9/11 Live: The NORAD Tapes
http://www.vanityfair.com/features/general/060801fege01
How did the U.S. Air Force respond on 9/11? Could it
have shot down United 93, as conspiracy theorists claim?
Obtaining 30 hours of never-before-released tapes from
the control room of NORAD's Northeast headquarters, the
author reconstructs the chaotic military history of that
day—and the Pentagon's apparent attempt to cover it up.
VF.com exclusive: Hear excerpts from the September 11
NORAD tapes. Click PLAY after each transcript to listen
By MICHAEL BRONNER
ucked in a piney notch in the gentle folds of the
Adirondacks' southern skirts—just up from a derelict
Mohawk, Adirondack & Northern rail spur—is a 22-year-old
aluminum bunker tricked out with antennae tilted
skyward. It could pass for the Jetsons' garage or, in
the estimation of one of the higher-ranking U.S. Air
Force officers stationed there, a big, sideways,
half-buried beer keg.
As Major Kevin Nasypany, the facility's mission-crew
commander, drove up the hill to work on the morning of
9/11, he was dressed in his flight suit and prepared for
battle. Not a real one. The Northeast Air Defense Sector
(NEADS), where Nasypany had been stationed since 1994,
is the regional headquarters for the North American
Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD), the Cold War–era
military organization charged with protecting North
American airspace. As he poured his first coffee on that
sunny September morning, the odds that he would have to
defend against Russian "Bear Bombers," one of NORAD's
traditional simulated missions, were slim. Rather,
Nasypany (pronounced Nah-sip-a-nee), an amiable
commander with a thick mini-mustache and a hockey
player's build, was headed in early to get ready for the
NORAD-wide training exercise he'd helped design. The
battle commander, Colonel Bob Marr, had promised to
bring in fritters.
NEADS is a desolate place, the sole orphan left behind
after the dismantling of what was once one of the
country's busiest bomber bases—Griffiss Air Force Base,
in Rome, New York, which was otherwise mothballed in the
mid-90s. NEADS's mission remained in place and continues
today: its officers, air-traffic controllers, and
air-surveillance and communications technicians—mostly
American, with a handful of Canadian troops—are
responsible for protecting a half-million-square-mile
chunk of American airspace stretching from the East
Coast to Tennessee, up through the Dakotas to the
Canadian border, including Boston, New York, Washington,
D.C., and Chicago.
It was into this airspace that violence descended on
9/11, and from the NEADS operations floor that what
turned out to be the sum total of America's military
response during those critical 100-some minutes of the
attack—scrambling four armed fighter jets and one
unarmed training plane—emanated.
The story of what happened in that room, and when, has
never been fully told, but is arguably more important in
terms of understanding America's military capabilities
that day than anything happening simultaneously on Air
Force One or in the Pentagon, the White House, or
NORAD's impregnable headquarters, deep within Cheyenne
Mountain, in Colorado. It's a story that was
intentionally obscured, some members of the 9/11
commission believe, by military higher-ups and members
of the Bush administration who spoke to the press, and
later the commission itself, in order to downplay the
extent of the confusion and miscommunication flying
through the ranks of the government.
The truth, however, is all on tape.
CLICK: FULL REPORT W/AUDIO CLIPS:
http://www.vanityfair.com/features/general/060801fege01
8/2/06 "The Charles Goyette Show" KNFX 1100 AM PHX
RE: 9/11 CALLERS...What are we going to do?
AUDIO:
http://www.apfn.net/pogo/A003I060802-goyette3.MP3