Can TWA 800 shoot down
Hillary?
March 22nd, 2005
On July 17th, 1996,
TWA flight 800, headed for Paris, exploded over
the Atlantic Ocean at 8:30 PM, just minutes after
takeoff from JFK Airport. Immediately, suspicion
arose that the plane had been shot down by a
missile fired from a boat offshore. Several dozen
people on the southern shore of Long Island saw
what appeared to be a rapidly rising object that
seemed to change course up in the sky. Hundreds
witnessed the explosion, or series of explosions
that occurred soon after seeing the rising object.
The investigation into the destruction of the
plane was led by the FBI. Normally, air disasters
are investigated by the National Transportation
Safety Board, but their role was from the
beginning a secondary one in this investigation.
The FBI's involvement lent credence to the widely
accepted belief that a criminal act (terrorism?)
had occurred to bring down the plane.
Days after the TWA disaster, the Summer Olympics
began in Atlanta. A week after that came the
bombing in a downtown Atlanta park. The luckless
Richard Jewell was fingered as the bomber, and
became NBC's designated villain for spoiling their
Olympic coverage. NBC and other networks and
newspapers gave far more coverage to this bombing
that had killed one person than to the TWA
disaster which had killed 230 ten days earlier.
Even after Jewell was cleared, and collected some
money from NBC for his troubles, he remained the
butt of jokes on Saturday Night Live (the
man to blame for all unsolved crimes).
In New York, however, the TWA disaster did not
slip from the front pages so quickly. Planes do
not explode in mid air very often (unless blown
up). In addition to the questions from grieving
family members, and TWA employees (59 of the dead
were company employees), there were those pesky
witnesses who thought they saw what had happened,
and were speaking to the press.
Weeks after the explosion, a new explanation was
offered by the investigating team. No missile had
hit the plane to bring it down. Rather an almost
empty center wing fuel tank had exploded, ignited
by faulty wiring, and this explosion led to the
catastrophic series of events that caused the
plane's destruction. Much skepticism accompanied
the new story line, especially when traces of
explosives were found in some of the recovered
sections of the plane. The investigative team
soon had an explanation for this too - the plane
had been used for explosives testing with dogs in
St. Louis weeks earlier and residue from that test
remained.
Critics of the official explanation did not go
quietly into the night. Some investigated the
tragedy on their own, and others offered
alternative explanations. If one googles TWA 800
today, almost 9 years after the explosion, one
finds, to use the words of my brother-in-law, a
veritable debris field on the internet.
In the first days and weeks after the TWA 800
explosion, like most Americans, I accepted the
initial explanation that was suggested by the
eyewitnesses - that a missile had brought the
plane down. The TWA 800 event occurred just
three weeks after a bombing had killed 19
Americans in Khobar Towers, Saudi Arabia. Three
years earlier, Islamic terrorists had tried to
blow up the World Trade Center in what proved to
be a practice run for the 9/11 attacks. A gang of
Islamic extremists had been arrested with plans to
blow up 11 international airliners (the Bojinka
plot), and in a separate incident, other
terrorists had been arrested plotting to blow up
several bridges and tunnels in the New York area.
The idea that a missile could have been obtained
by an Islamic terrorist group, and then used to
shoot down a jetliner, hardly strained credibility
at the time. Today, many major international
airlines are rapidly working on adding an
anti-missile defense capability, led (for obvious
reasons) by Israel's El Al.
I had not thought about TWA 800 the last few
years. Then I picked up Nelson DeMille's
Night Fall at an airport bookstore, to
help pass the time on a several hour flight. Books
about plane crashes or explosions are probably the
wrong choice for a plane flight. But in any case,
by the end of the next day, I had finished the 600
plus page book. Suffice to say, DeMille, who has
written several engrossing mystery/police novels
before, has outdone himself.
Night Fall is as seductive a page turner
as I have read since the
Day of the Jackal. And like the Day
of the Jackal, this is the case despite the
fact that you know the outcome from the beginning.
The reader knows that De Gaulle was not
assassinated from the outset of the Day of the
Jackal, and as Night Fall makes
clear in its first few pages, DeMille believes
there was a missile that rose up from the water on
that night of July 17th. In the Day of the
Jackal, the excitement is the chase - a very
skillful contract killer planning his attack, and
an equally skillful detective trying to keep
within a step and eventually catch up to him, and
prevent the assassination. In Night Fall,
the drama surrounds how a policeman gets
interested in the TWA 800 case at a memorial event
held five years after the plane was lost, and
doggedly presses ahead to figure out what happened
and challenge the official story and the cover up.
Unlike Michael Crichton's recent book on global
warming,
State of Fear, DeMille does not posture
or hit you over the head with any argument over
what happened to TWA 800. He allows a skeptic of
the official explanation to tell the policeman
what he thinks happened (the missile theory), and
an equally convinced defender of the official
story, to present his case. DeMille then allows
for the possibility of some convergent theory that
would explain both the missile that so many saw,
and the purported lack of physical evidence of an
explosive device hitting the plane.
First Strike: TWA 800 and the Attack on America by
Jack Cashill and James Sanders is not so
evenhanded. I read this as part of my own digging
through the TWA 800 internet debris field,
inspired by Night Fall to find out more.
This book presents a tough detailed attack on the
official explanation - the center fuel tank
theory, and the conduct of the investigation of
the explosion. The authors believe the real story
of what happened to TWA 800 was known by President
Clinton and his closest advisors almost
immediately. In fact the county was on heightened
alert that night due to credible intelligence of
coming attacks. There were several Navy ships and
submarines prowling around near the Long Island
shore that night, and there were military planes
in the air over Long Island.
The authors believe the White House allowed
(instructed?) the FBI and NTSB to create an
alternative explanation for public consumption.
While to some this may sound like readings from
the black helicopter crowd, I assure you this book
is not an Oliver Stone or Michael Moore type
“research” effort. The authors provide a credible
explanation of why the real events of that night
were hidden from public view (motive).
In the summer of 1996, President Clinton held a
large double-digit lead in the polls over his
Republican opponent Bob Dole. The country's
economy was improving, the deficit was falling,
the nation was at peace. If things continued on an
even keel, Clinton was a certain winner in the
November election. If, on the other hand, Arab
terrorists had shot down an American jetliner from
waters off our shore, there would have been strong
public pressure for a tough response. Targeting
whoever was responsible would involve military
action, and a risk of casualties, and things going
wrong overseas. Consider the precedent Clinton
surely remembered: the badly botched rescue
attempt of the Iranian hostages in the 4th year of
the Carter administration, the last prior
Democratic Party President, who was then beaten in
his re-election race.
The Clinton administration was, in all respects
other than the personal, a very cautious
Presidency. Dick Morris did polling to select the
President's vacation destination in 1996. Jackson
Hole, Wyoming won out over Martha's Vineyard,
Massachusetts. Being seen hiking though the
mountains and roughing it, was a safer way to win
over white male votes than launching attacks on
Afghanistan.
There are people who know about the
discussions in the White House late into the
evening of July 17, 1996 (one of them is George
Stephanopolous). Dick Morris has let slip that TWA
800 was shot down. He was not fired due to his
foot fetish until late the next month, in August
1996. He was still part of the team on July 17th.
For all the talk about how President Bush demands
loyalty from members of his administration, there
are lots more books by first term George W. Bush
administration employees attacking the President
than has been the case with the Clinton
administration. Part of this is undoubtedly due to
the fact that the Clintonistas and their partisans
see the Bush years as a pause before the throne is
restored once again to a rightful resident,
Hillary Clinton, in 2008. Don't expect any of
these people to volunteer information on TWA 800.
Out of sight, out of mind, means this sleeping dog
is not an issue that can hurt her.
One other thing is certain: whatever discussions
took place in the White House concerning TWA 800,
they were not kept from Hillary Clinton. If a
false story was released, and a cover up occurred,
in this case a cover up of a deliberate murder of
hundreds of Americans, it is a big story. As
Donald Trump would say, “huge.” It is in fact a
lot bigger story than Monica Lewinsky or Paula
Jones. It is the kind of story that could derail
Hillary's candidacy, and destroy many
reputations.
Nelson DeMille has done a great service by using a
gripping novel as a vehicle to bring this story
back into the public eye. Sometimes a page-turner
of a novel can do more than any number of
non-fiction books to raise public interest in a
subject. So far, the mainstream media has not
picked up on it, other than perfunctory book
reviews. The New York Times has not had
any front page story about the unanswered
questions of TWA 800, though their reporting was
pretty decent after the event occurred. No Cold
Case investigators are on the prowl, so far as
anyone knows.
But there are three and a half years until
November 2008, a very long time in politics.
Wherever Senator Clinton takes her summer
vacations the next few years, I do not expect that
she will be carrying around Night Fall as
part of her vacation reading. But maybe somebody
should ask her about it.
Richard Baehr
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