Al-Qaeda, Saudi Arabia and
Israel
Saudi Arabia is under a new cloud after a
jailed al-Qaeda operative implicated senior
Saudi officials as collaborators with the
terror group – and the shadow could even
darken the political future of Israeli Prime
Netanyahu because of his odd-couple alliance
with Riyadh.
By Robert Parry
The disclosure that convicted
al-Qaeda operative Zacarias Moussaoui has
identified leading members of the Saudi
government as financers of the terrorist
network potentially reshapes how Americans
will perceive events in the Middle East
and creates a risk for Israel’s Likud
government which has forged an unlikely
alliance with some of these same Saudis.
According to a story
in the New York Times on Wednesday,
Moussaoui said in a prison deposition that
he was directed in 1998 or 1999 by Qaeda
leaders in Afghanistan to create a digital
database of the group’s donors and that the
list included Prince Turki al-Faisal, then
Saudi intelligence chief; Prince Bandar bin
Sultan, longtime Saudi ambassador to the
United States; Prince al-Waleed bin Talal, a
prominent billionaire investor; and many
leading clerics.
“Sheikh Osama wanted to
keep a record who give money,” Moussaoui
said in imperfect English — “who is to be
listened to or who contributed to the
jihad.”
Although Moussaoui’s
credibility came under immediate attack from
the Saudi kingdom, his assertions mesh with
accounts from members of the U.S. Congress
who have seen a secret portion of the 9/11
report that addresses alleged Saudi support
for al-Qaeda.
Further complicating the
predicament for Saudi Arabia is that, more
recently, Saudi and other Persian Gulf oil
sheikdoms have been identified as backers of
Sunni militants fighting in Syria to
overthrow the largely secular regime of
President Bashar al-Assad. The major rebel
force benefiting from this support is al-Nusra
Front, al-Qaeda’s affiliate in Syria.
In other words, the Saudis
appear to have continued a covert
relationship with al-Qaeda-connected
jihadists to the present day.
The Israeli
Exposure
And, like the Saudis, the
Israelis have sided with the Sunni militants
in Syria because the Israelis share the
Saudi view that Iran and the so-called
“Shiite crescent” – reaching from Tehran and
Baghdad to Damascus and Beirut – is the
greatest threat to their interests in the
Middle East.
That shared concern has
pushed Israel and Saudi Arabia into a de
facto alliance, though the collaboration
between Jerusalem and Riyadh has been mostly
kept out of the public eye. Still, it has
occasionally peeked out from under the
covers as the two governments deploy their
complementary assets – Saudi oil and money
and Israeli political and media clout – in
areas where they have mutual interests.
In recent years, these
historic enemies have cooperated in their
joint disdain for the Muslim Brotherhood
government in Egypt (which was overthrown in
2013), in seeking the ouster of the Assad
regime in Syria, and in pressing for a more
hostile U.S. posture toward Iran.
Israel and Saudi Arabia
also have collaborated in efforts to put the
squeeze on Russia’s President Vladimir
Putin, who is deemed a key supporter of both
Iran and Syria. The Saudis have used their
power over oil production to drive down
prices and hurt Russia’s economy, while U.S.
neoconservatives – who share Israel’s
geopolitical world view – were at the
forefront of the coup that ousted Ukraine’s
pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych in
2014.
The behind-the-scenes
Israeli-Saudi alliance has put the two
governments – uncomfortably at times – on
the side of Sunni jihadists battling Shiite
influence in Syria, Lebanon and even Iraq.
On Jan. 18, 2015, for instance, Israel
attacked Lebanese-Iranian advisers assisting
Assad’s government in Syria, killing several
members of Hezbollah and an Iranian general.
These military advisors were engaged in
operations against al-Qaeda’s Nusra Front.
Meanwhile, Israel has
refrained from attacking Nusra Front
militants who have seized Syrian territory
near the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights. One
source familiar with U.S. intelligence
information on Syria told me that Israel
has a “non-aggression pact” with these Nusra
forces.
An Odd Alliance
Israel’s odd-couple
alliances with Sunni interests have evolved
over the past several years, as Israel and
Saudi Arabia emerged as strange bedfellows
in the geopolitical struggle against
Shiite-ruled Iran and its allies in Iraq,
Syria and southern Lebanon. In Syria, for
instance, senior Israelis have made
clear they would prefer Sunni extremists to
prevail in the civil war rather than Assad,
who is an Alawite, a branch of Shiite Islam.
In September 2013,
Israel’s Ambassador to the United States
Michael Oren, then a close adviser to
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu,
told the Jerusalem Post that Israel
favored the Sunni extremists over Assad.
“The greatest danger to
Israel is by the strategic arc that extends
from Tehran, to Damascus to Beirut. And we
saw the Assad regime as the keystone in that
arc,” Oren told the Jerusalem Post in
an
interview. “We always wanted
Bashar Assad to go, we always preferred the
bad guys who weren’t backed by Iran to the
bad guys who were backed by Iran.” He said
this was the case even if the “bad guys”
were affiliated with al-Qaeda.
And, in June 2014,
speaking as a former ambassador at an Aspen
Institute conference, Oren expanded on his
position,
saying Israel would even prefer a
victory by the brutal Islamic State over
continuation of the Iranian-backed Assad in
Syria. “From Israel’s perspective, if
there’s got to be an evil that’s got to
prevail, let the Sunni evil prevail,” Oren
said.
Skepticism and
Doubt
In August 2013, when I
first reported on the growing relationship
between Israel and Saudi Arabia in an
article entitled “The
Saudi-Israeli Superpower,” the
story was met with much skepticism. But,
increasingly, this secret alliance has gone
public.
On Oct. 1, 2013, Israeli
Prime Minister Netanyahu hinted at it in his
United Nations General Assembly speech,
which was largely devoted to excoriating
Iran over its nuclear program and
threatening a unilateral Israeli military
strike.
Amid the bellicosity,
Netanyahu dropped in a largely missed clue
about the evolving power relationships in
the Middle East, saying: “The dangers of a
nuclear-armed Iran and the emergence of
other threats in our region have led many of
our Arab neighbors to recognize, finally
recognize, that Israel is not their enemy.
And this affords us the opportunity to
overcome the historic animosities and build
new relationships, new friendships, new
hopes.”
The next day, Israel’s
Channel 2 TV news
reported that senior Israeli
security officials had met with a high-level
Gulf state counterpart in Jerusalem,
believed to be Prince Bandar, the former
Saudi ambassador to the United States who
was then head of Saudi intelligence.
The reality of this
unlikely alliance has now even reached the
mainstream U.S. media. For instance, Time
magazine correspondent Joe Klein
described the new coziness in an
article in the Jan. 19, 2015 issue.
He wrote: “On May 26,
2014, an unprecedented public conversation
took place in Brussels. Two former
high-ranking spymasters of Israel and Saudi
Arabia – Amos Yadlin and Prince Turki
al-Faisal – sat together for more than an
hour, talking regional politics in a
conversation moderated by the Washington
Post’s David Ignatius.
“They disagreed on some
things, like the exact nature of an
Israel-Palestine peace settlement, and
agreed on others: the severity of the
Iranian nuclear threat, the need to support
the new military government in Egypt, the
demand for concerted international action in
Syria. The most striking statement came from
Prince Turki. He said the Arabs had ‘crossed
the Rubicon’ and ‘don’t want to fight Israel
anymore.’”
Though Klein detected only
the bright side of this détente, there was
a dark side as well, as referenced in
Moussaoui’s deposition, which identified
Prince Turki as one of al-Qaeda’s backers.
Perhaps even more unsettling was his listing
of Prince Bandar, who had long presented
himself as a U.S. friend, so close to the
Bush Family that he was nicknamed “Bandar
Bush.”
Moussaoui claimed that he
discussed a plan to shoot down Air Force One
with a Stinger missile with a staff member
at the Saudi Embassy in Washington, at a
time when Bandar was the ambassador to the
United States.
According to the New York
Times article by Scott Shane, Moussaoui said
he was assigned to “find a location where it
may be suitable to launch a Stinger attack
and then, after, be able to escape,” but
that he was arrested on Aug. 16, 2001,
before he could carry out the reconnaissance
mission.
The thought of anyone in
the Saudi embassy, then under the control of
“Bandar Bush,” scheming with al-Qaeda to
shoot down George W. Bush’s Air Force One is
shocking, if true. The notion would have
been considered unthinkable even after the
9/11 attacks, which involved 15 Saudis among
the 19 hijackers.
After those terror attacks
which killed nearly 3,000 Americans, Bandar
went to the White House and persuaded Bush
to arrange for the rapid extraction of bin
Laden’s family members and other Saudis in
the United States. Bush agreed to help get
those Saudi nationals out on the first
flights allowed back into the air.
Bandar’s intervention
undercut the FBI’s chance to learn more
about the ties between Osama bin Laden and
the 9/11 perpetrators by giving FBI agents
only time for cursory interviews with the
departing Saudis.
Bandar himself was close
to the bin Laden family and acknowledged
having met Osama bin Laden in the context of
bin Laden thanking Bandar for his help
financing the jihad project in Afghanistan
during the 1980s. “I was not impressed, to
be honest with you,” Bandar
told CNN’s Larry King about bin
Laden. “I thought he was simple and very
quiet guy.”
The Saudi government
claimed to have broken ties with bin Laden
in the early 1990s when he began targeting
the United States because President George
H.W. Bush had stationed U.S. troops in Saudi
Arabia, but – if Moussaoui is telling the
truth – al-Qaeda would have still counted
Bandar among its supporters in the late
1990s.
Bandar and Putin
Bandar’s possible links to
Sunni terrorism also emerged in 2013 during
a confrontation between Bandar and Putin
over what Putin viewed as Bandar’s crude
threat to unleash Chechen terrorists against
the Sochi Winter Olympics if Putin did not
reduce his support for the Syrian
government.
According to a leaked
diplomatic account of a July 31,
2013 meeting in Moscow, Bandar informed
Putin that Saudi Arabia had strong influence
over Chechen extremists who had carried out
numerous terrorist attacks against Russian
targets and who had since deployed to join
the fight against the Assad regime in Syria.
As Bandar called for a
Russian shift toward the Saudi position on
Syria, he reportedly offered guarantees of
protection from Chechen terror attacks on
the Olympics. “I can give you a guarantee to
protect the Winter Olympics in the city of
Sochi on the Black Sea next year,” Bandar
reportedly said. “The Chechen groups that
threaten the security of the games are
controlled by us.”
Putin responded, “We know
that you have supported the Chechen
terrorist groups for a decade. And that
support, which you have frankly talked about
just now, is completely incompatible with
the common objectives of fighting global
terrorism.”
Bandar’s Mafia-like threat
toward the Sochi games – a version of “nice
Olympics you got here, it’d be a shame if
something terrible happened to it” – failed
to intimidate Putin, who continued to
support Assad.
Less than a month later,
an incident in Syria almost forced President
Barack Obama’s hand in launching U.S. air
strikes against Assad’s military, which
would have possibly opened the path for the
Nusra Front or the Islamic State to capture
Damascus and take control of Syria. On Aug.
21, 2013, a mysterious sarin attack outside
Damascus killed hundreds and, in the U.S.
media, the incident was immediately blamed
on the Assad regime.
American neocons and their
allied “liberal interventionists” demanded
that Obama launch retaliatory air strikes
even though some U.S. intelligence analysts
doubted that Assad’s forces were responsible
and suspected that the attack was carried
out by extremist rebels trying to pull the
U.S. military into the civil war on their
side.
Yet, pushed by the neocons
and liberal war hawks, Obama nearly ordered
a bombing campaign designed to “degrade” the
Syrian military but called it off at the
last minute. He then accepted Putin’s help
in reaching a diplomatic solution in which
Assad agreed to surrender his entire
chemical weapons arsenal, while still
denying any role in the sarin attack.
Later, the Assad-did-it
case crumbled amid new evidence that Sunni
extremists, supported by Saudi Arabia and
Turkey, were the more likely perpetrators of
the attack, a scenario that became
increasingly persuasive as Americans learned
more about the cruelty and ruthlessness of
many Sunni jihadists fighting in Syria. [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “The
Mistaken Guns of Last August.”]
Targeting Putin
Putin’s cooperation with
Obama to head off a U.S. military strike in
Syria made the Russian president more of a
target for the American neocons who thought
they finally had reached the cusp of their
long-desired “regime change” in Syria only
to be blocked by Putin. By late September
2013, a leading neocon, National Endowment
for Democracy President Carl Gershman,
announced the goal of challenging Putin and
recognizing his sore point in Ukraine.
Taking to the Washington
Post’s op-ed page on Sept. 26, 2013,
Gershman
called Ukraine “the biggest
prize” and an important step toward
ultimately ousting Putin. Gershman wrote,
“Ukraine’s choice to join Europe will
accelerate the demise of the ideology of
Russian imperialism that Putin represents.
… Russians, too, face a choice, and Putin
may find himself on the losing end not just
in the near abroad but within Russia
itself.” [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Neocons’
Ukraine-Syria-Iran Gambit.“]
However, in early 2014,
Putin was obsessed with Bandar’s implicit
threat of terrorism striking the Sochi
Olympics, thus distracting him from the
“regime change” – being pushed by NED and
neocon Assistant Secretary of State for
European Affairs Victoria Nuland – next door
in Ukraine.
On Feb. 22, 2014,
putschists, spearheaded by well-organized
neo-Nazi militias, drove elected President
Viktor Yanukovych and his government from
power. Putin was caught off-guard and, in
the resulting political chaos, agreed to
requests from Crimean officials and voters
to accept Crimea back into Russia, thus
exploding his cooperative relationship with
Obama.
With Putin the new pariah
in Official Washington, the neocon hand also
was strengthened in the Middle East where
renewed pressure could be put on the “Shiite
crescent” in Syria and Iran. However, in
summer 2014, the Islamic State, which had
splintered off from al-Qaeda and its Nusra
Front, went on a rampage, invading Iraq
where captured soldiers were beheaded. The
Islamic State then engaged in gruesome
videotaped decapitations of Western hostages
inside Syria.
The Islamic State’s
brutality and the threat it posed to the
U.S.-backed, Shiite-dominated government of
Iraq changed the political calculus. Obama
felt compelled to launch airstrikes against
Islamic State targets in both Iraq and
Syria. American neocons tried to convince
Obama to expand the Syrian strikes to hit
Assad’s forces, too, but Obama realized such
a plan would only benefit the Islamic State
and al-Qaeda’s Nusra Front.
In effect, the neocons
were showing their hand – much as Israeli
Ambassador Oren had done – favoring the
Sunni extremists allied with al-Qaeda over
Assad’s secular regime because it was allied
with Iran. Now, with Moussaoui’s deposition
identifying senior Saudi officials as
patrons of al-Qaeda, another veil seems to
have dropped.
Complicating matters
further, Moussaoui also claimed that he
passed letters between Osama bin Laden and
then Crown Prince Salman, who recently
became king upon the death of his brother
King Abdullah.
But Moussaoui’s disclosure
perhaps cast the most unflattering light on
Bandar, the erstwhile confidant of the Bush
Family who — if Moussaoui is right — may
have been playing a sinister double game.
Also facing potentially
embarrassing questions is Israeli Prime
Minister Netanyahu, especially if he
goes through with his planned speech before
a joint session of Congress next month,
attacking Obama for being soft on Iran.
And, America’s neocons might
have some explaining to do about why they
have carried water not just for the Israelis
but for Israel’s de facto allies in Saudi
Arabia.
Investigative reporter
Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra
stories for The Associated Press and
Newsweek in the 1980s. You can buy his
latest book, America’s Stolen
Narrative, either in print
here or
as an e-book (from
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