Hi pacifist85,
While "adding in" a radius can be a useful 'step' in dealing with a multiple-shape Geometry question, it won't actually help us here.
With the information in Fact 2, we know that we have a right triangle with a hypotenuse of 18, but we don't know ANYTHING else.
With that info, we have A^2 + B^2 = 18^2, but we don't know the actual values of A and B (which we need to figure out the area). If we had info about the other angles, then we COULD figure those sides out though (since we'd have a relationship among the 3 sides based on the angles).
Adding in a radius won't help us figure out any of the other angles (in the big triangle or in either of the smaller triangles).
To figure out the area of the triangle, we need a "base" and a "height." We COULD set the 18 as the base, but we have no way of determining the height without additional information (at least one more of the sides or one of the non-90 degree angles). As such, Fact 2 is INSUFFICIENT.
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich