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Army unit piecing together accounts of Pentagon attack
By MILAN SIMONICH, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
WASHINGTON -- They are soldiers on the capital city's saddest mission.
Each working day, a three-man military history unit uncovers firsthand stories of the Sept. 11 attack on the Pentagon.
The terrorism here killed 189 people, including the five hijackers who
crashed a commercial jet into America's military headquarters.
Now the Army's 305th
Military History Detachment has the job of making sense of the madness.
It is interviewing every willing survivor and witness -- a number that
could climb into the thousands -- to write the U.S. government's book
on the Pentagon assault and the lessons that can be learned from it.
The job is full of pain.
One Army office in the
Pentagon lost 34 of its 65 employees in the attack. Most of those
killed in the office, called Resource Services Washington, were
civilian accountants, bookkeepers and budget analysts. They were at
their desks when American Airlines Flight 77 struck.
Faced with so many
funerals of friends and colleagues, the director of the office, Robert
Jaworski, agonized over which ones to attend. He could not possibly be
at all of them.
Jaworski's plight was
extreme, but not so different from what the military historians find
every day. Just about every witness or survivor gets emotional when
recounting Sept. 11.
"In most interviews
there's a tear or two," said Sgt. 1st Class Dennis Lapic of Industry,
Pa., who is a member of the history unit.
Before Sept. 11, Lapic
spent most of his working life as a territorial sales manager for a
manufacturing company. His duties with the 99th Reserve Support Command
consumed only a few weeks a year. Now he is on active duty with a
two-year assignment to find out everything he can about the attack on
Washington.
That job was daunting
enough for the Army to dispatch a second unit, the 46th Military
History Detachment from Little Rock, Ark., to help with the interviews.
In all, the Army has 66
such units devoted to compiling history from battles and missions
around the world. The Pentagon project is unprecedented because it will
attempt to unravel an attack on domestic soil that indiscriminately
killed civilians.
Even Pearl Harbor was
different in that respect. All but 68 of the 2,403 Americans who died
in the Japanese attack on Hawaii were soldiers and sailors.
More than three months after the Pentagon was hit, nuggets of information continue to emerge as witnesses step forward.
One day last week, Lapic
ventured to Arlington National Cemetery to interview a groundskeeper
who watched in horror as the plane crashed into the Pentagon.
The worker, William
Middleton Sr., was running his street sweeper through the cemetery when
he heard a harsh whistling sound overhead. Middleton looked up and
spotted a commercial jet whose pilot seemed to be fighting with his own
craft.
Middleton said the plane
was no higher than the tops of telephone poles as it lurched toward the
Pentagon. The jet accelerated in the final few hundred yards before it
tore into the building.
"My sweeper has three wheels. I almost tipped it over as I watched," Middleton said.
In those first minutes, he thought he had seen a plane in trouble, not a terrorist attack.
Middleton and his
co-workers at Arlington continued to work Sept. 11 as Washington
offices closed and buildings emptied. The cemetery crew had no choice.
Funerals were scheduled and burials had to be completed, chaos and all.
As Middleton labored, he
could see the destruction less than a mile away at the Pentagon, where
the U.S. military mobilized for war.
Another Arlington worker
who declined to be interviewed in front of the media told a story that
the military historians had not heard in the 244 interviews they had
conducted through last week. The man said a mysterious second plane was
circling the area when the first one attacked the Pentagon.
The interviewers ask
every witness what might have been done to prevent the attack. It is
more than protocol. They want to know if somebody may have seen or
heard something hours or days earlier that could have been useful in
stopping the attack.
When the interviews are
completed, the findings will be published in book form and kept at the
Army Center of Military History. The researchers hope their work will
be a thorough account of the Pentagon attack, as well as a guide on
what should be done to prevent terrorist attacks.
Along with facts for the book, the historians collect tidbits on what the attack did to the nation's psyche.
"I felt complete anger. If I wasn't an old man, I might volunteer to go back into the service," said Middleton, 54.
The history detachments
for the Pentagon project are based at Fort McNair, a Washington post
established in 1791 as Old Arsenal Penitentiary. Until now, the
installation's most notable brush with American history involved the
murder of President Lincoln.
Four people who conspired
with Lincoln assassin John Wilkes Booth were hanged there July 7, 1865.
The executions occurred as a nation torn by civil war tried to heal
itself.
Now the military historians see their research on the Pentagon attack as one way to help people cope with today's crisis.
"There can be a cathartic
effect to people talking about what they have seen and gone through,"
said Maj. Robert Smith of Germantown, Md., commander of the 305th
History Detachment.
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