By Lawrence Wright
The New Yorker, Sept. 9, 2014
EXCERPT...
Those advocating declassification present a powerful and oftentimes emotional argument, but others offer compelling reasons that the document should remain buried under the Capitol. Immediately after the Joint Congressional Inquiry finished its report, in late 2002, the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United Statesbetter known as the 9/11 Commissionbegan its work, under the leadership of Thomas Kean, the former governor of New Jersey, and Lee Hamilton, a former congressman from Indiana. The questions raised by the twenty-eight pages were an important part of the commissions agenda; indeed, its director, Philip Zelikow, hired staffers who had worked for the Joint Inquiry on that very section to follow up on the material. According to Zelikow, what they found does not substantiate the arguments made by the Joint Inquiry and by the 9/11 families in the lawsuit against the Saudis. He characterized the twenty-eight pages as an agglomeration of preliminary, unvetted reports concerning Saudi involvement. They were wild accusations that needed to be checked out, he said.
Zelikow and his staff were ultimately unable to prove any official Saudi complicity in the attacks. A former staff member of the 9/11 Commission who is intimately familiar with the material in the twenty-eight pages recommends against their declassification, warning that the release of inflammatory and speculative information could ramp up passions and damage U.S.-Saudi relations.
Stephen Lynch agrees that the twenty-eight pages were buried in order to preserve the U.S. relationship with Saudi Arabia. Part of the reason it was classified was the fact that it would create a visceral response, he told me. There would be a backlash. But, thirteen years later, is that still a reason to keep the document a secret?
SNIP...
Thomas Kean remembers finally having the opportunity to read those twenty-eight pages after he became chairman of the 9/11 Commissionso secret that I had to get all of my security clearances and go into the bowels of Congress with someone looking over my shoulder. He also remembers thinking at the time that most of what he was reading should never have been kept secret. But the focus on the twenty-eight pages obscures the fact that many important documents are still classifieda ton of stuff, Kean told me, including, for instance, the 9/11 Commissions interviews with George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, and Bill Clinton. I dont know of a single thing in our report that should not be public after ten years, Kean said.
CONTINUED...
http://www.newyorker.com/news/daily-comment/twenty-eight-pages
PS: You are most welcome, Uncle Joe. The long shadow of Bush and Cheney, evinced by their failure to give their word in sworn testimony, is to cover up their Treasons.