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Pilot who flew 2 planes used on 9/11 doesn’t believe official story
September 17th, 2007
Source

Former Air Force fighter pilot Russ Wittenberg, who flew over 100 combat missions in Vietnam, sat in the cockpit for Pan Am and United for over 30 years, and previously flew two of the actual airplanes that were allegedly hijacked on 9/11 (United Airlines Flight 175 & 93), does not believe the government's official 9/11 conspiracy theory...

RUSS WITTENBERG: "I flew the two actual aircraft which were involved in 9/11... Fight number 175 and Flight 93, the 757 that allegedly went down in Shanksville and Flight 175 is the aircraft that's alleged to have hit the South Tower. I don't believe it's possible for... a so-called terrorist to train on a 172, then jump in a cockpit of a 757-767 class cockpit, and vertical navigate the aircraft, lateral navigate the aircraft, and fly the airplane at speeds exceeding it's design limit speed by well over 100 knots, make high-speed high-banked turns,.. pulling probably 5, 6, 7 G's... I couldn't do it and I'm absolutely positive they couldn't do it."

End original story.


This pilot's account of the difficulty of flying a plane in that manor gives credibility to the possibly that the planes were being controlled remotely. Most of us don't understand the difficulty of flying a plane at those speeds and G's, but Wittenberg, an experience pilot, who has flown those planes, is "absolutely positive" that some alleged hijacker couldn't have done it.

Could the truth be that the jets were being controlled remotely? Since many of the alleged hijackers are still alive, it would be pretty reasonable to believe that they didn't actually fly those planes. So who really did?