Zalmay Khalizad Central to the 9-11 Operation

Read this bio of Zalmay Khalizad and you will see how central this man is and was to the 9-11 False Flag event. This comes from Wikkipedia and he should be one of the prime suspects and persons to be questioned should we ever get a real investigation.

Zalmay Mamozy Khalilzad (Nastaliq: زلمی خلیلزاد - Zalmay Khalīlzād) (born: 22 March 1951) is a counselor at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) and president of Khalilzad Associates. He was the United States Ambassador to the United Nations under President George W. Bush. He has been involved with U.S. policy makers at the White House since the early 1980s, and was the highest-ranking Muslim American in the Administration of U.S. President George W. Bush.[2] Khalilzad's previous assignments in the Administration include U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan and U.S. Ambassador to Iraq.

[edit] Early history and personal life
Zalmay Khalilzad was born in the city of Mazari Sharif in northern Afghanistan. Khalilzad's father (Khalilullah Khalilzad) was a government official under the monarchy of Mohammed Zahir Shah.[3] He is an ethnic Pashtun,[4][5] and his mother tongue is Persian (Dari).[6] He also speaks English, Arabic and Pashto.

Khalilzad began his education at the public Ghazi Lycée school in Kabul. He first visited the United States as a Ceres, California high school exchange student with AFS Intercultural Programs. Later, he attained his bachelor's and master's degrees from the American University of Beirut in Lebanon. Khalilzad received his Ph.D at the University of Chicago, where he studied closely with strategic thinker Albert Wohlstetter, a prominent nuclear deterrence thinker and an opponent to the disarmament treaties, who provided Zalmay with contacts in the government and with RAND.[2]

Khalilzad is married to Cheryl Benard. They have two children, Alexander and Maximilian.

[edit] Career history
From 1979 to 1989, Khalilzad worked as an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs. During that time he worked closely with Zbigniew Brzezinski, the Carter Administration's architect of the policy supporting the mujahideen resistance to the Soviet Union's invasion of Afghanistan.[2] (See also: Operation Cyclone.)

In 1984 Khalilzad accepted a one-year Council on Foreign Relations fellowship to join the State Department, where he worked for Paul Wolfowitz, then the Director of Policy Planning.

From 1985 to 1989, Khalilzad served in President Ronald Reagan's Administration as a senior State Department official advising on the Soviet war in Afghanistan and the Iran–Iraq War. During this time he was the State Department's Special Advisor on Afghanistan to Undersecretary of State Michael H. Armacost. In this role he developed and guided the international program to promote the merits of a Mujahideen-led Afghanistan to oust the Soviet occupation. From 1990-1992, Khalilzad served under President George H. W. Bush in the Defense Department as Deputy Undersecretary for Policy Planning.

Between 1993 and 2000, Khalilzad was the Director of the Strategy, Doctrine, and Force Structure at the RAND Corporation. During this time, he helped found RAND's Center for Middle Eastern Studies as well as "Strategic Appraisal," a periodic RAND publication. He also authored several influential monographs, including "The United States and a Rising China" and "From Containment to Global Leadership? America and the World After the Cold War." While at RAND, Khalilzad also had a brief stint consulting for Cambridge Energy Research Associates, which at the time was conducting a risk analysis for Unocal, now part of Chevron, for a proposed 1,400 km (890 mile), $2-billion, 622 m³/s (22,000 ft³/s) Trans-Afghanistan gas pipeline project which would have extended from Turkmenistan to Afghanistan and further proceeding to Pakistan. He acted as a special liaison between UNOCAL and the Taliban regime.[3] As one of the original members of Project for the New American Century, Khalilzad was a signatory of the letter to President Bill Clinton sent on January 26, 1998, which called for him to accept the aim of "removing Saddam Hussein and his regime from power" using "a full complement of diplomatic, political and military efforts."[7]

Khalilzad presenting President George W. Bush a ballot from the first democratic election in Afghanistan on 18 October 2004.In 2001, President George W. Bush asked Khalilzad to head the Bush-Cheney transition team for the Department of Defense and Khalilzad briefly served as Counselor to Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. In May 2001, National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice announced Khalilzad's appointment as Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for Southwest Asia, Near East, and North African Affairs at the National Security Council. In December 2002 the President appointed Khalilzad to the position of Ambassador at Large for Free Iraqis with the task of coordinating "preparations for a post-Saddam Hussein Iraq."[8]

After the terrorist attacks of 9/11, President Bush came to rely on Khalilzad's Afghanistan expertise. Khalilzad was involved in the early stages of planning to overthrow the Taliban and on December 31, 2001 was selected as Bush's Special Presidential Envoy for Afghanistan. He served in that position until November 2003, when he was appointed to serve as U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan.

Khalilzad held the position of U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan from November 2003 until June 2005. During this time, he oversaw the drafting of Afghanistan's constitution, was involved with the country's first elections, and helped to organize the first meeting of Afghanistan's parliament (the Loya Jirga). At the June, 2002, Loya Jirga to select the Head of State, Khalilzad personally strong-armed the former king of Afghanistan, 87-year old Zahir Shah, to withdraw from consideration, even though a majority of Loya Jirga delegates supported him, a move which angered Pashtuns who were concerned with the disproportionate power of the Northern Alliance in the Karzai government.[9] He subsequently denied it, claiming that "It was just a rumor, don't believe in rumors." It was also well known that Afghan President Hamid Karzai was very reliant on Khalilzad's guidance, not making the smallest decision as President without first calling Khalilzad on his mobile phone[citation needed]. However, Khalilzad denied this.[10] During 2004 and 2005 he was also involved in helping with the establishment of the American University of Afghanistan (AUAF), which is the first American-style higher learning educational institution in Afghanistan.[11]

[edit] Time as U.S. Ambassador to Iraq
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Zalmay Khalilzad and U.S. Army General George Casey attend a transfer of security responsibility ceremony in Baghdad, Iraq, in September 2006.Khalilzad began his job as U.S. Ambassador to Iraq on June 21, 2005. He was credited for helping negotiate compromises which allowed the ratification of Iraq's Constitution in October 2005, which allows for the partitioning of Iraq into different regions along ethnic lines. Khalilzad also worked to ensure that the December 2005 elections ran smoothly and played a substantial role in forming the current government. Khalilzad was one of the first high-level Administration officials to warn that sectarian violence was overtaking the insurgency as the number one threat to Iraq's stability. After the Al Askari shrine bombing, in February 2006, he warned that spreading sectarian violence might lead to civil war — and possibly even a broader conflict involving neighboring countries.

Khalilzad's term as Ambassador to Iraq ended on March 26, 2007. He was replaced by Ryan Crocker, a career diplomat who was serving as Ambassador to Pakistan previously.

[edit] United States Ambassador to the United Nations
On 12 February 2007, the White House submitted Khalilzad's nomination to the Senate to become U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations.[12] He was confirmed by the Democratic-controlled U.S. Senate on March 29, 2007 by a unanimous voice vote.[13] This marked a strong contrast to Khalilzad's predecessor, John R. Bolton, whose often controversial rhetoric caused him to fail to be confirmed by the United States Senate resulting in a recess appointment. Colleagues at the UN noted that Khalilzad has a different, more reconciling style than Bolton's.[14]

In November 2007, Khalilzad charged that Iran is helping the insurgent groups in Afghanistan and Iraq. He also told the media, soon after the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) released its report on Iran, that the Iranian government is clearly going ahead with its nuclear program. Khalilzad explained that the United States will try to pass another resolution in the U.N. Security Council under Chapter 7, to impose additional sanctions on Iran.[15]

Khalilzad, along with most U.S. politicians, supported Kosovo's independence.

In August 2008, he urged the UN Security Council to "take urgent action" and "condemn Russia's military assault on the sovereign state of Georgia,"[16] in addition to stating that Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov had told Secretary of State Rice that Georgian president Mikheil Saakashvili "must go."[17]

[edit] Writing on U.S. leadership
Khalilzad wrote several articles on the subject of the value of U.S. global leadership in the mid-1990s. The specific scenarios for conflict he envisioned in the case of a decline in American power have made his writings extremely popular in the world of competitive high school and college policy debate, particularly his writing linking the loss of United States hegemony to global war.

Khalilzad, Zalmay (1995). "Losing the moment? The United States and the world after the Cold War". The Washington Quarterly 18:2: 03012.
[edit] Bid to become "chief executive officer" of Afghanistan
The New York Times reported May 18, 2009 that Zalmay Khalilzad "could assume a powerful, unelected position inside the Afghan government under a plan he is discussing with Hamid Karzai, the Afghan president, according to senior American and Afghan officials." That this plan has been discussed with the State Department. Khalilzad had pursued the Presidency of Afghanistan but missed the May 8 filing deadline.[18]

The Associated Press quotes Zalmay Khalilzad as saying "I am not negotiating with President Karzai to become Afghanistan's CEO".[19]

Neocon Scum

IMO Khalilzad most likely had some involvement in the 9/11 false flag attacks, he was the ultimate Bush / Cheney neocon insider and he served his masters well. One important fact that is not covered above is that Khalilzad worked for Wolfowitz in the Department of Defense when Cheney was the Secretary of Defense under Bush 41. In 1992, Khalizad, Wolfowitz, Libby, and Perle drafted the annual Defense Planning Guide which for the first time articulated a strategy of US global supremacy based on overwhelming military power (aka Wolfowitz Doctrine). When the draft was leaked to the press, the Bush administration had the document rewritten and referred to its authors as the "nuts in the basement." Unfortunately, these very same nuts where the people who later ran and controlled the Bush 43 presidency and who brought us 9/11, two Middle Eastern wars / occupations, and well over a trillion dollars flushed down the toilet in the facade of a "war on terror."

The truth is hidden from most

Apathy Supports the Status Quo

Good points, Miachilany, wouldn't it be nice to see these people and issues discussed on the public airwaves instead of the drivel and parade of useless distractions manufactured by the corporate fascist media?

They sell these wars as necessary to preserve our freedoms, well what about the freedom of open public dialog? The fact that there is no discussion of the oil and gas pipelines and strategic issues suggests strong culpability in the 9-11 terrorist event by the CEOs and boards of directors of the MSM. Justice is based on truth. The MSM hides the truth from the public. Fascism is the way in today's America and most people are too distracted with conspicuous consumption and banal entertainment to notice. They feel things are going to hell, but can't be bothered to ask questions and seek answers.