Oklahoma City OKC Bombing: Demolition Charges Used Inside Building?




Written by Jim Capo
Thursday, 15 October 2009 00:00

OKC Bombing
That is the most likely reason the security camera tapes recently released by the FBI under a Freedom of Information Act request appear to be doctored.
The official line on the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City on April 19th, 1995 is that a couple a guys in a Ryder Rental truck, filled with a backyard brew of fertilzer and fuel oil (ANFO bomb), were able to bring down a major portion of a steel reinforced concrete structure. While that story was being fabricated for mass consumption, investigative reporter Willaim F. Jasper of The New Americanmagazine — flagship publication of The John Birch Society — was digging up the real truth. (Click on cover story photo.)
Jasper called on the expertise of Brigadier General Benton K. Partin (USAF, ret). Partin had spent a career in the military developing ordnance that would get the biggest bang for the buck when it came to destroying things like buildings. Partin's analysis of the blast site and destruction of the Murrah building came down to this:
An ANFO bomb could not have destroyed the structural columns in the Murah building. And, even if military grade explosives were used, a blast in the street could not destroy interior columns while leaving closer more exterior columns intact.  
The conclusion Partin offered was that the Murrah building had most likely been brought down with the use of demolition charges.
Read the full story at JBS.org

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