The recent World Public Opinion poll “Who was behind 9/11?” noted that 46 percent correctly responded Al Qaida; 15 percent the United States, and 7 percent Israel. But 7 percent blamed other groups for the crime. I wondered: who might these supposed culprits be?

I called World Public Opinion, but they did not collect this data. Their pollsters were told to place answers in an overall category, not to record individual responses.

I found one creative “answer” in a recent book by ABC foreign correspondent Jim Sciutto, Against Us: The New Face of America’s Enemies in the Muslim World. He wrote:

“An American diplomat serving … in Saudi Arabia told the story of being invited to dinner at the home of a senior Saudi business executive in Riyadh in 2004. After the meal … his host leaned over as if to pass on a secret. He knew who was behind 9/11, he said. The diplomat had heard it all before: the CIA, the Israelis. No, no, the man replied, it was the Japanese. The Japanese had a history of kamikaze attacks, he explained, and they had to take revenge for losing World War II and they were angry at America for overtaking the Japanese economy after the 1980s.”

At a conference last month, I learned some West Africans believe former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, who lost the 2000 election by the narrowest of margins, was behind 9/11. Some people there misinterpreted it as an attempt by Gore to seize state power.

Our creative minds are very good at concocting “reasons” that “explain” why groups that had nothing to do with the September 11 attacks were supposedly “behind” it.