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Former FBI Agent Said 9/11 Hijackers Had U.S. Support


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Jet fuel can’t melt steel beams right?

A former FBI agent has exclusively told CBS News that at least two of the 9/11 Saudi hijackers that were based in San Diego had U.S. support.

Former FBI Agent Danny Gonzalez who was involved in Operation Encore (the secret investigation of Saudi Arabia’s links to the terror attacks on September 11th) believes the documents the Department of Justice will release regarding details behind 9/11 attacks will show that there was U.S. involvement behind the terror attacks.

He also told CBS News that “19 hijackers cannot commit 3,000 mass murders by themselves” which is a fairly true statement.

The declassification of documents regarding the 9/11 attacks come after Biden signed an Executive Order that would declassify some information regarding the attacks.

The New York Post had more on the story:

At least two of the 9-11 hijackers probably had a U.S.-based support network, according to a former FBI agent.

Danny Gonzalez worked on “Operation Encore,” the still-secret investigation into the two Saudi hijackers who were based in San Diego. Gonzalez told CBS News he’s confident the records of that operation will show the hijackers had help.

“19 hijackers cannot commit 3,000 mass murders by themselves,” Gonzalez told the network.

President Biden signed an executive order Friday directing the Department of Justice to oversee a declassification review of some documents related to the 9/11 attacks, after pressure from families of victims who are demanding to know if Saudi Arabia helped the hijackers. The DOJ must release any declassified documents in the next six months.

Here’s What CBS News had to share:

Biden signed an executive order Friday directing the Department of Justice to oversee a declassification review of some documents related to the 9/11 attacks, amid pressure from families of victims who are demanding to know if Saudi Arabia helped the hijackers. The order requires the attorney general to release any declassified documents in the next six months.

Some records pertain to a still-secret investigation, code named “Operation Encore,” which centered on the two hijackers that lived in San Diego and who may have assisted them. While it could take months for the documents to be released, Danny Gonzalez, a former FBI agent who worked on the operation, told CBS News that he’s confident two of the hijackers had a U.S.-based support network.

“19 hijackers cannot commit 3,000 mass murders by themselves,” Gonzalez said in his first television interview about the investigation.

“Based on what you found, do you believe there was a domestic support network for the hijackers?” CBS News senior investigative correspondent Catherine Herridge asked Gonzalez.

“Obviously,” he said. “I can’t comment on it, but you don’t have to be an FBI agent with 26 years of experience to figure that out.”

More than likely names and businesses that helped support the Saudi Hijackers were be redacted because the elites won’t want one of their own to be thrown in jail for treason.



 

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