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KISSINGER APPOINTED TO HEAD 9/11 COMMISSION
Oswald, Sirhan Sirhan Top Suspect List
New York, NY - (GNS)
- Henry Kissinger, master of deceit and public relations, accused by many of being a War Criminal, was appointed to lead the Federal Government's 9/11 Commission to investigate what really happened on 9/11. In New York City. At the World Trade Center. When U.S. intelligence failed and the Al Qaeda terrorists attacked.
     Kissinger asked Sen. Arlen Spectre and former President Gerald Ford to serve on the Commission. Both men were on the Warren Commission, which investigated John F. Kennedy's assassination. In Dallas. In 1963. When several gunmen shot Kennedy and Lee Harvey Oswald, firing a Mannlicher-Carcano from a window while eating several floors below in the snack room, killed the president.
     Kissinger announced Oswald was a suspect, but a stronger suspect was Sirhan Sirhan, the Arab tried and convicted of killing Robert Kennedy with a pistol that fired more than twice as many bullets as it held.
     Spectre, the inventor of the "single-bullet" theory in the JFK assassination, announced his "single-plane" theory in the strike on the towers on 9/11.
     "As improbable as it seems, there is less than compelling evidence, but none of it is circumstancial," he said.
     Ford, thought by some to be behind many of the assassinations and other events in the 60s and early 70s in his drive to become president during America's Bicentennial, has been a proponent of the Pardon Strategy and was reluctant to serve on the Commission.
     "It's time to put this behind us," he said in an interview with TV Guide earlier this year.
     President Bush denied the appointment of Kissinger was part of a cover-up, as many suggest about Warren and the Warren Commission.
     "Why should we cover up anything? People who practice cover-ups are afraid. Do we look like we're afraid?" Bush said.
     Kissinger said the "probe will lead where it goes", "no stone will be unturned," and "we will get near the bottom of this."
     Kissinger also announced "Peace is at hand."