In January of 2002, Noam Chomsky was asked the following question
by an audience member at a speaking engagement for FAIR in New
York: "Is there credible evidence that some part of the US government
was complicit in the 9/11 attacks?" His answer: "That's an
internet theory and it's hopelessly implausible. Hopelessly implausible.
So hopelessly implausible I don't see any point in talking about
it." As a matter of fact, the accusation of evidence for USG
complicity had been made just days before by former top German
minister and widely recognized intelligence expert Andreas
von Buelow in an interview with Tagesspiel, adding weight
to a number of independent investigations that had already been
very effectively raising serious questions for several months.
No, not quite an "internet theory."
For those who had spent every spare minute of their time for
months studying the issue of 9/11 prior knowledge and discovering
the utter absurdity of the official narrative, Chomsky was obviously
out to lunch. But, you can't fault him for not being consistent.
His attitude, post-9/11, is in many ways a repeat of an episode
a decade ago, when he and a handful of other "leftist"
figures signed onto a savage establishment media attack on Oliver
Stone and his film JFK, which brought an interpretation of the
JFK assassination conspiracy to the public. In addition to defending
the Warren Commission report's "lone gunman" findings,
these anticonspiratorialists made a peculiar far-fetched hedge,
claiming that the assassination did not result in any significant
changes to US policy or the political power structure, and hence
need not concern Left political analysis in the slightest!
Hmmm. Not only have the latter arguments been very soundly demolished
by recent (mainstream) historical work, but another recent news
item made light of the whole situation, although it slipped by
with very little notice during the uproar over Israel's incursion
into Palestinian territory last Spring. This was the completion
of a top-flight official scientific study of audio recordings
from Dealey Plaza, reported in the Washington Post, which finally
confirmed the existence of a second gunman at the notorious "grassy
knoll" with almost total certainty (repeating the results
of a similar study carried out for the House Assassinations Cmte.
in the 1970s). So, now science has spoken: those who continue
to accept the "lone gunman" findings of the Warren Commission
Report are, well, frauds.
Still, a lot of people seem gullible enough to believe that "America's
leading intellectual dissident" can be trusted to give them
the real scoop on 9/11; his lightweight pamphlet, '9/11', has
been a bestseller, becoming for many the default "dissident"
view of the "War on Terror". Meanwhile, a number of
political scholars and security experts are now openly discussing
the very strong evidence suggesting that 9/11 was probably an
inside job and the al Qaeda terrorists were setup patsies, with
the overwhelmingly critical implication that the trigger for the
"War on Terrorism" was a fabricated deception. Chomsky,
true to form, seems to pretend the evidence doesn't exist.
There is one piece of documentation, however that Chomsky did
seem to find interesting, which he made sure to include in his
book's appendix: The US State Department's Report on Foreign Terrorist
Organizations, from the Office of the Coordinator of Counterterrorism.
Michael Parenti on Noam Chomsky and JFK, as a characteristic
example of Left anticonspiracism:
Conspiracy
Phobia on the Left
Alexander
Cockburn and Noam Chomsky vs. JFK: A Study in Misinformation
(Citizens for the Truth About the Kennedy Assassination, May 1994)
JFK
Conspiracy: The Intellectual Dishonesty and Cowardice of Alexander
Cockburn and Noam Chomsky (Michael Worsham, The
Touchstone. Feb 1997)
My
Beef With Chomsky (Michael Morrissey, Sep 2000)
Concerning Chomsky's arrogant evasions of fact
and truly bizarre double standards about trusting official sources,
in regards to several critical conspiracy issues (including the
JFK assassination). Also, he points out Chomsky's change of mind
from his keen interest in the JFK assassination in the late 60s,
something he doesn't seem to have anything to say about these
days.
Rethinking
Chomsky (Michael Morrissey, May 1994)
Rethinking Camelot (Boston: South End Press, 1993)
"Noam Chomsky's worst book. I don't think it merits a detailed
review, but we should be clear about the stand that 'America's
leading intellectual dissident,' as he is often called, has taken
on the assassination. It is not significantly different from that
of the Warren Commission or the majority of Establishment journalists
and government apologists, and diametrically opposed to the view
'widely held in the grassroots movements and among left intellectuals'
(p. 37) and in fact to the view of the majority of the population."
Max
Holland Rescues the Warren Commission and the Nation
(Gary Aguilar, PROBE. Sep 2000)
A very detailed and lengthy rebuttal of Max Holland
(who has been featured in The Nation) and his defence of the Warren
Commission. On the subject of the JFK assassination, Holland is
roughly in the same camp as Chomsky and Cockburn.