the chickens came home to roost.

Al Qaeda and their associates coordinated the initial attacks on 9/11/2012 with the hope they would spread. Killing Osama bin Laden turned out to be as meaningless as I expected. This is a much bigger movement than one man.

Watching the media rally around the President and try to make Romney a bad guy for making a rational, not to mention needed, statement about the groveling message from the Egyptian embassy staff has been a depressing sight.

Once again, I repeat that weakness is not a virtue.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

11 from 9/11

Watching the 9/11 ceremony streaming from the memorial site and listening to the names of the murdered read off has made the memories come back with a vengeance. One thing that strikes me is the names come from every ethnic background. When Bin Laden and company launched the attack, they did not attack just one hyphenated American, but the entire country.

I wish people would remember that this year when identity politics have gotten the worst I have seen in my forty plus years of living.

It is painful to listen to the families of the fallen speak and they are only up to ‘P’. It is one thing to remember watching what happened over a decade ago, but to see and hear just a fraction of the people whose lives were permanently changed reminds us of the very human dimension involved. So many kids left behind missing their parents and growing up without their presence are reading names.

Never forget.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

The Path to 9/11 Part 2 (2006)

With the first three hours covering events from the first World Trade Center bombing in 1993 to the Millennium bomb plot, the final two hours cover things from the attack on the U.S.S. Cole to the collapse of the Twin Towers. Prepare to get upset watching the mix of re-enactments and real footage in this riveting second part.

The review of Part 1 can be found here.

Path to 911 Part 1 Commercial CutawayPath to 911 Part 2 Desires Death More

Part 2 picks up where the previous night left off, with the hijackings beginning. Flight attendant Betty Ong (Jean Yoon) makes a desperate cellphone call to American Airlines booking desk to report the hijacking of flight American 11. Confused controllers try to raise the plane but are surprised to hear Mohammed Atta addressing the passengers. The terrorist flipped the wrong switch in the cockpit.

Path to 911 Part 2 F-16 Intercept

This is enough to justify notifying the Air Force who ask if it is a drill. It isn’t and they scramble fighters. An aviation buff’s note here: that is a Navy F-14 Tomcat shown taking off. I know the media doesn’t like the military, but they really need to do their research. A correct F-16 is later shown as the screen capture above testifies. Ten years later we find out that the Air National Guard pilots scrambled unarmed and were to ram the airliners. The pilots were willing to die to protect innocents on the ground.

Path to 911 Part 2 Hijacker at the ControlsPath to 911 Part 2 Too Low

The hijackers are cut from a different cloth and want to die to kill innocents. With the terrorists at the controls, other cellphone calls come in and one is chilling saying she can see the New York City skyline and they are too low.

Path to 911 Part 2 John O'NeilPath to 911 Part 2 USS Cole

Back nearly a year to October, 2000. Having narrowly dodged one bullet after another thanks to luck and the stupidity of the terrorist foes, the  United States government officials start to get lax again. John O’Neill (Harvey Keitel) gets an early morning phone call that the U.S.S. Cole destroyer has been attacked in Yemen. American lives have been lost and it bears all the hallmarks of an Al Qaeda attack.

Path to 911 Part 2 Barbara BodinePath to 911 Part 2 General Hugh Shelton

This leads to two scenes guaranteed to raise any red blooded American’s blood pressure. The first involves the autocratic and hostile ambassador to Yemen, Barbara Bodine (Patricia Heaton). Running afoul of her is the beginning of the end of O’Neill’s FBI career. It is a great short performance – you will hate her.

Path to 911 Part 2 Predator DronePath to 911 Part 2 Al Qaeda Compound

The second is another meeting of the putative minds handling the defense of the United States against terrorist attacks. Richard Clarke (Stephen Root) finally mans up and wants to hit Afghanistan again. See, he has a new tool in his bag of tricks called the Predator drone. With it, Osama Bin Ladin can be hunted for and targets can be pinpointed.

But there is zero support for it other than General Hugh Shelton suggesting “boots on the ground.” Say, 50,000 or so. With three months left in the Clinton administration and it being an election year, this is viewed with disdain.

Meanwhile, the usefulness of the Predator is limited by it being unarmed, as it is tragically depicted. A lost opportunity that might have changed history goes down in flames.

Path to 911 Part 2 Kirk and MassoudPath to 911 Part 2 Abandoning a Trainer

Things aren’t going great elsewhere as Massoud (Mido Hamada) wants real weapons for the Northern Alliance in Afghanistan, but can’t get help from the CIA thanks to an uninterested administration. At the same time, a fresh bunch of recruits arrive at an Al Qaeda training camp for a very special mission.

Before long they are in the States at flight schools learning to fly. Not taking off or landing, which raises flags with local authorities in Arizona and Minnesota. Most of which are ignored or shelved for being “racial profiling.”

Path to 911 Part 2 Briefcase

A lost briefcase becomes the undoing of our main protagonist, O’Neill. Simple mistakes can be blown into scandals if the right people are there to run a person out of a job. Once again, politics trumps protecting the country.

Path to 911 Part 2 Mohammed Al-KahtaniPath to 911 Part 2 Jose Perez

But sometimes a local official has enough power and guts to do what needs to be done. INS Officer Jose Perez (Geoffrey Rivas) shows he has both and refuses entry to one would be hijacker, Mohammed Al-Khatani (Elie Gamael) from Saudi Arabia. Bucking political correctness, this immigrant sticks to his guns in a wonderful scene.

Al-Khatani is currently in GITMO and is a poster child to the left for alleged war crimes against prisoners. I have no sympathy whatsoever.

Path to 911 Part 2 Mohammed AttaPath to 911 Part 2 Zacarias Moussaoui

With the fanatic Mohammed Atta (Martin Brody) safely ensconced as leader, he shows how angry and impatient he is by demanding additional personnel for the terrorist attack. Told to be patient, he is to use Zacarias Moussaoui (Zee Sulleyman), a French citizen from Morocco to make up for the short fall. That doesn’t work out well when the idiot gets himself arrested in Minneapolis. Even the terrorists viewed him as a dim bulb.

Still, Washington won’t take it seriously and the local agents are ignored. If this sounds like a stuck record, it is because there was a serious pattern of negligence by the authorities. That is one reason watching this is infuriating. It all could have been prevented…

Path to 911 Part 2 George Tenet WorriesPath to 911 Part 2 Massoud Assasination

A warning from Massoud to the CIA that an operation on U.S. soil involving aviation and hijackers is imminent goes ignored due to lack of proof. With the Clinton and Bush administrations giving tens of millions of dollars to the Taliban as humanitarian aid, the Northern Alliance commander is very miffed. He also warns his death will be “a signal.”

Intelligence chatter goes through the roof, alarming CIA Director George Tenet (Dan Lauria) but he can’t find the details. But at least he gets Condi Rice (Penny Johnson) to finally read a report that gets her moving. The new administration had not been receptive to the worries of Clarke earlier.

Though Rice is now onboard and has brought President Bush on too, Tenet doesn’t want to arm the Predator drones. He insists it is illegal to use them against Bin Ladin despite what the State Department lawyers have concluded. Fears of legal issues still dominate and paralyze the government. It is September 4, 2001.

Five days later, Massoud is assassinated in Afghanistan. The Lion is dead and the signal has been given. Despite cramming many people and events into the miniseries, there are scenes of great emotional depth in it and this is one of them. Having built up a sympathetic portrayal of the man, his death is shown to be devastating to his followers. Their grief is believable and there is a feeling of great loss.

Path to 911 Part 2 Hijacking

It is a prelude of what is to come.

 Path to 911 Part 2 WTC Tower 1 BurningPath to 911 Part 2 WTC Tower 2 FlamesPath to 911 Part 2 WTC Tower 1Path to 911 Part 2 United 175 on the SkylinePath to 911 Part 2 United 175 about to Hit WTC Tower 2Path to 911 Part 2 WTC Tower 2 StruckPath to 911 Part 2 Burning TowersPath to 911 Part 2 WTC Tower 2 CollapsesPath to 911 Part 2 Tower 2 GonePath to 911 Part 2 Debris CloudPath to 911 Part 2 United 93 CrashesPath to 911 Part 2 Commission Warning

It is a powerful ending to a powerful miniseries. Words fail me at the moment, for it has evoked feelings and memories from ten years ago.

The heroic deaths of John O’Neil, Reverend Mychal Judge, and John Burnett with his fellow men on Flight 93 are all touched upon briefly without actually showing them. To do more would have been too much, for this was aired a mere five years after.

Our government failed us miserably and 9/11 was the result. Though many precautions have been taken since then, on December 5, 2005 the 9/11 Commission Report graded the governments progress on its 41 recommendations. As the ending sequence shows, there were five “F’s”, twelve “D’s”, and one “A”.

I wonder how many of them are due to political correctness? That point is hammered home throughout The Path to 9/11. Things have only gotten worse that way since then.

I should address the film making from a more technical point of view before ending this review. $40 million was spent making it and it shows in every scene. The directing is very good and succeeds at eliciting emotions in most scenes. Cinematography is very good, though I am not a fan of the shaky cam style. It did add some feeling of “you are there”, I suppose. Filming on location with Morocco doubling for Afghanistan, Spain, and Pakistan added authenticity to the foreign scenes.

As far as acting goes, only one performance bothered me and that was the nonperformance of Dick Cheney. Not only did the actor not look like him, he could have been replaced by a cardboard photo of the real man. Since he barely appears in this, not a big deal in the slightest.

The use of Arabic with subtitles was very much a plus and I was impressed by the casting.

As you can tell from the screen captures, the copy I obtained isn’t the best quality.

I highly recommend The Path to 9/11 for teenagers on up – it is a pity it isn’t easily available.

Friday, September 09, 2011

The Path to 9/11 Part 1 (2006)

In 2006 on the 5th anniversary of the infamous terrorist attacks, ABC Television broadcast a dramatization of the events that lead up to them. Since then pressure from the Clinton’s has kept the miniseries from being aired or released on DVD. Top notch acting, direction, and writing make this a must see for every adult American – too bad they can’t.

Path to 911 Part 1 Main Title

ABC’s $40,000,000 risk was controversial at the time, with the Clinton’s doing their best to try to keep it off the air. Originally meant to run with limited commercial interruptions, no advertiser would buy time and so it ran without commercials. This meant no money was made from it which was an effective way to punish ABC for making it. But was the money spent worth it?

Path to 911 Part 1 DisclaimerPath to 911 Part 1 Intro

The first thing on screen hangs there for a very long time. It is clear that fears of lawsuits had ABC nervous. In fact, halfway through Part 1 it is seen again.

The opening credits feature very moody minimalistic music by John Cameron and sets a somber tone. A washed out and nearly B&W tour of New York City’s daily life and landmark set the feeling of normality about to be disrupted.

Path to 911 Part 1 Boarding the PlanesPath to 911 Part 1 John O'Neill

Various Arab men are seen checking in at airline counters on the morning of September 11, 2001. Computer red flags on names are ignored by the check in clerks – the first failure in security shown. Shaky cam and fast cuts typify the style of the miniseries, so get used to it.

At the World Trade Center (WTC), we are introduced to John O’Neill, Director of Security for the WTC. Harvey Keitel portrays the likeable if hard as nails man in charge of protecting the Twin Towers. In many ways this is his story and he is the link between many of the protagonists.

Back at the airports, the airliners are boarded by the nervous hijackers. One of them calls another on cell phone and it is clear he is the leader. While all of this is being shown, the low, dull howl of wind can be heard in the background. It is an unnerving sound and deliberately out of place.

So begins the nearly three hour Part 1, which covers the events from 1993 to New Years Eve in 1999. Part 2 covers events from 2000 to the day of the attack.

Path to 911 Part 1 New York Skyline 1993

In order to understand how America got to 9/11, the production takes us back to the events of the first attack on the WTC in 1993. It is like something out of 24 watching the yellow Ryder van going into the second tower’s underground parking garage and the ensuing events. Except it all really happened.

Path to 911 Part 1 Truck Bomb InteriorPath to 911 Part 1 Truck Bomb Explodes

The mastermind and main villain of  most of Part 1 makes his appearance here in the form of Ramzi Yousef (Nabil Elouahabi), a dedicated jihadi and explosives enthusiast. Having lit the fuse on his own handmade bomb, Yousef jumps into a waiting car with his two accomplices, Mahmoud “The Red” Abouhalim (Youssef Kerkour) and Mohammed Salameh (Enis Esmer).  Their frantic and then exuberant escape from the garage contrast sharply with the carnage they unleash. Six are killed and scores more wounded by the explosion.

Watching the live reports, Nancy Floyd (Katy Selverstone) of the FBI receives a phone call from a very upset informant. Emad Salem (Shaun Taub) is a former colonel in the Egyptian Army and had warned the Feds something was going to happen. It is the beginning of blown opportunities to protect U.S. citizens from terrorists.

Path to 911 Part 1 Ramzi Yousef DisappointedPath to 911 Part 1 Tower Parking Garage Damage

Salem isn’t the only one upset. Yousef thought his bomb would topple the towers like oversized dominos. Adding insult to injury, other organizations are trying to take credit for his work. At the airport on his way out of the country, his pride gets the better of him and he calls in a claim for his organization.

A reporter, John Williams (Barclay Hope), arrives to document the forensic work going on at the bombing site. The miniseries is partially based on his book, The Cell, written with Michael Stone. He’s also a friend of John O’Neill’s as we soon find out. We’ll be seeing a lot of him as he managed to be on the scene for many of the major events depicted.

At the site, NYPD bomb squad officers decide to disobey orders to save evidence from being destroyed. That turns out to be the very famous chunk of metal with the Ryder van’s VIN number on it. Do they get chewed out? Yes. But their bucking the system and taking initiative leads directly to the bombers. The theme of having to bypass superiors to get anything done runs through the story.

Path to 911 Part 1 Mohammed Salameh Demands Money

But it gets better. Proving greed begets stupidity on an epic scale, Salameh files a claim on the rental van deposit claiming it was stolen. This leads to one of the more memorable scenes of the first part. His desire for money is his undoing and he utters one of the most surreal and hypocritical lines I have ever heard.

Not exactly the brightest operatives, these terrorists. I’ve often found myself agreeing with the idea that most evil is of the mundane variety and also think stupidity plays a major part. As things unfold, this is reinforced by the concept that incompetency by those who are tasked to protect us enables evil to succeed despite their stupidity. It was sheer luck that caused Salameh to be caught.

Floyd’s boss, Neil Herman (William Sadler) puts it succinctly: “This was like the Keystone cops versus the gang who couldn’t shoot straight.”

Path to 911 Part 1 Khalid Sheikh Muhammad and Yousef PartyPath to 911 Part 1 FBI Task Force Hunts Yousef

While they get the two accomplices, the authorities still can’t get their hands on the ringleader, Ramzi Yousef. They don’t know he is in the Philippines partying in Manila with his uncle, Khalid Sheikh Muhammad (Michael Benyaer), at a nightclub. But he has big ideas in mind, very big ideas involving airliners.

Yousef becomes the most wanted man by the FBI and a task force is put together to go after him. Remember O’Neill? This was his job before working at the WTC. It turns out Ramzi has been a very busy guy, with a failed attempt to assassinate Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto in Pakistan and a successful bombing of a Shia mosque in Iran. We then get to see his latest creation kill one and injure seventeen others on an airplane bound to Japan from the Philippines.

But his help aren’t very bright and that leads to his hideout in Manila being compromised and his plans on a laptop falling into the hands of local authorities. This prevents a suicide bombing attack on the Pope and President Clinton. Once again, dumb luck is the only thing that prevented a planned attack.

Watching this is an exercise in infuriation, at least for me. What I thought would be a fast thing to review has turned into something far more difficult. I have to take breaks due to the anger building up while reviewing The Path to 9/11. You will not have a positive feeling about government after watching this, I can promise.

Path to 911 Part 1 Informer and YousefPath to 911 Part 1 Ramzi Yousef

A man appears in at the U.S. embassy in Islamabad, Pakistan to turn in Yousef. While he agrees with all of the terrorist’s goals, he cannot abide killing innocents which is something Ramzi enjoys. This is a huge break that leads to his being captured in 1995.

Elouahabi’s performance as Yousef deserves a special mention. His rendition of Ramzi is charismatic, charming, and with the occasional the craziness seeping out. It is very layered and he dominates every scene he is in.

Path to 911 Part 1 Ayman Al-ZawahiriPath to 911 Part 1 Usama Bin Ladin

With prison sentences handed out to the bombers, things shift to the money behind the terror and the trail leads to a wealthy Saudi named Usama Bin Ladin (the spelling used by ABC). Yes, he was the one financing Yousef via his uncle, Khalid. John Miller also re-enters the picture, being the reporter who got the famous interview with Bin Ladin in 1998.

Miller shares what he observed at the Al Qaeda compound with FBI Agent O’Neill and we get a short rundown of what Usama had been responsible for. Things like the Khobar Towers attack and the famous “Blackhawk Down” incident in Somalia. Bin Ladin believes he brought the Soviet Union down and plans to do the same to the United States of America.

Path to 911 Part 1 Ahmed Shah MassoudPath to 911 Part 1 Northern Alliance Fighters

Bickering in the CIA and a desire to avoid accountability by Clinton administration officials lead to difficulties in forming a relationship with the commander of the Northern Alliance in Afghanistan, Ahmed Shah Massoud (Mido Hamada). A charismatic man with a Western education, he is Bin Ladin’s mortal enemy.

The fear of legalities haunts the Clinton staff so they don’t want Bin Ladin killed and a chance to snatch him is aborted last minute. It sours things considerably despite the work of CIA field agent “Kirk” (Donnie Wahlberg). Kirk is an amalgam of agents who were involved there.

 Path to 911 Part 1 KirkPath to 911 Part 1 Bomb Detonator

And so another opportunity is wasted. The problems with the higher ups frustrates FBI and CIA agents both and at one point O’Neil is asked how you can win a war when it is considered a law and order issue. His blunt response says it all: “You can’t.”

Then comes the U.S. Embassy bombing in Nairobi, Kenya. It is depicted in all its gory horror with most of the gore coming from actual news footage. Even though distracted by the Monica Lewinsky scandal, Bill Clinton can’t ignore this.

Path to 911 Part 1 Kenya ConfrontationPath to 911 Part 1 President Clinton

An outstanding scene of the take down of the surviving attacker on the embassy is tension filled and is executed like something out of a James Bond film. With him in custody, the administration feels it can go ahead and use cruise missiles to take out targets in the Sudan and Afghanistan. That of course led to a pharmaceutical factory being wiped out with no evidence that chemical weapons were being made there. Sound familiar?

It is amateur hour and it is enraging to watch the decisions come made out of political expedience. Madeline Albright (Shirley Douglas) comes off particularly badly, though CIA Director George Tenet (Dan Lauria) and National Security Advisor Richard Clarke (Stephen Root) prove to be waffling posers. They are all in way over their heads and more concerned about covering their rears politically than protecting the country.

Path to 911 Part 1 Taliban Attack Northern AlliancePath to 911 Part 1 Diana Dean

Retaliation for the failed missile attacks is swift in Afghanistan. Al Qaeda and the Taliban attack the Northern Alliance in brutal scene of limbs being blown off and wounded executed. Massoud tells the CIA that the Pakistani’s tipped off Bin Ladin.

Acrimony amongst the government heads involved comes to a head and they show themselves as being incapable of doing what is needed. While they dither, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed presents a plan to Zawahiri called “the Planes Operation.”

Retaliation comes to the States as well but is foiled by an alert customs agent, Diana Dean (Kathy Bates). It is December 14, 1999 and she correctly senses something is wrong with a man coming over the border from Canada. In the trunk of his car are the ingredients for a fertilizer based bomb and a plot to attack the United States for the Millennium celebrations is uncovered.

Path to 911 Part 1 Times Square New YearsPath to 911 Part 1 Hijacking

O’Neill and Herman can’t get Mayor Rudy Giuliani to cancel the New Years Eve celebration in Times Square and wonder if their luck will hold out. When it does, O’Neill celebrates in a restaurant with friends and that fades out to September 11, 2001 with the hijackers making their move in a surreal and dreamlike sequence.

Path to 911 Part 1 To Be Continued

 

In many ways the whole show feels like a nightmare. From the sound and lighting choices to the quick edits, it has that feeling of something you can’t control or stop. That makes it effective at portraying something that has already happened and I wonder if that was the film makers’ intent.

It strikes me that if this were presented as fiction, it would have been laughed at for being unbelievable. Especially how things kept happening due to coincidence or random luck.

It is rare to see successful censorship or banning of films in current day America and The Path to 9/11 is a choice example of how political power holds massive sway over the media today – if that power is from the Left, that is. With Hilary Clinton’s presidential ambitions, this damning indictment of the Clinton administration’s follies had to be suppressed. While the rookie Bush administration takes a few shots in Part 2, it is clear where the bulk of the blame lies.

This film should be mandatory viewing for all high school kids, but that will never happen.