Talk:The CIA and September 11 (book)

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Good article The CIA and September 11 (book) has been listed as one of the Language and literature good articles under the good article criteria. If you can improve it further, please do. If it no longer meets these criteria, you can delist it, or ask for a reassessment.

Why does this book have a separate entry rather than being part of the article on Andreas von Bülow? It's not note-worthy enough to warrant its own page. Of course, if it is merged with the von Bülow article, the man may sound like a paranoid nut-case rather than a responsible person supporting a noble cause. Ande B. 20:45, 30 March 2006 (UTC)

Try reading Wikipedia:Naming_conventions_(books)#Note_on_notability_criteria --Striver 02:15, 31 March 2006 (UTC)

Hi Striver, I read the section on notability criteria before posing the quesition. My feeling is that the book has not had wide enough circulation in the English speaking community to be deemed "notable" enough to warrant a separate page on the English Wikipedia. It's primary claim to notability is the political position of the author. This info might, however, be well placed on von Bulow's page or on a page specifically addressing arguments and organizations that are compatible with the subject matter. I don't know that getting into the specifics of some of the assertions in the book is very helpful unless you want to precipitate a lot of flames or attacks on the author's believability, motivations and, quite honestly, firmness of mind. The title of the article, referring to the CIA and September 11, might be more attention grabbing than the name Andreas von Bülow but perhaps you could devise adequate links that bring those interesetd in the topic to his page. Ande B 02:37, 31 March 2006 (UTC)

The book really needs to be translated and published in English, before it merits an article here. Also, the English-language version should have wide circulation. -Aude (talk | contribs) 02:48, 31 March 2006 (UTC)

Wikipedia:Naming_conventions_(books)#Note_on_notability_criteria:

Usually, books with an ISBN-number and/or availability in a couple dozen of libraries and/or a Project Gutenberg type website, and with a notability above that of an average cookbook or programmers manual would qualify. --Striver 17:23, 1 April 2006 (UTC)
  • Just for the record, I changed my original vote from Delete to Keep after TheGrappler turned it into a high quality article, answering all my concerns about notability. Ande B 00:45, 8 April 2006 (UTC)

Contents

[edit] Which best seller list?

The article states the book was "number three in the country" but what best seller list was that on? Esquizombi 15:47, 31 March 2006 (UTC)

Fixed: it was the Spiegel's. TheGrappler 03:10, 7 April 2006 (UTC)

[edit] GA

Great work. Balanced and cited coverage of a controversial subject. savidan(talk) (e@) 19:19, 15 April 2006 (UTC)

[edit] articles on books should be on the books

Unfortunately, the entry dealing with the contents of the book is miniscule, while e. g. the criticism of the book, taken mostly from a single "Der Spiegel" article featured much more prominently and convolutedly, even though this article didn't even deal exclusively with the book in question.

I have taken the liberty to correct some of this disproportionality as well as the clear and blatant bias in some parts. Wiki should be neutral, and not the government loudspeaker for what is deemed appropriate thought and criticism. I was escpecially careful to delete any suggestion that von Bülow has a "theory" or "states" something he cannot possibly know or prove. He does not do that as is correctly pointed in the short summary of contents.

Forgot to include signature and time stamp, so here they are:

--Rkrichbaum 03:35, 23 April 2006 (UTC) (previous edits as 84.178.175.61)
Most of the last edits were a good call - the section on the book's content certainly needing a little more disambiguation (the "stronger" claims being made in it were actually the work of a Bulow supporter, not a detractor, though - it can be dangerous to attempt to ascertain an editor's POV!). It's good to include the ARD interviews - the anti-Semitism claims should clearly be balanced with Bulow's rebuttal of the claims, but finding a citation has proven tricky. One thing that is unsatisfactory is that a citation is desperately needed for the ARD interviews - could a properly referenced one be provided? I also removed the reference to the SPD being the governmental party - the article has already established that Bulow is a member of a mainline, not fringe, party, since Bulow was a government minister. Bulow has nothing to do with the current or previous government though - he remains a member of the SPD but has basically drifted to the sidelines. Besides, the current government was established well after this book was published. Where the SPD is relevant is the governmental reaction when the book was published, which ought to be restored. Governmental reaction to a sensitive or controversial book is clearly relevant to an article on it (the SPD government privately distanced themselves from the book; we have a citation for this so it should be included). Also, the book caused a controversy within the German publication industry, not on its substantive content but on whether it was a wise or even ethically or journalistically defensible to publish such a book, especially so soon after 9/11. Why has reference to this been removed? This is a strongly referenced claim - many editors and writers were extremely upset about Piper's decision. The book caused a storm at the world's largest bookfair. How is this not relevant to an article about that book? Articles on books should be on the books is palpably true - but it includes details like: what were the contents of the book? Who wrote it and how was it written? What was the critical and political reaction to the book? Did the book cause any controversies, and if so, what were they and who was upset? Was the book a commercial success? Did it achieve any influence? Book articles shouldn't just be plot rehashes. In this particular instance, the contents of the book were largely unexceptional, as it was effectively a rehash of previously existing material. The controversy and criticism the book sparked were relatively large. A "balanced" article may therefore be expected to focus more on controversy and criticism than substantive content of the book. This article clearly needs more on the content, but in the absence of an English translation, English-language references are hard to come by. It would probably be worth mentioning that Bulow's book was widely misrepresented in the press as actually making substantive claims as opposed to speculation.
It would also be good to track down original critical reviews in the German magazines and newspapers. This would reduce the reliance on the later cover story in the Spiegel. However, that cover story itself became an important media event (the Spiegel cover story was reported worldwide) so it would be wrong to to talk down the importance of it. Spiegel criticised Bulow's methods and claims specifically (though a lot of venom was also directed, individually, at the other writers) so although it was not solely an anti-Bulow piece it remains highly relevant. This should be balanced by the fact the Spiegel cover story itself came under criticism by the global press. Removing the claims that speculation and anti-Americanism have also made appearances in the Spiegel sets up a false dichotomy between Spiegel's criticism and Bulow's work. Theil effectively claimed that Bulow merely occupied a place on a continuum and that Spiegel had sat on that continuum too. For an outsider reading this article now, it may appear that Bulow was actually out on a limb with his apparently outlandish claims, and it took the face of responsible journalism to prove him wrong. Theil suggested the truth of the matter is more complex, and this is relevant to an article on the book on two counts: (1) it contextualises Bulow's work and controversy surrounding it (while allegedly speculative and anti-Americanist, the same allegations have been levelled against more mainstream German publications too) and (2) it undermines the most scathing critical attack the book came under. One more problem:
One of the claims in the book is that only one Israeli citizen died in the attack. This was reported in the New York Times on September 22, 2001, but the Israeli Consulate later asserted that seven Israelis were among the dead in the WTC (it is unclear how many of those were cases of dual citizenship) [8]), and that "a number of indications" exist "that point to some sort of connection between the Israeli Mossad and the act and perpetrators of 9/11."
This paragraph doesn't make sense! Should it be:
One of the claims in the book is that only one Israeli citizen died in the attack. This was reported in the New York Times on September 22, 2001, but the Israeli Consulate later asserted that seven Israelis were among the dead in the WTC (it is unclear how many of those were cases of dual citizenship) [8]. Bulow goes on to suggest that "a number of indications" exist "that point to some sort of connection between the Israeli Mossad and the act and perpetrators of 9/11."?
TheGrappler 00:50, 24 April 2006 (UTC)
Also, on a related point, although Bulow doesn't claim to be a conspiracy theorist, the book has been described as consisting of "conspiracy theories" by: the Telegraph, the FAZ, DW, Newsweek, and taz ([1]). Bulow may say that he is only asking questions, but it ought to be noted that the book is almost universally perceived as part of conspiracy literature. This really ought to be mentioned in the lead, which, at the moment doesn't state what the book is about! The book is also not primarily about the CIA, which is something that ought to be mentioned in the lead (the title suggests otherwise).TheGrappler 01:13, 24 April 2006 (UTC)


I have corrected the paragraph which didn't make sense and included a reference to the ARD interview transcript, hopefully in a satisfactory manner.

As to your other points:

- SPD reaction when the book was published (the SPD government privately distanced themselves from the book; we have a citation for this so it should be included).

I had missed the citation, now I see it's from the Telegraph: "Berlin has made no official response to the book, but behind closed doors ministers have tried to distance themselves from his radical views."

Is this really a verified / verifiable claim? ... "behind closed doors" (as in "sources that refuse to be named"? why on earth would they do that ...) ... "ministers" (how many?) ... "have tried to distance themselves" (really?, how? to what extent? why only tried, not just did it?) "from his radical views" (which ones exactly?). What a mealy-mouthed weasel-worded sentence. I do not even understand what the Telegraph reporter is referring to when she says "radical views". And all of this despite the fact that nobody would think that von Bülow speaks for the current (now former) government in the first place.

- Also, the book caused a controversy within the German publication industry, not on its substantive content but on whether it was a wise or even ethically or journalistically defensible to publish such a book, especially so soon after 9/11.

This is still mentioned in the article. There is no need to refer extensively to such a storm in a teapot - the Börsenblatt and Deutsche Welle are not exactly opinion leaders in Germany and this debate was quickly over.

-Articles on books should be on the books is palpably true - but it includes details like: what were the contents of the book? Who wrote it and how was it written? What was the critical and political reaction to the book? Did the book cause any controversies, and if so, what were they and who was upset? Was the book a commercial success? Did it achieve any influence? Book articles shouldn't just be plot rehashes.

I agree with each and every point. The public controversy was over in a matter of weeks, though. You publicly target someone for anti-Semitism in Germany - and the matter is closed. As to the other anti-no,no - anti-Americanism, the allegation is not as damning, but more often than not used as a broad brush to dismiss anything critical of our dear friends across the Atlantic. Comes up occasionally as a topic, but is far from being a consolidated view or movement or something like that. The "conspiracy theory" allegation is, in part, something new - as von Bülow correctly observes, we don't have such a "culture" of conspiracy theories as the US do - in part it is of course associated with the Nazi's demonization of the Jews.

The latter is the reason why I object to the inclusion of "conspiracy theory" into the lead. In a strictly American context, such a characterisation might be fair. But elsewhere, even if a number of German papers and radio stations "perceive" von Bülow's speculative reasoning as "a conspiracy theory" - the connotation undoubtedly is, especially in combination with the (very vague) allegation of anti-Semitism which is cited in the article: that von Bülow is a Nazi, a closet case at best. And this is simply not true! Let alone supported by facts. There was an organised media campaign against the book - let's not perpetuate this by reducing Wikipedia to an echo of strongly opinionated articles.

--Rkrichbaum 03:29, 26 April 2006 (UTC)

Reply appreciated, as ever. Thanks for your thoughts.
(1) I agree that it is inaccurate for this article to unilaterally characterise the book as conspiracy theorist when its author claims that he is "just asking questions" - indeed, it really is a book of questions more than a book of accusations. (Of course, a question asked in a particular way can be an implicit accusation, but that's another issue...) However, it is also true that the book is almost universally branded as part of conspiracy theorist literature. I think that the best way out would be to mention this in "the book has faced allegations ranging from..." section. It is misrepresentative not to include the fact that the book is almost universally seen as part of conspiracy literature by the press (in fact it also seems to be interpreted as such by the conspiracy theorist community - one of the reasons this book is misunderstood is that pro-conspiracy theorists "adopted" the book, rather unfairly, and that was one of the factors behind the initital inaccurate description of the book's content. It wasn't put there by someone anti-Bulow but by someone who was "pro-Bulow", interpreting Bulow as a fellow-traveller). I can't find a strong citation to back up the way it is seen in the conspiracy theorist community - I will have to do a bit more digging for that, but it would clearly be relevant. The fact that the mainstream press believed (perhaps inaccurately) that the book is conspiracy theorist definitely belongs in the article. It shouldn't be seen as Wikipedia characterising the book, but we should report the characterisations given by others, especially if they are widespread and consistent. We ought to counterbalance it by including Bulow's view of the work. I can't find an interview in which he makes this clear. Do you know if he sees it as primarily a piece of journalistic endeavour, for example?
(2) The lead should make clear that the book doesn't actually accuse the CIA of being behind 9/11. I think we can both agree on that! The book's title probably didn't help when it came to accurate reporting of its contents - it is certainly very provocative.
(3) Yes, I do believe the Telegraph's description of official governmental reaction is relevant and citeable, but perhaps it needs to be better written. For instance: "Official government reaction to the book was mute [this is what the Telegraph description provides as an undisputed fact] but it was reported that ministers privately distanced themselves from its claims [to make it clear that we are relying on a press report which is less easily verified]". Have you heard of the "dog that didn't bark"? The lack of an official government reaction to a controversial book written by a former government minister (and member of the governing party) is still worthy of reporting in itself. Inclusion of this fact answers what is, to my mind, an obvious question: what was the governmental response to a book written by an ex-minister and current member of the governing party? Answer: none officially. Does the comment about ministers' private reaction bear secondary reporting? I think the answer is yes. You asked some pertinent questions (who said what?) but these are questions that can never be expected to be answered in a story like this. The question boils down to "should we report what we do know?" which, in this case, is that the Press reported that ministers' "unofficial" reaction was to distance themselves from Bulow. As a comparison, until more information becomes available about the inner workings of the Bush White House, we can never say (a) "Despite publicly welcoming the visit of the Chinese leadership to the United States, both George W. Bush and Condi Rice privately expressed their distaste for the Chinese Communist politicians whose policies they strongly disagreed with" but we could report in Wikipedia that: (b) "George W. Bush publicly welcomed the visiting Chinese leadership warmly. However, the American press reported [give citation] that leading White House figures privately felt uneasy about the visit of Communist politicians whose policies they found distasteful". Option (c) is simply to report "George W. Bush publicly welcomed the visiting Chinese leadership warmly." Now, (a) we can't do because we would be speculating, based on press reports, who precisely felt what (those "in the know", particularly politicians and political journalists, probably know exactly who, but Wikipedia doesn't, so we can't say). Option (c), though factually correct and verifiable, doesn't reveal the whole truth and is therefore somewhat misleading. Option (b) is fair, balanced and verifiable. Even if the press reports are wrong, they are listed merely as press reports, not infallible facts.
(3) As for the "storm in a teacup" about the debate this caused within the publishing industry - by removing the meat of this section, it is left with a trailing and unsupported sentence in the lead. It probably needed trimming but I think too much information has been removed. A balanced overview of this book should consider: (a) did the journalistic qualities of this book provoke a reaction within the publishing industry (emphatically "yes"; it may have blown over but some people got very angry about it, others felt decidedly uneasy... and it caused a controversy at the world's largest book fair, so it was a storm in a fairly large teacup, as publishing-industry-tea-cups go...) and (b) was the book unusual, or part of a trend, in this regard (i.e. it was found surprising that what was seen as a poorly researched book on a controversial topic was published so soon after the event; was this book a one-off or part of a trend towards what has been seen as a trend towards profit-driven sensationalism, even among reputable publishers?) We have citations to support the latter view. The accuracy, reliability and motives of the press in a free society are of the highest importance, since the citizenry are reliant on the press for our information. This book has been seen as part of a trend towards degradation of the quality and reliability of the press in pursuit of sales figures. I fail to see why this is so unimportant that it doesn't deserve a place in the article, provided we report how "it has been seen" rather than directly accusing it.
(4) Thanks for getting hold of that reference and for sorting out the paragraph that didn't make sense. There's some information I'd like to get hold of but haven't been able to. Do you happen to know how the book was advertised or promoted? Was there a major promotional campaign or was it simply a word-of-mouth best-seller? Also, I'd like to find the original German reviews rather than articles about the post-publication controversy. Did it receive attention in the "Book Reviews" sections of the major newspapers? I can find quotations allegedly from a book review in Spiegel (distinct from the "Panoply" article) but haven't been able to track down any original reviews. Are there any online that anybody here knows of?
Many thanks, TheGrappler 10:29, 29 April 2006 (UTC)

[edit] WikiProjects

I've pulled this page from being under WikiProject Iraq - I can't see how this counts as an Iraq-related article, but people are welcome to add it back if a coherent reason can be given. More suitable projects have been added instead, largely based on those allocated to the primary 9/11 attacks article, USGOV to represent the fact that the CIA is involved, and WikiProject Germany since this is a German book that caused more controversy in Germany than elsewhere. It's possible that this has resulted in project allocation overkill but I've set the importance to "low" to compensate, where possible. TheGrappler 06:40, 4 April 2007 (UTC)

[edit] "Citation required" tags

I will pull one of the "citation required" tags in the lead section (regarding allegations that the book fostered anti-Semitism and/or anti-Americanism), since lead sections are generally not expected to be choked up with references. They should, however, only summarise the following sections of the article. Since the existence of anti-Semitism allegations is backed up by references for later statements in the article, I'm happy that the need for a citation is fulfilled.

There is another statement apparently added by an anti-conspiracy theory editor that has also been flagged as requiring a citation - namely, that the book has no scientific evidence i.e. that it is nonsense. It is beyond the scope of this article to attempt to debunk the entire web of 9/11 conspiracy theories that Bulow was drawing from, so I'll pull the statement entirely. TheGrappler 06:40, 4 April 2007 (UTC)