Three days after our original visit, a small group of us returned to Amarijah to gather more facts andanswer unanswered questions. During this time, we thoroughly inspected and photographed the undergroundbasement, and found nothing to indicate a possible military usage. We saw an aid station for the doctors andnurses, a dressing room, a water-tank room, a room for the electrical generator, toilet facilities, but therewas nothing else there—absolutely nothing. I wondered what kind of communications center could have beenplaced here. First of all, there was no extra room for such a center—not unless the civilian facilities hadbeen removed. Second of all, what kind of communications center could have been here—an officer with atransistor radio? What kind of transmissions could have been coming from the basement? None of the photographsI’ve ever seen have indicated an antennae or radio transmitter in the vicinity of the building, and even ifthere was a communications center in the basement, it would have remained intact because the basement of theshelter was completely untouched by the blast. And yet the Pentagon claimed that "the target had beendestroyed as designated." The military simply killed all the women and children upstairs, then claimed themission was a success and never returned to bomb the site again. The intelligence planners also had interiorphotographs and blueprints of the entire shelter (you can download the photographs off the internet) includingthe basement, and yet no effort was made to destroy the basement, even though, this is where the Pentagonclaimed the "command center" was.