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The Jersey Girls, a group of 9/11 widows, demanded an independent commission to investigate the attacks, leading to the establishment of the 9/11 Commission.
On the morning of 9-11, a group of five Israeli nationals purportedly witnessed the initial explosion of the World Trade Center and were seen celebrating the event. This incident received significant media coverage at the time.
U.S. intelligence agencies were fully aware that the hijackers were in the United States and even helped at least two of them get there.
Dominic Souter, the leader of the group of Israelis arrested in New Jersey, fled to Israel on or around September 14th, 2001, and was later included on an FBI anti-terror watch list distributed to European allies in May of 2002.
The Jersey Girls demanded an independent commission to explore the truth about 9/11, leading to the creation of the 9/11 Commission.
The call for a new 9/11 commission is based on claims that the original investigation was a fraud. Evidence suggests prior knowledge of the attacks, including an unknown investor shorting stocks of airlines involved. The public deserves transparency and accountability.
Israeli intelligence officials claimed they warned the United States about large-scale terror attacks on highly visible targets, but the specifics of those warnings have never been made public.
Kristen Breitweiser, whose husband was killed on September 11th, was one of the 'Jersey Girls' who didn't believe the official 9-11 story and sought to identify government officials who may have been complicit.
The CIA knew the hijackers were in the United States and planning an act of terror before 9-11.
According to FBI documents, Israelis caught celebrating the 9-11 attacks had videotaped the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center and may have possessed foreknowledge of the event. However, polygraph tests suggested they did not have foreknowledge but were involved in illegal foreign counterintelligence.