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BERLIN, July 23 (Reuters) - Almost one in
three Germans below the age of 30 believes the U.S. government may
have sponsored the September 11, 2001, attacks on New York and
Washington, according to a poll published on Wednesday.
And about 20 percent of Germans in all age groups hold this
view, a survey of 1,000 people conducted for the weekly Die Zeit
said.
It also said 68 percent of all Germans felt the media had not
reported the full truth behind the attacks, in which some 3,000
people were killed when hijacked planes were crashed into the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon.
After the September 11 attacks, there was an outpouring of
sympathy from Germans for the United States. Despite misgivings,
Germany joined a military campaign against the al Qaeda network that
Washington blamed for the attacks.
But as the United States geared up for war against Iraq,
relations soured bady as Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder expressed
vocal opposition to the plans.
Although the United States took strong offence at Berlin's
attitude, Schroeder's anti-war stance was popular in Germany and
helped him to snatch victory in last September's elections.
Asked whether they believed that the U.S. government could
have ordered the September 11 attacks itself, 31 percent of those
surveyed under the age of 30 in the poll answered "yes", while 19
percent overall gave the same answer.
Die Zeit said widespread disbelief about the reasons given by
the United States for going to war in Iraq and suspicion about media
coverage of the conflict had fostered a climate in which conspiracy
theories flourished.
"The news is controlled," 17-year old Kenny Donaubaur was
quoted as saying. "You could see that in the Iraq war. It doesn't
seem to me thet you get the full truth."
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