The Guardian (USA)

Robert F Kennedy Jr expresses skepticism at official 9/11 account

- Martin Pengelly in Washington

In a podcast interview, the US presidenti­al hopeful Robert F Kennedy Jr raised a conspiracy theory about 9/11 and also refused to say that al-Qaida was responsibl­e for the attacks on New York and Washington DC.

“I don’t always accept official explanatio­ns,” he said.

Kennedy, 69 and an attorney, is the son of the former US attorney general and New York senator Robert F Kennedy and nephew of President John F Kennedy.

Challengin­g Joe Biden for the Democratic nomination next year, Kennedy lags in polling but has nonetheles­s achieved an unusual level of coverage for an outsider running against an incumbent, in part due to his family history and prominence as an anti-vaccine campaigner.

Kennedy’s podcast interview was with Peter Bergen, host of In the Room and author of books including The Rise and Fall of Osama bin Laden and Manhunt: The Ten-Year Search for Bin Laden from 9/11 to Abbottabad.

Bergen first asked if Kennedy “bought” the official explanatio­n of 9/11, as establishe­d by the bipartisan 9/11 commission, which concluded that alQaida was responsibl­e for the attacks of 11 September 2001, in which planes were flown into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, while another airliner crashed in Pennsylvan­ia. The attacks led to an immediate death toll of 2,977 (and thousands of related deaths since) and stoked more than two decades of war.

Kennedy said: “I don’t know what happened on 9/11. I mean, I understand what the official explanatio­n [for 9/11] is, I understand that there is dissent. I have not looked into it. I haven’t examined it. I’m not a good person to talk to about it.”

Bergen said: “So there’s doubt in your mind that al-Qaida was responsibl­e?”

Kennedy raised a well-known 9/11 conspiracy theory, that 7 World Trade Center, a building close to the twin towers, did not fall because of the attack nearby.

He said: “Well, I know … there’s strange things that happened, that don’t seem … One of the buildings [in

New York] came down that wasn’t hit by a plane, so, you know, was it building seven or building 10?”

Bergen said: “That collapsed because two of the world’s biggest buildings collapsed on top of it.”

Before entering the political scene, Kennedy was an environmen­tal attorney who worked on cleaning the Hudson River.

He said: “No, they didn’t collapse on top of it. My offices were down there [at the bottom of Manhattan]. My offices were closed and you know … there’s pictures of it collapsing. There’s nothing collapsing on top of it.

“I mean, listen, I don’t want to argue any theories about this because all I’ve heard is questions. I have no explanatio­n. I have no knowledge of it. But … what you’re repeating now, I know not to be true.”

Commenting after the interview, Bergen said: “To clarify … the government’s official report found that building seven was hit with debris from the north tower [of the World Trade Center]. That impact caused fires, which led to the building collapse. It’s very well documented and there’s nothing ‘strange’ about it.”

Kennedy continued: “It’s not something that I, you know, any part of [it] I endorse one way or the other, but I do think that it ought to be permissibl­e in this country to question official narratives.” Bergen said: “I couldn’t agree with you more … I’ve spent three decades reporting on al-Qaida, interviewe­d Bin Laden and, you know, spent a lot of my life … going around the world reporting on this.”

Kennedy said he admired Bergen for it.

Bergen continued: “But just on the 9/11 investigat­ion, you know, this was the largest criminal investigat­ion in history. There are 500,000 leads, 170,000 witness interviews. You’re not accepting that that kind of was a – ”

Kennedy said: “Don’t tell me what I’m accepting or not … because I never said I don’t accept that.”

Bergen said: “OK, but what are you saying?”

Kennedy said: “I’m saying I have no expertise in it.”

Bergen said: “But you still have questions about it?”

Kennedy said: “Well … I haven’t read the data myself. And unfortunat­ely for me, Peter, because it’s made my life kind of difficult … I don’t always accept official explanatio­ns.”

Commenting on the exchange, Bergen acknowledg­ed “conspiracy theories out there surroundin­g 9/11” such as those concerning building seven at the World Trade Center.

“But it’s an area where I have looked at the evidence and interviewe­d many hundreds of people myself,” Bergen said. “And if your position is that the 9/11 commission’s explanatio­n of September 11 … is somehow up for question, this kind of extreme skepticism is going to make being president, well, kinda tough.”

 ?? Photograph: Étienne Laurent/EPA ?? Robert F Kennedy said on a podcast that de doesn’t ‘always accept official explanatio­ns’.
Photograph: Étienne Laurent/EPA Robert F Kennedy said on a podcast that de doesn’t ‘always accept official explanatio­ns’.

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