Where's the Remote Control?
Here's my take on the possibility that the 9/11 planes were remote controlled. What do you think?
Some writers have claimed that the 9/11 hijacked airplanes were flown by remote control. So far, nothing has convinced me that the airplanes were controlled remotely.
However, as demonstrated below, the technology did in fact exist to control commercial airplanes by remote control as of September 11, 2001:
"Most modern aircraft have some form of autopilot that could be re-programmed to ignore commands from a hijacker and instead take direction from the ground". See also this article, in which the former head of British Airways "suggested . . . that aircraft could be commandeered from the ground and controlled remotely in the event of a hijack."
Boeing states of its 757-200 (the type of airplane which slammed into the Pentagon), "A fully integrated flight management computer system (FMCS) provides for automatic guidance and control of the 757-200 from immediately after takeoff to final approach and landing."
In fact, before 9/11, remote-controlled planes could fly up to 8600 miles (from the April 24, 2001 edition of Britain's International Television News)
Indeed, more than 40 years ago, the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff suggested shooting down a military drone airplane, pretending it was a real airplane, and then blaming the attack on the Cubans as a way to justify an invasion of Cuba. See also this searchable html version of the relevant documents.
And airplanes could be flown by remote-control least as far back as 1944, as demonstrated by this secret mission by President John F. Kennedy's older brother involving the remote-control flying of a bomb-laden airplane to attack German targets inside France.
And coincidentally, Fox TV ran a fictional drama 6 months before 9/11, in which the U.S. government intended to fly a plane into the World Trade Center via remote control and blame it on terrorists.
So it is beyond doubt that the hijacked planes could have been controlled remotely. Were they?
Well, it is indeed strange that the guy who supposedly flew a huge Boeing 757 into the Pentagon with the skill of a military jet fighter reportedly "could not fly at all". Strange, indeed.
But I am still waiting for convincing proof."





















