- Two excerpts -
-
- "When I was at Ft. Hood, I told my boss there, 'This
just doesn't add up.' He goes, 'Yeah, well, you have some good points,
but you're buying into conspiracy theories, and I just don't believe it.'
And I've found that a lot of people in the military intelligence community
have ignored their thoughts; they're putting aside their own ability to
think rationally, and they're doing what they are told. Their bosses, and
their bosses' bosses, are not thinking on their own, and following a very
narrow road with no deviating. They are telling them what to look for in
the professional actions we Intelligence Analysts use, the tools we use;
Priority Intelligence Requirements (PIR) are sets of priorities. Local
commands determine where and what tools to use to solve these questions.
-
- "Me...I was all over the place all the time. I was
always bumping into the walls, asking 'Why can't we explore over here?
Why can't we follow this lead?' Eventually I started saying to people,
'Look, 9/11 is the main thing. We're going to war over this stuff, and
it needs to be reexamined."
-
- [...]
-
- "My whole point is to get a message to members of
the military: 'Obey your oath, do what you feel is right.' I've made decisions
that I felt were right and caught heat for it. I call on all the military:
'If you see something wrong, question it. If you see something that's not
right, illegal, question it. Get out of that box you're in. If you follow
that path, if you take the road of least resistance, people will die. People
have died. I want you think for yourself. I want the military to think
independently.'
-
- "Sadly, we recently saw Admiral Fallon, an independent
thinker who was standing against the administration's plans to attack Iran,
routed from command. I have effectively been routed from command as well.
It is going to take hundreds more to be routed before this takes hold.
-
- "Right now, in the INTEL sections of the Army, the
Navy, Air Force, Marines ... everywhere, in Homeland Security, the defense
department, state department, they are beginning to question. It will take
more people going through what I experienced to really shake things up,
however.
-
- "My message to the military is this: 'Question everything.
Be a student of history. Stay on top of current events. Remember your oath.
And defend the constitution at all costs. It is the ultimate requirement
of your service, all else fail.'
-
- "Solving 9/11 is going to require our military.
I don't think we need an investigation with European influence, or Japanese
influence. I think they all have noble intentions, but we've got laws on
our books for terrorism, treason, and murder. All, it appears likely, were
committed on 9/11. We have rules on our books to solve this.
-
- "If it ultimately comes down to it, we may have
to round up these thugs and have them all shot in the internal courtyard
section of the Pentagon. After a trial, of course - punishment carried
out right where it all began.
-
- "Now, I'm not saying who should be shot. I don't
know. But the military needs to uncover this, but they won't. Not yet,
anyway, because they have to obey the civilian leaders. Thank God we all
swear to uphold the constitution. That, right there, is the basic gospel
of the soldier and serviceman. If they don't know what to do, they should
read the constitution.
-
- "Yes, the oath does say, 'I will obey the orders
of the president of the United States.' But the constitution is supreme.
Presidents come and go, constitution remains. It is not a living document;
it is not open to interpretation. We can all discuss it, but it's plain
and simple. We as soldiers need to obey it. And when we as a Republic get
around to enforcing the supreme law, it must be a concerted effort, a coordinated
effort, and it must be handled internally.
-
- "My mission is to speak with the military and encourage
them to do the right thing. When you see something not right, like what
I saw, and you bring it up to command but they leave you with no options,
you have to reach out there and send that mortar over the wall. I want
an investigation. 9/11 must be solved. Put the mess behind us and move
on.
-
- =========
-
- Tuesday, May 13, 2008
-
- By Stephen C. Webster
-
- Austin Bureau Chief
-
- AUSTIN, Texas -- On Aug. 2, 2006, Sergeant First Class
Donald Buswell had his life forever changed by an e-mail.
-
- During his 21 years in the Army, SFC Buswell served in
both Iraq conflicts, Bosnia, Rwanda, and Korea. In 2004, Buswell sustained
numerous shrapnel injuries from a rocket attack, after attempting to save
two Iraqis who were left burning from explosions on a dirt road adjacent
Saddam's palace.
-
- SFC Buswell, a decorated soldier, is by numerous measures
a patriot who willingly and regularly risked his life in service to the
United States. Unfortunately, the United States Army did not see it that
way.
-
- On that August day in 2006, Buswell received an e-mail
which claimed to refute the "liberal" idea that a jet aircraft
cannot vaporize. The e-mail's author intended to support the 9/11 Commission's
claim that the plane which hit the Pentagon on 9/11/2001 literally atomized.
It was sent to 34 people in the compartmentalized information facility
at Ft. Sam Houston. Its allegation was not one Buswell could let pass unanswered.
-
- His response, found in The Iconoclast's first story about
SFC Buswell published Aug. 21, 2006 refuted the allegation
that airplanes can vaporize, and urged his fellow soldiers to support a
new investigation into the attacks; to question the official story and
"demand answers."
-
- The next day, he was denied entry into his place of work.
Soon thereafter, the Army informed him that he was under investigation.
In the following days, he was fired from his job, demoted, ordered to undergo
a mental health examination, and accused by Col. Luke S. Green, chief of
staff at US Army North (Fifth Army), of "making statements disloyal
to the United States."
-
- Article is continued here:
-
- http://www.911truth.org/article.php?story=20080515130436575
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