ÒHijackerÓ
Instructor Described Woeful Skills
Guest column by Hugh Turley
An edited version
of this article was published in the September 2008 Hyattsville (MD) Life and
Times.
To comment on this article go to BÕManÕs Revolt.
This month at the Pentagon a memorial
will be dedicated to the 184 victims who died on September 11, 2001. One of those victims was my high school
ROTC instructor, Max Beilke. On March 29, 1973, Max Beilke was the Òofficial last manÓ to leave Vietnam when the United States was ending its
direct military presence in Vietnam.
When tragedy struck the morning of
September 11 people wondered what had happened. The names and the number of
victims would not be known for weeks.
The following day The Washington Post described how
American Airlines Flight 77 approached the Pentagon, ÒThe unidentified pilot
executed a pivot so tight that it reminded observers of a fighter jet
maneuverÉaviation sources said the plane was flown with extraordinary
skill. Someone even knew how to
turn off the transponder, a move that is considerably less than obvious.Ó
Within days the names of 19 terrorist
hijackers were publicized.
On September 16, Hani Hanjour was named
as the hijacker and pilot aboard American Airlines Flight 77. The
Washington Post said, ÒFederal records show Hani Hanjoor
[sic] obtained a commercial pilotÕs license in April of 1999 with a rating to
fly commercial jetsÓ.
When HanjourÕs name appeared in the
press, Marcel Bernard, the chief flight instructor at the Freeway Airport
in nearby Mitchellville, Md., contacted authorities and reported that Hanjour
had visited the airport.
Hanjour went into the air in a Cessna
172 three times with instructors in August of 2001, a scant month before the
attack on the Pentagon, for a Òcheck outÓ to rent an airplane, Bernard told the
Hyattsville Life and Times. ÒInsurance requires that a person must
be checked out before they can rent a plane at the airport,Ó Bernard said. ÒHanjourÕs skills were so poor we would
not rent a plane to him.Ó
The Prince GeorgeÕs
Journal [Sept. 18,
2001] reported that Hanjour did not finish a flight school in Arizona in 1996
Òbecause instructors felt he was not capable.Ó Bernard recalled that Hanjour did have a
commercial pilotÕs license that had been issued in Arizona, but he was certain
Hanjour did not have what is called a ÒType Rating,Ó which is necessary to fly
commercial jets.
Not only are the requisite piloting
skills different, but a certified commercial jet pilot
must be proficient in English.
Bernard said that HanjourÕs English speaking skills were so poor he
Òcould barely understand him on the telephone.Ó
Bernard said it is possible a person
with some flying experience, even a poor pilot like Hanjour, could steer a
plane in the air and crash it into a building. But, he said, Ò[HanjourÕs] skills were
so poor he may have been aiming for the White House when he hit the Pentagon.Ó
Bernard was asked about the PostÕs report that Òaviation sources
said the plane was flown with extraordinary skillÓ and executed a pivot that
Òreminded observers of a fighter jet maneuver.Ó
ÒThatÕs difficult to believe,Ó he
responded. ÒI donÕt believe a lot
that I read in the newspaper.Ó
He then asked rhetorically, ÒWhose
opinions are those, and who are the unnamed aviation sources?Ó
It is fitting that a memorial should
be dedicated to all the innocent victims who perished on that fateful day. It is also proper that all of our
questions be answered.
April 6, 2015
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