Prelude 9/11 morning Flight 11 hijacked Flight 175 hijacked WTC 1 hit Flight 77 hijacked WTC 2 hit Flight 93 hijacked Pentagon hit WTC 2 collapses Flight 93 crashes WTC 1 collapses WTC 7 collapses Epilogue

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Flight 93 hijacked

On September 11, 2001, at 9.28 AM, United Airlines Flight 93 was hijacked by four al-Qaeda terrorists armed with knives and box cutters. The plane was later forced to crash in a field near Shanksville, Pennsylvania. The plane departed from Newark International Airport in New Jersey at 8.42 heading for San Francisco International Airport. The four terrorists were Ziad Jarrah, Ahmed Al-Nami, Saeed Al-Ghamdi and Ahmed Al-Haznawi.

Below, we investigate various conspiracy theory claims related to the hijacking of Flight 93.

No trace of Flight 93

Skift til dansk Using 911facts.dk How do you get the most out of this site? Truth Movement About Methods Theories Publications Fact sheets Booking We are available for booking a lecture or a workshop here. Facebook Claim There is absolutely no evidence of a plane...

One of the passengers saw a gun

The claim indicates that the official account is false since that states that the terrorists used box cutters. The official account should thus seek to conceal that it wasn’t untrained al Qaeda terrorists but instead trained people who were hijacking the plane.

Passenger manifests are not evidence of the persons having been on board

Jeppe Severin, representative and spokesperson for the Danish Truth Movement, claims that there is no evidence that Mohammed Atta, Marwan al-Shehhi, and Hani Hanjour, who the forensic investigation named as three of the suicide pilots, were on the three planes Flight 11, Flight 175, and Flight 77. Since those three terrorists from al Qaeda appeared on the passenger manifests for the three planes, it must mean that passenger manifests are not evidence that the persons have been on board.

The hijacked planes could have been intercepted by military planes

In 1999, Air Traffic Control lost contact with a Learjet 35 on its way from Orlando, Florida, to Dallas, Texas. On board were two pilots and four passengers, one being the famous golf player Payne Stewart. An F-16 from Eglin Air Force Base, Florida, which happened to be in the area, was dispatched to localize the plane but was unable to make contact. Two more planes were dispatched, also to make contact, but this was also in vain. The Learjet continued its course until it ran out of fuel, after which it crashed. This incident is used to argue that the hijacked planes on September 11, 2001 were intentionally not intercepted by military planes.