Wikileaks releases thousands of pager intercepts from 9/11
- Source: Global Times
- [02:03 November 27 2009]
- Comments
Whistleblower website Wikileaks began publishing Wednesday what it said were hundreds of thousands of pager messages from the day of the September 11, 2001 attacks on New York and Washington.
Wikileaks.org said it was releasing more than half a million US national text pager intercepts covering a 24-hour period on the day when Al Qaeda militants slammed hijacked airliners into the World Trade Center and Pentagon while another plane crashed into a Pennsylvania field, killing nearly 3,000 people.
The first message is from 3 am the day of the attacks, more than five hours before the first attack, and the last is 24 hours later.
Wikileaks did not say how it obtained the pager messages purportedly from companies such as Skytel, Metrocall and Arch Wireless, but technology blogs said they appeared to be genuine.
"The archive is a completely objective record of the defining moment of our time," Wikileaks said. "We hope that its revelation will lead to a more nuanced understanding of the event and its tragic consequences."
The pager intercepts included messages from the New York Police Department, emergency services, the Pentagon, ordinary citizens and computers reporting server errors.
Most have nothing to do with the events themselves.
The messages range from the mundane – "Got plans for lunch today?" or "Did you turn the iron off?" – to the distressed, with people urging loved ones to "Please call ASAP."
A message from 8:50 am, just minutes after the first plane slammed into the World Trade Center, reads: "A plane crashed thru the twin towers. Real bad... BR."
An 8:51 am message reads: "de Center is on FIRE!!!! No Joke. rickc."
At 8:53 am, a police department message from "NYPD Ops Div" calls for action: "Possible explosion World Trade Center Building. Level 3 mobilization to church and vessy."
At 8:54 am, a message from an unidentified sender says: "Confirmed plane crash into the World Trade Center multiunits responding."
Wikileaks allows people to anonymously post documents on the web. It was founded by mathematicians and startup company technologists from the United States, Europe, Australia and South Africa, claims to have received more than 1 million documents from dissident communities and anonymous sources.
AFP




