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Welcome To Terrorland

By Daniel Hopsicker

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say three of the four terrorist pilots learned to fly.

Based on hundreds of interviews with eyewitnesses and participants, “Welcome to TerrorLand” details the shocking results of Hopsicker’s yearlong investigation, and names more than a half-dozen individuals Atta went to meetings with while in Florida.

All are living. None are Saudi. You’ll meet people who knew Atta, worked with him, flew with him. They say things like…

“After going to meetings with his German friends, Mohamed always came back glum.”

“I can't really discuss anything. I'm afraid I'll get in trouble. The FBI warned me not to talk.”

“They loaded two Ryder trucks right outside, then drove the trucks right onto a C-130 military cargo plane at Sarasota Airport which flew out with Jeb Bush aboard.”

The book answers questions like: Did nineteen Arab terrorists from desert kingdoms roam the Gulf Coast of Florida as easily as if they'd been listening to Tom Petty albums all their lives? Or were they being trained here in a still-secret covert intelligence operation that somehow went horribly wrong?

Dozens of Arab student pilots learned to fly at two flight schools at the tiny Venice Airport. Each school had just recently been purchased by two separate Dutch nationals. The two Dutch nationals have no connection to each other. Was this just coincidence?

Hopsicker unearths shocking new information about the most intriguing two characters in the Sept. 11th drama: terrorist ringleader Mohamed Atta, and Rudi Dekkers, the Dutch national whose Florida flight school became Atta’s Hamburg cadre’s American beachhead.

Recently Sen. Bob Graham of the Senate Intelligence Committee, "I was surprised at the evidence that there were foreign governments involved in facilitating the activities of at least some of the terrorists in the United States."

Pressed for details by reporters, Graham said, "Most of that information is classified, I think overly-classified... It will become public at some point when it's turned over to the National Archives, but that's 20 or 30 years from now."

If you read “Welcome to TerrorLand you won’t have to wait thirty years. $29.95

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