09-Oct-2008
Japan Questions 9/11 and the War on Terror
From
Project Censored.
IN TOP 25 CENSORED STORIES FOR 2009
Title: ?Transcript Of Japanese Parliament?s 911 Testimony?
Author: Benjamin Fulford
Student Researchers: Kyle Corcoran, Alan Scher, Bill
Gibbons, and
Elizabeth Rathbun
Faculty Evaluator: Mickey S. Huff, MA
Testimony in the Japanese parliament, broadcast live on Japanese
television in January 2008, challenged the premise and
validity of
the Global War on Terror. Parliament member Yukihisa Fujita
insisted
that an investigation be conducted into the war?s origin:
the events
of 9/11.
In a parliament Defense and Foreign Affairs Committee
session held to
debate the ethics of renewing Japan?s ?anti-terror law,? which
commits Japan to providing logistical support for coalition
forces
operating in Afghanistan, Fujita opened the session by
stating, ?I
would like to talk about the origin of this war on
terrorism, which
was the attacks of 9/11, . . . When discussing these
anti-terror laws
we should ask ourselves, what was 9/11? And what is terrorism??
Fujita pointed out that, ?So far the only thing the
government has
said is that we think it was caused by al-Qaeda because
President
Bush told us so. We have not seen any real proof that it was al-
Qaeda.? He reminded parliament that twenty-four Japanese
citizens
were killed on 9/11, yet the mandate of a criminal
investigation by
the Japanese government never followed. ?This is a crime so
surely an
investigation needs to be carried out,? said Fujita
(Censored 2008,
#16).
Fujita went on extensively to ask ?about the suspicious
information
being uncovered and the doubts people worldwide are having
about the
events of 9/11.?
The Japanese parliament viewed several slides from the
Pentagon and
World Trade Center (WTC) sites as Fujita explained each. The
slides
showed evidence inconsistent with official explanation:
damage in and
around the Pentagon was not consistent with the damage a 757
airplane
would cause. Fujita noted, ?Also, there were more than eighty
security cameras at the Pentagon, but officials have refused to
release the footage. In any case, as you have just seen,
there is no
picture of the airplane or of its wreckage in any of these
photographs. It is very strange that no such pictures have
been shown
to us.? A US Air Force official corroborated the fact that
the plane
executed a U-turn and avoided the Defense Secretary?s
office, a feat
that would be impossible for an unskilled first-time pilot to
maneuver; and no air defense was made in the ninety-minute
interval
between the initial impact of the planes at the WTC and the
Pentagon.
Fujita added, ?It is baffling that no flight records were
found at
any of four sites.? On the ground at the WTC sites, both
sounds and
visual evidence from explosions were verified. Flying debris
shot out
as far as 150 meters consistent with buildings exploding. A
New York
fireman during rescue operations confirmed that a series of
explosions resembled a professional demolition, and a Japanese
survivor heard explosions while fleeing the site. The World
Trade
Center Building 7 (WTC 7), forty-seven stories high and
located one
block away, collapsed into its footprint, seven hours after
the main
WTC buildings were attacked, in five or six seconds, although no
plane struck it and it had minimal fire damage. Not only did
the 9/11
Commission fail to mention WTC 7, but the US Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA and National Institute of Standards and
Technology (NIST) made no mention of it in their reports.
Fujita went on to detail proof of insider trading from
September 6
through 8, when investors executed ?put options? to sell
stock in
United and American Airlines at a fixed price. Finance
specialist
Keiichiro Asao responded with confirmation that such complex
transaction would be the work of insiders rather than al-Qaeda.
Fujita then addressed Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda, ?I would
like to
know why the Prime Minister thinks it was the Taliban who was
responsible for 9/11.? He continued, ?We need to go back to the
beginning and not just simply and blindly trust the US
government
explanation and indirect information provided by them. . . .
We need
to look at this evidence and ask ourselves what the war on
terrorism
really is. . . . We need to ask who the real victims of this
war on
terrorism are. I think the citizens of the world are its
victims.?
?Prime Minister,? Fujita continued, ?what about the origin
of the War
on Terror and the idea of whether it is right or wrong to
participate
in it? Is there really a reason to participate in this War
on Terror??
Fujita received support for concluding that the reason for
participating in the US War on Terror needs to be
investigated and
analyzed. Opposition blocked the extension of Japan?s
anti-terror law
and colleagues acknowledged his bravery with congratulatory
phone calls.
This came to an end in mid-January when, after months of
parliamentary debates and the opposition of at least 50
percent of
the Japanese public, Fukuda rammed the anti-terror bill through
parliament. After the bill was voted down by opposition in
the Upper
House plenary session on January 12, the government
resubmitted it
later that same day to the Lower House, where the ruling
conservative
party holds the majority, and turned a bill into a law.
Thus, they
overturned a veto in the Upper House.
This is the first time in half a century that a Japanese
government
has resorted to such tactics?deemed a drastic measure by
Japanese
standards.1
According to Christopher W. Hughes, professor of politics and
international studies at University of Warwick, ?Fukuda?s
government
was under a lot of US pressure to re-deploy ships, and even
if he was
always somewhat doubtful about the importance of the mission in
military terms and the whole US War on Terror, he perceived
passing
the bill as very important to US-Japan relations. This was also
impressed upon him by a personal meeting with US President
Bush.?
Citation
1. Axel Berkofsky, ?Japan: The Deployment Dilemma,?
International
Relations and Security Network, January 24, 2008.
UPDATE BY BENJAMIN FULFORD
If you still believe that the English language corporate
media is
free, take a look behind the scenes at the Foreign
Correspondents
Club of Japan (FCCJ) and think again.
I was a member of that club for over two decades, but I had
no clue
about what it really represented until I tried to stage a press
conference about 9/11. From that point on all sorts of nasty
things
started to happen and I suddenly realized the place seemed
more like
a nest of spies than a club for journalists.
For example, people I did not know tried to have me evicted
from the
club, e-mails vanished from my inbox before I got to read
them, and
people started to spread the word that I had mental issues.
The list of insults to press freedom at the club since that
initial
conference is too long to write about in detail here, so I will
merely cite the most recent example.
Yukihisa Fujita, a member of parliament for the opposition
Democratic
Party, in a parliamentary debate broadcast nationwide on
NHK, asked
Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda about many of the glaring
discrepancies
in the official US government explanation of what happened
on 9/11. A
member of parliament in Japan, a US ally, showed powerful
evidence on
national TV that the US government murdered 3,000 of its own
citizens
as well as people from Japan and many other nations. I
suggested we
call him for a press conference, and nine working journalists?
representing a potential audience of billions?agreed.
Usually, only
three or more yes votes from working journalists is enough
for an
event to go ahead. Despite this, the Wall Street Journal?s James
Sims, head of the Professional Activities Committee (PAC), in
confederation with FCCJ President Martyn Williams, vetoed
the event
even though it was subject matter that they, as technical
journalists, do not cover. They vetoed it in violation of
Article 3
of the club bylaws that call for press freedom. Not only
that, they
kicked me off the PAC in a blatant attempt to shut me up.
Fujita has since been invited to speak to the EU parliament
and many
other venues. Fujita has been given a chance to ask more
questions in
parliament, and many Japanese news magazines have written
about his
activities. Books about 9/11 are also selling well in Japan. A
growing group of Japanese politicians has become aware of
what really
happened on that day. The Japanese government itself
actually knows
the truth and is starting to affect the US?Japan alliance in
fundamental ways. The Japanese government?s formal replies to
Fujita?s questions show it is becoming increasingly
suspicious that
the US government murdered over twenty Japanese citizens.
The long-
term repercussions for US security could be huge.
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