"WE
HAVE SOME PLANES"
Excerpt from the 9/11
Commission Report
Tuesday,
September 11, 2001, dawned temperate and nearly cloudless
in the eastern United States.
Millions of men and women readied themselves for work. Some made their way to
the Twin Towers,
the signature structures of the World Trade Center
complex in New York City.
Others went to Arlington, Virginia, to
the Pentagon. Across the Potomac River,
the United States Congress was back in session. At the other end of Pennsylvania
Avenue, people began to line up
for a White House tour. In Sarasota, Florida,
President George W. Bush went for an early morning run.
For those heading to an airport, weather conditions
could not have been better for a safe and pleasant journey. Among the travelers
were Mohamed Atta and Abdul Aziz
al Omari, who arrived at the airport in Portland, Maine.
1.1 INSIDE THE FOUR FLIGHTS
Boarding the Flights
Boston: American 11 and United
175. Atta and Omari boarded a 6:00
A.M. flight from Portland to Boston's Logan International Airport.
When he checked in for his flight to Boston, Atta was selected by a computerized prescreening system
known as CAPPS (Computer Assisted Passenger Prescreening System), created to
identify passengers who should be subject to special security measures. Under
security rules in place at the time, the only consequence of Atta's selection by CAPPS was that his checked bags were
held off the plane until it was confirmed that he had boarded the aircraft.
This did not hinder Atta's plans.
Atta and
Omari arrived in Boston at 6:45. Seven minutes later, Atta apparently took a call from Marwan
al Shehhi, a longtime colleague who was at another
terminal at Logan Airport. They spoke for three minutes. It would be their
final conversation.
Between 6:45 and 7:40, Atta
and Omari, along with Satam
al Suqami, Wail al Shehri,
and Waleed al Shehri,
checked in and boarded American Airlines Flight 11, bound for Los Angeles. The
flight was scheduled to depart at 7:45.
. .
Atta, Omari, and Suqami took their
seats in business class (seats 8D, 8G, and 10B, respectively). The Shehri brothers had adjacent seats in row 2 (Wail in 2A,Waleed in 2B), in the first-class cabin. They boarded
American 11 between 7:31 and
7:40.
The aircraft pushed back from the gate at 7:40.
Shehhi and
his team . . . boarded United 175 between 7:23 and
7:28. Their aircraft pushed back from the gate just
before 8:00.
Washington Dulles: American 77. Hundreds of miles
southwest of Boston, at
Dulles International Airport in
the Virginia
suburbs of Washington, D.C.,
five more men were preparing to take their early morning flight. At 7:15, a pair of them, Khalid al Mihdhar and Majed Moqed, checked in at the
American Airlines ticket counter for Flight 77, bound for Los
Angeles. Within the next 20 minutes, they
would be followed by Hani Hanjour
and two brothers, Nawaf al Hazmi
and Salem al Hazmi. . .
Mihdhar and
Moqed placed their carry-on bags on the belt of the
X-ray machine and proceeded through the first metal detector. Both set off the
alarm, and they were directed to a second metal detector. Mihdhar
did not trigger the alarm and was permitted through the checkpoint. After Moqed set it off, a screener wanded him. He passed this inspection.
About 20 minutes later, at 7:35, another passenger for
Flight 77, Hani Han-jour, placed two carry-on bags on
the X-ray belt in the Main Terminal's west checkpoint, and proceeded, without
alarm, through the metal detector. A short time later, Nawaf
and Salem al Hazmi entered the same checkpoint. Salem
al Hazmi cleared the metal detector and was permitted
through; Nawaf al Hazmi set
off the alarms for both the first and second metal detectors and was then hand-wanded before being passed. In addition, his
over-the-shoulder carry-on bag was swiped by an explosive trace detector and
then passed. The video footage indicates that he was carrying an unidentified
item in his back pocket, clipped to its rim.
At 7:50, Majed Moqed and Khalid al Mihdhar boarded the
flight and were seated in 12A and 12B in coach. Hani Hanjour, assigned to seat 1B (first class), soon followed.The Hazmi brothers, sitting
in 5E and 5F, joined Hanjour in the first-class
cabin.
Newark: United 93. Between 7:03 and 7:39, Saeed al Ghamdi, Ahmed al Nami, Ahmad al Haznawi, and Ziad Jarrah checked in at the
United Airlines ticket counter for Flight 93, going to Los Angeles. Two checked
bags; two did not. . .
The four men boarded the plane between 7:39 and 7:48. All four had seats in the
first-class cabin; their plane had no business-class section. Jarrah was in seat 1B, closest to the cockpit; Nami was in 3C, Ghamdi in 3D, and
Haznawi in 6B.
The 19 men were aboard four transcontinental flights.
They were planning to hijack these
planes and turn them into large guided missiles, loaded with up to 11,400
gallons of jet fuel. By 8:00 A.M. on the morning of Tuesday, September 11, 2001,
they had defeated all the security layers that America's civil aviation
security system then had in place to prevent a hijacking.
The Hijacking of American
11
American Airlines Flight 11 provided nonstop service from Boston to Los
Angeles. On September 11, Captain John Ogonowski and
First Officer Thomas McGuinness piloted the Boeing
767. It carried its full capacity of nine flight attendants. Eighty-one
passengers boarded the flight with them (including the five terrorists).
The plane took off at 7:59. Just before 8:14, it had climbed to
26,000 feet, not quite its initial assigned cruising altitude of 29,000 feet.
All communications and flight profile data were normal. About this time the
"Fasten Seatbelt" sign would usually have been turned off and the
flight attendants would have begun preparing for cabin service.
At that same time, American 11 had its last routine
communication with the ground when it acknowledged navigational instructions
from the FAA's air traffic control (ATC) center in Boston. Sixteen
seconds after that transmission, ATC instructed the aircraft's pilots to climb
to 35,000 feet. That message and all subsequent attempts to contact the flight
were not acknowledged. From this and other evidence, we believe the hijacking
began at 8:14 or
shortly thereafter.
Reports from two flight attendants in the coach cabin,
Betty Ong and Madeline "Amy" Sweeney, tell
us most of what we know about how the hijacking happened. As it began, some of
the hijackers-most likely Wail al Shehri and Waleed al Shehri, who were seated
in row 2 in first class, stabbed the two unarmed flight attendants who would
have been preparing for cabin service.
We do not know exactly how the hijackers gained access to
the cockpit; FAA rules required that the doors remain closed and locked during
flight. Ong speculated that they had "jammed
their way" in. Perhaps the terrorists stabbed the flight attendants to get
a cockpit key, to force one of them to open the cockpit door, or to lure the
captain or first officer out of the cockpit. Or the flight attendants may just
have been in their way.
At the same time or shortly thereafter, Atta-the only terrorist on board trained to fly a jet-would
have moved to the cockpit from his business-class seat, possibly accompanied by
Omari. As this was happening, passenger Daniel Lewin, who was seated in the row just behind Atta and Omari, was stabbed by
one of the hijackers-probably Satam al Suqami, who was seated directly behind Lewin.
Lewin had served four years as an officer in the
Israeli military. He may have made an attempt to stop the hijackers in front of
him, not realizing that another was sitting behind him.
The hijackers quickly gained control and sprayed Mace,
pepper spray, or some other irritant in the first-class cabin, in order to
force the passengers and flight attendants toward the rear of the plane. They
claimed they had a bomb.
About five minutes after the hijacking began, Betty Ong contacted the
American Airlines Southeastern Reservations Office in Cary, North
Carolina, via an AT&T airphone to report an emergency aboard the flight. This was
the first of several occasions on 9/11 when flight attendants took action
outside the scope of their training, which emphasized that in a hijacking, they
were to communicate with the cockpit crew. The emergency call lasted
approximately 25 minutes, as Ong calmly and
professionally relayed information about events taking place aboard the
airplane to authorities on the ground.
At 8:19, Ong reported: "The cockpit is not answering,
somebody's stabbed in business class-and I think there's Mace-that we can't breathe-I don't know, I think we're getting
hijacked." She then told of the stabbings of the two flight attendants.
At 8:21, one of the American employees receiving Ong's call in North Carolina, Nydia Gonzalez, alerted the
American Airlines operations center in Fort Worth, Texas, reaching Craig
Marquis, the manager on duty. Marquis soon realized this was an emergency and
instructed the airline's dispatcher responsible for the flight to contact the
cockpit. At 8:23, the dispatcher tried unsuccessfully to contact the aircraft.
Six minutes later, the air traffic control specialist in American's operations
center contacted the FAA's Boston Air Traffic Control Center about the flight.
The center was already aware of the problem.
Boston Center
knew of a problem on the flight in part because just before 8:25 the hijackers had
attempted to communicate with the passengers. The microphone was keyed, and
immediately one of the hijackers said, "Nobody move.
Everything will be okay. If you try to make any moves, you'll endanger yourself
and the airplane. Just stay quiet." Air traffic controllers heard the
transmission; Ong did not. The hijackers probably did
not know how to operate the cockpit radio communication system correctly, and thus inadvertently broadcast their message
over the air traffic control channel instead of the cabin public-address
channel. Also at 8:25, and again at 8:29, Amy Sweeney got through to the
American Flight Services Office in Boston but was cut off after she reported
someone was hurt aboard the flight. Three minutes later, Sweeney was
reconnected to the office and began relaying updates to the manager, Michael
Woodward.
At 8:26, Ong reported that the
plane was "flying erratically." A minute later, Flight 11 turned
south. American also began getting identifications of the hijackers, as Ong and then Sweeney passed on some of the seat numbers of
those who had gained unauthorized access to the cockpit.
Sweeney calmly reported on her line that the plane had
been hijacked; a man in first class had his throat slashed; two flight
attendants had been stabbed-one was seriously hurt and was on oxygen while the
other's wounds seemed minor; a doctor had been requested; the flight attendants
were unable to contact the cockpit; and there was a bomb in the cockpit.
Sweeney told Woodward that she and Ong were trying to
relay as much information as they could to people on the ground.
At 8:38, Ong told Gonzalez
that the plane was flying erratically again. Around this time Sweeney told
Woodward that the hijackers were Middle Easterners, naming three of their seat
numbers. One spoke very little English and one spoke excellent English. The
hijackers had gained entry to the cockpit, and she did not know how. The
aircraft was in a rapid descent.
At 8:41, Sweeney told Woodward that passengers in coach
were under the impression that there was a routine medical emergency in first
class. Other flight attendants were busy at duties such as getting medical
supplies while Ong and Sweeney were reporting the
events.
At 8:41, in
American's operations center, a colleague told Marquis that the air traffic
controllers declared Flight 11 a hijacking and "think he's [American 11]
headed toward Kennedy [airport in New
York City].They're moving everybody
out of the way. They seem to have him on a primary
radar. They seem to think that he is descending."
At 8:44,
Gonzalez reported losing phone contact with Ong.
About this same time Sweeney reported to Woodward," Something is wrong. We
are in a rapid descent . . . we are all over the place." Woodward asked
Sweeney to look out the window to see if she could determine where they were.
Sweeney responded: "We are flying low. We are flying very, very low. We
are flying way too low." Seconds later she said, "Oh my God we are
way too low." The phone call ended.
At 8:46:40,
American 11 crashed into the North Tower of
the World Trade Center in New
York City. All on board, along with an unknown number of
people in the tower, were killed instantly.
The Hijacking of United 175
United Airlines Flight 175 was scheduled to depart for Los
Angeles at 8:00.
Captain Victor Saracini and First Officer Michael Horrocks piloted the Boeing 767, which had seven flight
attendants. Fifty-six passengers boarded the flight.
United 175 pushed back from its gate at 7:58 and departed Logan Airport at 8:14. By 8:33, it had reached its
assigned cruising altitude of 31,000 feet. The flight attendants would have
begun their cabin service.
The flight had taken off just as American 11 was being
hijacked, and at 8:42 the
United 175 flight crew completed their report on a "suspicious
transmission" overheard from another plane (which turned out to have been
Flight 11) just after takeoff. This was United 175's last communication with
the ground.
The hijackers attacked sometime between 8:42 and 8:46.They used knives
(as reported by two passengers and a flight attendant), Mace (reported by one
passenger), and the threat of a bomb (reported by the same passenger). They
stabbed members of the flight crew (reported by a flight attendant and one
passenger). Both pilots had been killed (reported by one flight attendant).The
eyewitness accounts came from calls made from the rear of the plane, from
passengers originally seated further forward in the cabin, a sign that
passengers and perhaps crew had been moved to the back of the aircraft. Given
similarities to American 11 in hijacker seating and in eyewitness reports of tactics
and weapons, as well as the contact between the presumed team leaders, Atta and Shehhi, we believe the
tactics were similar on both flights.
At 8:52, in
Easton, Connecticut, a
man named Lee Hanson received a phone call from his son Peter, a passenger on
United 175. His son told him: "I think they've taken over the cockpit-An
attendant has been stabbed- and someone else up front may have been killed. The
plane is making strange moves. Call United Airlines-Tell them it's Flight 175, Boston to
LA." Lee Hanson then called the Easton Police Department and relayed what
he had heard.
At 8:58,
the flight took a heading toward New
York City.
At 8:59,
Flight 175 passenger Brian David Sweeney tried to call his wife, Julie. He left
a message on their home answering machine that the plane had been hijacked. He
then called his mother, Louise Sweeney, told her the flight had been hijacked,
and added that the passengers were thinking about storming the cockpit to take
control of the plane away from the hijackers.
At 9:00,
Lee Hanson received a second call from his son Peter:
It's
getting bad, Dad-A stewardess was stabbed-They seem to have knives and
Mace-They said they have a bomb-It's getting very bad on the plane-Passengers
are throwing up and getting sick-The plane is making jerky movements-I don't
think the pilot is flying the plane-I think we are going down-I think they
intend to go to Chicago or someplace and fly into a building-Don't worry, Dad-
If it happens, it'll be very fast-My God, my God.
The call ended abruptly. Lee Hanson had heard a woman
scream just before it cut off. He turned on a television, and in her home so
did Louise Sweeney. Both then saw the second aircraft hit the World Trade Center.
At 9:03:11,
United Airlines Flight 175 struck the South Tower of
the World Trade Center.51 All on board, along with an unknown number
of people in the tower, were killed instantly.
The Hijacking of American
77
American Airlines Flight 77 was scheduled to depart from Washington Dulles for Los
Angeles at 8:10. The aircraft was a Boeing 757 piloted
by Captain Charles F. Burlingame and First Officer David Charlebois.
There were four flight attendants. On September 11, the flight carried 58
passengers.
American 77 pushed back from its gate at 8:09 and took off at 8:20. At 8:46, the flight reached its
assigned cruising altitude of 35,000 feet. Cabin service would have begun. At 8:51, American 77 transmitted
its last routine radio communication. The hijacking began between 8:51 and 8:54. As on American 11 and
United 175, the hijackers used knives (reported by one passenger) and moved all
the passengers (and possibly crew) to the rear of the aircraft (reported by one
flight attendant and one passenger). Unlike the earlier flights, the Flight 77
hijackers were reported by a passenger to have box cutters. Finally, a
passenger reported that an announcement had been made by the "pilot"
that the plane had been hijacked. Neither of the firsthand accounts mentioned
any stabbings or the threat or use of either a bomb or Mace, though both
witnesses began the flight in the first-class cabin.
At 9:12,
Renee May called her mother, Nancy
May, in Las Vegas.
She said her flight was being hijacked by six individuals who had moved them to
the rear of the plane. She asked her mother to alert American Airlines. Nancy May
and her husband promptly did so.
At some point between 9:16 and 9:26, Barbara Olson called her husband, Ted
Olson, the solicitor general of the United
States. She reported that the
flight had been hijacked, and the hijackers had knives and box cutters. She
further indicated that the hijackers were not aware of her phone call, and that
they had put all the passengers in the back of the plane. About a minute into
the conversation, the call was cut off. Solicitor General Olson tried
unsuccessfully to reach Attorney General John Ashcroft.
Shortly after the first call, Barbara Olson reached her
husband again. She reported that the pilot had announced that the flight had
been hijacked, and she asked her husband what she should tell the captain to
do. Ted Olson asked for her location and she replied that the aircraft was then
flying over houses. Another passenger told her they were traveling northeast.
The Solicitor General then informed his wife of the two previous hijackings and
crashes. She did not display signs of panic and did not indicate any awareness
of an impending crash. At that point, the second call was cut off.
At 9:37:46,
American Airlines Flight 77 crashed into the Pentagon, traveling at
approximately 530 miles per hour.61 All on
board, as well as many civilian and military personnel in the building, were
killed.
The Battle for United 93
At 8:42,
United Airlines Flight 93 took off from Newark (New
Jersey) Liberty International Airport
bound for San Francisco.
The aircraft was piloted by Captain Jason Dahl and First Officer Leroy Homer,
and there were five flight attendants. Thirty-seven passengers, including the
hijackers, boarded the plane. Scheduled to depart the gate at 8:00, the Boeing 757's takeoff
was delayed because of the airport's typically heavy morning traffic.
The hijackers had planned to take flights scheduled to
depart at 7:45
(American 11), 8:00
(United 175 and United 93), and 8:10
(American 77). Three of the flights had actually taken off within 10 to 15
minutes of their planned departure times. United 93 would ordinarily have taken
off about 15 minutes after pulling away from the gate. When it left the ground
at 8:42,
the flight was running more than 25 minutes late.
As United 93 left Newark,
the flight's crew members were unaware of the hijacking of American 11.Around 9:00, the FAA, American, and
United were facing the staggering realization of apparent multiple hijackings.
At 9:03,
they would see another aircraft strike the World Trade Center.
Crisis managers at the FAA and the airlines did not yet act to warn other
aircraft.64 At the same time, Boston Center
realized that a message transmitted just before 8:25 by the hijacker pilot of American 11
included the phrase, "We have some planes."
No one at the FAA or the airlines that day had ever
dealt with multiple hijackings. Such a plot had not been carried out anywhere
in the world in more than 30 years, and never in the United
States. As news of the hijackings
filtered through the FAA and the airlines, it does not seem to have occurred to
their leadership that they needed to alert other aircraft in the air that they
too might be at risk.
By all accounts, the first 46 minutes of Flight 93's
cross-country trip proceeded routinely. Radio communications from the plane
were normal. Heading, speed, and altitude ran according to plan. At 9:24, Ballinger's warning to
United 93 was received in the cockpit. Within two minutes, at 9:26, the pilot, Jason Dahl,
responded with a note of puzzlement: "Ed, confirm latest mssg plz-Jason."
The hijackers attacked at 9:28. While traveling 35,000 feet above
eastern Ohio,
United 93 suddenly dropped 700 feet. Eleven seconds into the descent, the FAA's
air traffic control center in Cleveland
received the first of two radio transmissions from the aircraft. During the
first broadcast, the captain or first officer could be heard declaring
"Mayday" amid the sounds of a physical struggle in the cockpit. The
second radio transmission, 35 seconds later, indicated that the fight was
continuing. The captain or first officer could be heard shouting:" Hey get
out of here-get out of here-get out of here."
On the morning of 9/11, there were only 37 passengers on
United 93-33 in addition to the 4 hijackers. This was below the norm for
Tuesday mornings during the summer of 2001. But there is no evidence that the
hijackers manipulated passenger levels or purchased additional seats to
facilitate their operation.
At 9:32, a
hijacker, probably Jarrah, made or attempted to make the following announcement to
the passengers of Flight 93:"Ladies and Gentlemen: Here the captain,
please sit down keep remaining sitting. We have a bomb on board. So, sit."
The flight data recorder (also recovered) indicates that Jarrah
then instructed the plane's autopilot to turn the aircraft around and head
east.
The cockpit voice recorder data indicate that a woman,
most likely a flight attendant, was being held captive in the cockpit. She
struggled with one of the hijackers who killed or otherwise silenced her.
Shortly thereafter, the passengers and flight crew began
a series of calls from GTE airphones and cellular
phones. These calls between family, friends, and colleagues took place until
the end of the flight and provided those on the ground with firsthand accounts.
They enabled the passengers to gain critical information, including the news
that two aircraft had slammed into the World Trade Center.
At 9:39,
the FAA's Cleveland Air Route Traffic Control Center
overheard a second announcement indicating that there was a bomb on board, that
the plane was returning to the airport, and that they should remain seated.78
While it apparently was not heard by the passengers,
this announcement, like those on Flight 11 and Flight 77, was intended to
deceive them. Jarrah, like Atta
earlier, may have inadvertently broadcast the message because he did not know
how to operate the radio and the intercom. To our knowledge none of them had
ever flown an actual airliner before.
At least two callers from the flight reported that the
hijackers knew that passengers were making calls but did not seem to care. It
is quite possible Jarrah knew of the success of the
assault on the World Trade Center. He
could have learned of this from messages being sent by United Airlines to the
cockpits of its transcontinental flights, including Flight 93, warning of
cockpit intrusion and telling of the New
York attacks. But even without them, he
would certainly have understood that the attacks on the World Trade Center
would already have unfolded, given Flight 93's tardy departure from Newark. If
Jarrah did know that the passengers were making
calls, it might not have occurred to him that they were certain to learn what
had happened in New York,
thereby defeating his attempts at deception.
At least ten passengers and two crew members shared
vital information with family, friends, colleagues, or others on the ground.
All understood the plane had been hijacked. They said the hijackers wielded
knives and claimed to have a bomb. The hijackers were wearing red bandanas, and
they forced the passengers to the back of the aircraft.
Callers reported that a passenger had been stabbed and
that two people were lying on the floor of the cabin, injured or dead-possibly
the captain and first officer. One caller reported that a flight attendant had
been killed.
One of the callers from United 93 also reported that he
thought the hijackers might possess a gun. But none of the other callers
reported the presence of a firearm. One recipient of a call from the aircraft
recounted specifically asking her caller whether the hijackers had guns. The
passenger replied that he did not see one. No evidence of firearms or of their
identifiable remains was found at the aircraft's crash site, and the cockpit
voice recorder gives no indication of a gun being fired or mentioned at any
time. We believe that if the hijackers had possessed a gun, they would have
used it in the flight's last minutes as the passengers fought back.
Passengers on three flights reported the hijackers'
claim of having a bomb. The FBI told us they found no trace of explosives at
the crash sites. One of the passengers who mentioned a bomb expressed his
belief that it was not real. Lacking any evidence that the hijackers attempted
to smuggle such illegal items past the security screening checkpoints, we
believe the bombs were probably fake.
During at least five of the passengers' phone calls,
information was shared about the attacks that had occurred earlier that morning
at the World Trade Center.
Five calls described the intent of passengers and surviving crew members to
revolt against the hijackers. According to one call, they voted on whether to
rush the terrorists in an attempt to retake the plane. They decided, and acted.
At 9:57,
the passenger assault began. Several passengers had terminated phone calls with
loved ones in order to join the revolt. One of the callers ended her message as
follows: "Everyone's running up to first class. I've got to go. Bye."
The cockpit voice recorder captured the sounds of the
passenger assault muffled by the intervening cockpit door. Some family members
who listened to the recording report that they can hear the voice of a loved
one among the din. We cannot identify whose voices can be heard. But the
assault was sustained.
In response, Jarrah
immediately began to roll the airplane to the left and right, attempting to
knock the passengers off balance. At 9:58:57, Jarrah told another hijacker in the cockpit to block the
door. Jarrah continued to roll the airplane sharply
left and right, but the assault continued. At 9:59:52, Jarrah
changed tactics and pitched the nose of the airplane up and down to disrupt the
assault. The recorder captured the sounds of loud thumps, crashes, shouts, and
breaking glasses and plates. At 10:00:03, Jarrah stabilized the airplane.
Five seconds later, Jarrah
asked, "Is that it? Shall we finish it off?" A hijacker responded,
"No. Not yet. When they all come, we finish it off." The sounds of
fighting continued outside the cockpit. Again, Jarrah
pitched the nose of the aircraft up and down. At 10:00:26, a passenger in the
background said, "In the cockpit. If we don't we'll die!" Sixteen
seconds later, a passenger yelled, "Roll it!" Jarrah
stopped the violent maneuvers at about 10:01:00 and
said, "Allah is the greatest! Allah is the greatest!" He then asked
another hijacker in the cock-pit, "Is that it? I mean, shall we put it
down?" to which the other replied, "Yes, put it in it, and pull it
down."
The passengers continued their assault and at 10:02:23, a hijacker said,
"Pull it down! Pull it down!" The hijackers remained at the controls
but must have judged that the passengers were only seconds from overcoming
them. The airplane headed down; the control wheel was turned hard to the right.
The airplane rolled onto its back, and one of the hijackers began shouting
"Allah is the greatest. Allah is the greatest." With the sounds of
the passenger counterattack continuing, the aircraft plowed into an empty field
in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, at 580 miles per hour,
about 20 minutes' flying time from Washington, D.C.
Jarrah's
objective was to crash his airliner into symbols of the American Republic,
the Capitol or the White House. He was defeated by the alerted, unarmed passengers
of United 93.