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April 10, 2007
The Unsolved Anthrax Case: Maybe They're Just Not Looking In The Right Places
And by the right places, I mean the obvious places. The FBI decided from the get-go that the references to Allah and poor spelling and letter-writing were not legit, but were an attempt by a rightwing wacko or, even more preposterously, a civic-minded fellow who merely wished to demonstrate the danger anthrax posed and hence created an anthrax panic to wake the government up to this menace.
This unknown person just happened to have very finely milled of high technical sophistication ready to go on 9/11, and immediately began sending out his anthrax to take advantage of the cover 9/11 had given him.
Maybe the FBI should focus a little more on the obvious explanation that doesn't rely so much on chance and coincidence and strange motives: the letters were sent out by the 9/11 hijackers, or confederates who were instructed to send out the letters to coincide with the chaos.
Which leads to the next question: If Al Qaeda had anthrax in 2001, how come it doesn't seem to have any more now?
Maybe -- just maybe -- they got it from a state producer of WMDs, a state sponsor of terrorism who quickly destroyed its anthrax capability when it saw what bin Ladin had done, and realized the serious, deadly blowblack that would ensue for anyone connected to the mass slaughter of 9/11 and the anthrax terrorism that coincided with it.
Who -- who in the all the world -- could that possibly be?
A must read from Dr. Laurie Mylorie.
Thanks to Larwyn.