Gladly. I'm reluctant though to start a political discussion.
All Star Trek stories, no matter how fantastic, are about characters whose behavior and motivation are grounded in the real world. Longing for revenge, seeking god, assassinating political leaders to sabotage peace talks, relocating native people to harvest their land's ressources, we find that all in history and today's society. Now, Marcus' plan to sabotage Enterprise and sacrifize her to justify a war, that's like a Navy admiral sinking his own aircraft carrier to provoke a war with China. He would need this vessel in said war, especially after recently losing a whole fleet of eight ships the previous year. Plus, I doubt that such a corrupt admiral can be found in any democratically legitimated military. These people feel responsible and care for their subordinates.
9/11 truthers - like STID's screenwriters - believe that Bush blew up the WTC to justify a war against terror. If he really wanted so he would have found a more appropriate way than killing 3000 innocents and crippling the economy - that's common sense. Even Hitler knew better.
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gleiwitz_incident
The premise of STID though is basically a nod to the 9/11 conspiracy. From unscrupulous leaders to collapsing skyscrapers.
The same escapism from reality can be seen in their interpretation of Section 31. In the original universe it was a powerful but secretive organisation. They knew how to efficiently achieve their goals by doing what was forbidden for all other Federation personnel while staying undetected.. Now they are... SHIELD from MARVEL. Limitless funds, better equipped than any other organization. Yet nobody is aware. What's the price tag for the latest Ford-class carrier? 13 billion? How to you get four times that amount passed in Congress for your flying carrier without letting them know?
And don't get me started on Vengeance. There have always been ambitious projects in Trek - Excelsior, Genesis for instance. And they failed, like in our world projects might hit a wall. But not our beloved 'three times the speed Dreadnought', built over night. Behind Jupiter. Where no one gonna find it.
NuTrek is not SciFi, it's comic book fantasy. Because it sells better they think. Here's where I draw the line.