Saturday, March 28, 2026

An Interview with Art Olivier - A Unique Explanation for the Aircraft that Hit the Twin Towers


[Source] The planes that struck targets on 9/11 have long posed a stumbling block for 9/11 researchers.

Let’s start with the government’s official explanation, which states that on September 11, 2001, the North Tower of the World Trade Center was struck dead-center by a Boeing 767 flown at approximately 465 mph by hijacker pilot Mohamed Atta, the South Tower struck slightly off-center by a 767 flown at approximately 585 mph by hijacker pilot Marwan al-Shehhi, and the Pentagon’s first floor struck precisely by a 757 flown at about 535 mph by hijacker Hani Hanjour.

Why the Government Story Cannot Be True I think the easiest way to summarize the conundrum is by pasting in a passage from my previous article 9/11 Planes Part II: 33 Anomalies

A Matter of Logic. It is still accepted by me—and broadly throughout the 9/11 movement—that the Twin Towers were destroyed by demolition, regardless of the theory ascribed to—nano-thermite, nuclear devices, Directed Energy Weapons (DEWs), or more conventional explosives.

But to demolish the Twin Towers, successful plane hits had to be guaranteed up front. If Flight 175, the second plane, had only clipped the South Tower with a wing, and crashed elsewhere in the city, the tower’s demolition would have had to be called off.

The same holds true for the first plane, “Flight 11.” If this plane had missed, not only would the North Tower’s destruction have been canceled, but no cameras would have been focused on the Twin Towers, enabling them to capture the iconic pictures of the second plane hit, which became so embedded in worldwide consciousness.

I do not accept that 9/11’s masterminds would have gambled that Mohamed Atta, Marwan al-Shehhi and Hani Hanjour (the alleged hijacker pilots) would have hit their targets in the way it happened, pulling off feats that experienced Boeing pilots have said they could not have achieved.

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