The Secret Saudi Ties to
Terrorism
By Daniel Lazare
March 13, 2015 "ICH"
- "Consortium
News" - The
U.S.-Saudi alliance is coming under
unprecedented strain. Everything seems to be
going wrong. Up in arms over growing Shi‘ite
resistance in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Bahrain
and Yemen, the ultra-Sunnis in Riyadh are
alarmed that Obama continues to press ahead
with arms negotiations in Teheran, from its
viewpoint the center of the Shi‘ite
conspiracy.
Saudis want the U.S. to
overthrow Syria’s Assad in return for its
cooperation in the fight against ISIS, yet
Washington is signaling that it wouldn’t
mind if the Baathists remain in power in
Damascus a while longer. Similarities
between Saudi methods and those of the
Islamic State – both have a peculiar
fondness for beheadings – are harder and
harder to ignore. But with Saudi executions
now running at triple the 2014 rate
according to
Amnesty International, the Saudis
are pressing on regardless.
Even the kingdom’s
decision to award a $200,000 prize to an
Indian tele-preacher named Zakir Naik for
“services to Islam” seems like a deliberate
thumb in the eye of the United States. Naik,
who has been banned from entering Canada or
the U.K., is a Salafist nightmare who
attacks evolution, defends al-Qaeda, and
claims that George W. Bush was secretly
responsible for 9/11. What is Riyadh’s point
other than to flip Washington the bird?
But the ultimate body blow
may prove to be Zacarias Moussaoui’s
sensational testimony in an anti-Saudi
lawsuit filed by 9/11 survivors. Now serving
a life sentence in a federal supermax prison
in Florence, Colorado, Moussaoui, the
so-called “twentieth hijacker,” told lawyers
about top-level Saudi support for Osama bin
Laden right up to the eve of 9/11 and even a
plot by a Saudi embassy employee to sneak a
Stinger missile into the U.S. under
diplomatic cover and use it to bring down
Air Force One.
Moussaoui’s list of
ultra-rich al-Qaeda contributors couldn’t be
more stunning. It includes the late King
Abdulllah and his hard-line
successor, Salman bin Abdulaziz; Turki Al
Faisal, the former head of Saudi
intelligence and subsequently ambassador to
the U.S. and U.K.; Bandar bin Sultan, a
longtime presence in Washington who was so
close to the Bushes that Dubya nicknamed him
Bandar Bush; and Al-Waleed bin Talal, a
mega-investor in Citigroup, Rupert Murdoch’s
News Corporation, the Hotel George V in
Paris, and the Plaza in New York.
These are people whom a
series of U.S. presidents have fussed and
fawned over – not just Bushes I and II, but
Obama, who
bowed deeply at the waist upon
meeting Abdullah in April 2009. Yet
according to Moussaoui, the princes provided
bin Laden with millions of dollars needed to
engineer the deaths of nearly 3,000 people
in Lower Manhattan.
Considering how 9/11 has
driven U.S. foreign policy, then the
consequences are staggering. Teapot Dome?
Watergate? If Moussaoui’s story turns out to
be true, then the latter will really seem
like the “third-rate burglary” that Nixon
always made it out to be.
An Inside View
So the first question to
ask concerns Moussaoui credibility. Should
we believe the guy? How credible is he? The
short answer is: very.
Admittedly, Moussaoui is a
nut job whose behavior during his trial in
U.S. federal court was often bizarre. He
refused to enter a plea, tried to fire his
court-appointed attorneys, filed a motion
describing the presiding judge as a
“pathological killer … with ego-boasting
dementia,” and described the U.S. as “United
Sodom of America.”
But as the New York Times
points out, Judge Leonie M.
Brinkema said she was “fully satisfied that
Mr. Moussaoui is completely competent,”
adding that he is “an extremely intelligent
man” with “a better understanding of the
legal system than some lawyers I’ve seen in
court.”
In his testimony last
October – the transcripts of which became
public early last month – he comes across as
calm and lucid, a man eager to tell what he
knows about bin Laden’s terror operation and
its connections with the uppermost rungs of
Saudi society.
What’s more, what he has
to say is highly plausible. His account not
only accords with what we know about Saudi
Arabia’s otherwise opaque power structure,
but seems to shed light on a few things we
don’t.
The most obvious concerns
Saudi Arabia’s 7,000 or so princes and their
riotous lifestyle. The kingdom is famous for
banning alcohol, virtually all types of
public entertainment, and the slightest
sexual displays. Yet its over-paid,
under-worked royals are no less notorious
for stampeding to the airport cocktail
lounge as soon as they touch down in
Cairo or Dubai and then jetting
off to the plushest casinos and brothels
that Europe has to offer.
So if mullahs can’t
tolerate the sight of a woman’s bare arm,
then why do they put up with such
licentiousness? The answer, according to
Moussaoui, is that the ulema, as
the mullahs are collectively known, does so
because of the leverage it gains.
“Ulema, essentially they
are the king maker,” he
testified. “If the ulema say that
you should not take power, you are not going
to take power.”
Since the mullahs have the
power to label as an apostate anybody who
drinks, fornicates (i.e. engages in illicit
sex), or practices homosexuality –
collective behavior which apparently covers
virtually the entire royal family – then the
effect is to give the ulema a veto
over who is eligible for the throne and who
is not. The more the princes misbehave, the
more control the ulema acquires
over Saudi politics as a whole.
Another puzzle concerns
why the Saudi establishment would continue
channeling funds to bin Laden even after a
war of words had broken out over the
stationing of U.S. troops in Saudi Arabia
during the 1990-91 Gulf War. Former CIA
counter-intelligence chief Robert Grenier
has seized on the issue to discredit
Moussaoui’s testimony out of hand.
“The reason Osama bin
Laden went to Sudan in the 1990s in the
first place was because he was under
pressure from the Saudi government,” Grenier
told
the
Guardian. “The idea they’d be
supporting him under any circumstances, and
in particular in an attack on the U.S., is
inconceivable.
But Moussaoui’s version is
more nuanced than Grenier’s rather
self-serving description of the Saudis as
reliable partners would suggest. When asked
why Saudi princes would contribute to
someone who had turned against them,
Moussaoui replied that bin Laden had not
turned against all of the princes, merely
some of them:
“He went against Fahd, but
he didn’t want to go against … Abdullah Saud
and Turki and the people who have been
classified by … the ulema as …
criminal, but not apostate.”
The mullahs, no less
xenophobic than bin Laden, despised
then-King Fahd because he had OK’d the
stationing of U.S. troops in “the land of
the two holy mosques.” But while Abdullah
was also guilty of certain offenses
according to the ulema – hence
Moussaoui’s description of him as a
“criminal” – they did not add up to
apostasy, or abandonment of Islam, a far
more serious offense.
The mullahs were therefore
willing to cut him some slack, according to
Moussaoui, in the hope that he would steer
the kingdom back in a more authentically
Muslim direction. “[T]he ulema told
him [bin Laden] not to wage war against Al
Saud,” Moussaoui said, “because Fahd was
going to die and therefore that Abdullah Al
Saud will take power and he will reestablish
a true power.”
If we accept Moussaoui’s
description of the mullahs as kingmakers,
then this makes sense. As to why the princes
would funnel aid to bin Laden as opposed to
some other would-be terrorist mastermind,
Moussaoui is helpful as well. Post-9/11,
Bandar bin Sultan
dismissed bin Laden as a flaky
no-account who “couldn’t lead eight ducks
across the street.”
But in his testimony,
Moussaoui describes bin Laden as a capable
organizer who built a complicated jihadi
movement from the ground up. Since holy war
is expensive, he was dependent on
large-scale infusions of cash and
equipment. As Moussaoui put it in his
less-than-perfect English:
“[A]ll this money were
there … especially to set up the camp,
because nothing was there, it was the
desert, so we have to pay Afghan to dig a
well, you have to dig to build the base for
tent and camp and medical, everything was
created from scratch, it was very expensive,
OK? … I mean, hundred of thousand of dollar
on a weekly basis, you know? You have a lot
of car, you have to pay for the maintenance
of the tank and dozer, OK, and all of the
spare part. … And everybody would get
expense … every child have X amount of
money, every woman have X amount of money,
every person have X amount of money … a
quite substantial [amount] of money.”
Since 9/11 was nothing if
not smoothly organized, Moussaoui’s
description of bin Laden as a skilled
operator makes sense as well. Moussaoui
notes that bin Laden stood high in the
religious establishment’s esteem, much
higher, in fact, than the princes.
Bin Laden’s father, the
Yemeni-born construction magnate Mohammed
bin Awad bin Laden, had been best friends
with Saudi Arabia’s founding king, Ibn Saud,
and had been entrusted with rebuilding or
restoring Islam’s three holiest sites – the
Grand Mosque in Mecca, the Prophet’s Mosque
in Medina, and the Al-Aqsa Mosque in
Jerusalem.
Since Mohammed bin Laden
was pure gold in the eyes of the ulema as
a consequence, Osama was 24-karat
as well. “So bin Laden was pure,” Moussaoui
said, “a pure Wahhabi [who] will obey the
Wahhabi scholar to the letter” – loyalty
that the mullahs fully repaid.
When asked what Abdullah,
Turki and other top-rank royals hoped to get
in exchange for contributing to bin Laden’s
organization, Moussaoui replied that “it was
a – a matter of survival for them, OK,
because all of the mujahideen … the hard
core believe that … Al Fahd was an apostate,
so they would have wanted jihad against
Saudi Arabia.”
If Wahhabi hardliners
believed that Fahd was a renegade, then they
might say the same of other high-living
royals, in which case the princes would have
to run for their lives. Funding bin Laden
was a cheap way to remain in the mullahs’
good graces and continue raking in profits.
Real Power behind
the Throne
Bin Laden was thus the ulema’s
fair-haired boy, and since the princes were
already skating on thin ice, they had to be
nice to him so that the mullahs would be
nice to them in return. Referring to top
Wahhabi theologians Abd al-Aziz ibn Baz
and Muhammad ibn al Uthaymeen, Moussaoui
said:
“He [bin Laden] was doing
it [waging jihad] with the express advice
and consent and directive of the ulema. He
will not have a single persons coming from
Saudi Arabia if the ulema and Baz or
Uthaymeen state this man is wrong. … Not to
say he’s an apostate … just he’s wrong …
everybody will have left, except the North
African maybe.”
One word from the mullahs
and bin Laden would have found himself cut
off – or so Moussaoui maintains. If talk of
an all-powerful ulema seems a mite
over the top, other experts agree that their
clout is difficult to exaggerate.
Mai Yamani, an independent
scholar who is the daughter of the famous
Saudi oil minister Ahmed Zaki Yamani,
describes the Wahhabis, for
instance, as “the kingdom’s de facto
rulers,” noting that that they control not
only the mosques and religious police, but
all 700 judgeships, religious education in
general (which comprises half the school
curriculum), and other ministries as well.
While the House of Saud
has proved adept at co-opting the mullahs
and keeping in their place, decades of oil
money have resulted in a hypertrophied
religious sector to which attention must be
paid. [See Thomas Hegghammer, Jihad in
Saudi Arabia: Violence and Pan-Islamism
since 1979 (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ.
Press, 2010), pp. 232-33]
So princes tread lightly
in the ulema’s presence. This seems
to have been especially the case during the
delicate post-1995 period when Fahd
continued to cling to the throne even though
crippled by stroke and Abdullah ruled in all
but name. One king was out, but the other
was not yet in, which is why the religious
establishment’s approval was more critical
than ever.
Thus, the princes eagerly
did the ulema’s bidding, funding
bin Laden’s activities abroad and only
putting their foot down, according to
Moussaoui, when it came to jihad at
home. While Osama was free to do what he
liked in Afghanistan and elsewhere, the
princes drew the line at “do[ing] stuff in
your … backyard.”
Moussaoui, who says he was
put to work compiling a financial database
upon joining al Qaeda in late 1998,
describes flying by private plane to Riyadh
as a special courier.
“We went in … to a private
airport,” he recalled. “[T]here was a car,
we get into a car, a limousine, and I was
taken to a place, it was like a Hilton
Hotel, OK, and the next morning … Turki came
and we went … to a big room, and there was
Abdullah and there was Sultan, Bandar, and
there was Waleed bin Talal and Salman” –
i.e., the Saudi crème de la crème. When
asked if the princes knew why he was there,
he said yes: “I was introduced as the
messenger for Sheik Osama bin Laden.”
Moussaoui says that
prominent Saudis visited bin Laden’s camp in
Afghanistan in return: “There was a lot of
bragging about I been to Sheik Osama bin
Laden, I been to Afghanistan, I’m the real
deal, I’m a real mujahid, I’m a real fighter
for Allah.”
He says that bin Laden’s
mother visited too, testimony that has also
led to attacks on his credibility since he
says that Hamid Gul, chief of Pakistan’s
Inter-Service Intelligence, helped arrange
it even though Gul by that time had been out
of office for a
decade. But Gul is a powerful
player in Pakistan’s murky politics to this
day, so the notion that he would help
organize a visit by bin Laden’s mother even
though no longer head of the ISI is hardly
farfetched.
The Guardian
has also labeled as “improbable” Moussaoui’s
tale of smuggling a Stinger missile into the
U.S. under diplomatic immunity in order to
shoot down Air Force One. But Moussaoui was
careful to note that it was not a prince who
suggested such an operation, but a
comparatively lowly member of the Saudi
Embassy’s Islamic Department in Washington.
Moreover, the proposal
“was not to launch the attack, it was only
to see [to] the feasibility of the
attack.” If, as he says, the Wahhabi
cleric Muhammad ibn al Uthaymeen did indeed
issue a fatwa declaring that embassy
personnel “had a personal obligation to help
the jihad if they can, even if they were not
order[ed] by … the Saudi government,” then
it is hardly inconceivable that an
individual Wahhabi militant might have
decided to take matters into his own hands.
The Cover-Up
None of this means that
Moussaoui’s charges are true, merely that
they’re plausible and therefore merit
further investigation. But what makes them
even more persuasive is the behavior of
those in a position to know, not only the
Saudis but the Americans as well.
Since virtually the moment
the Twin Towers fell, top officials have
behaved in a way that would tax the
imagination of even the most fevered
conspiratorialist. Two days after 9/11, Bin
Sultan, the Saudi ambassador at the time,
met with Bush, Dick Cheney, and National
Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice, after
which 144 Saudi nationals, including two
dozen members of the Bin Laden family, were
allowed to fly out of the country with at
most cursory questioning by the FBI.
The Bush administration
dragged its feet in the face of two official
investigations, a joint congressional
inquiry that began in February 2002 and an
independent commission under Thomas Kean and
Lee H. Hamilton the following November. When
Abdullah visited Bush at his Texas ranch in
April 2002, the question of 9/11 hardly came
up.
When a reporter pointed
out that 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudis,
Bush cut him short, saying, “Yes, I – the
crown prince has been very strong in
condemning those who committed the murder of
U.S. citizens. We’re constantly working
with him and his government on intelligence
sharing and cutting off money … the
government has been acting, and I appreciate
that very much.”
Yet just a month earlier,
former FBI assistant director Robert
Kallstrom had said of the Saudis, “It
doesn’t look like they’re doing much, and
frankly it’s nothing new.” In April 2003,
Philip Zelikow, the independent commission’s
neocon executive director, fired an
investigator, Dana Leseman, when she proved
too vigorous in probing the Saudi
connection. [See Philip Shenon, The
Commission: The Uncensored History of the
9/11 Investigation (New York: Twelve,
2008), pp. 110-13]
Strangest of all is the
famous 28-page chapter from the 2002 joint
congressional report dealing with the
question of Saudi complicity. While the
congressional report was heavily redacted,
the chapter itself was suppressed in its
entirety. Obama promised 9/11 widow Kristen
Breitweiser shortly after taking office that
he would see to it that the section was
de-classified, yet nothing has been done.
Why did Obama go back on
his word? Is it the text itself that’s so
explosive? Or do the Saudis have something
on the U.S., something very damaging, that
they are threatening to release if it tries
to blame them for 9/11? All we can do is
speculate.
The Great
Unraveling
The U.S. and Saudi Arabia
are a pair of odd fellows if ever there was
one. One is a liberal republic in the
classic Nineteenth Century definition of the
term while the other is perhaps the most
illiberal society on the face of the
earth. One is officially secular while the
other is an absolute theocracy.
One professes to believe
in diversity while the other imposes a
suffocating uniformity, banning all
religions other than Wahhabist Islam,
forbidding “atheist thought in any form,”
and prohibiting participation in
any conference, seminar, or other gathering,
at home or abroad, that might have the
effect of “sowing
discord.” One claims to oppose
terrorism while the other “constitute[s] the
most significant source of funding to Sunni
terrorist groups worldwide,” according to no
less an authority than
Hillary Clinton.
The alliance has served
the imperial agenda but at appalling cost.
This includes not only 9/11 and ISIS, which
Joe Biden
said the Saudis and others Arab
gulf states funded to the tune of “hundreds
of millions of dollars,” but the Charlie
Hebdo massacre in Paris as well, which was
financed by Al Qaeda in the Arabian
Peninsula, a group that,
according to former U.S.
Ambassador to Morocco Marc Ginsberg, has
also benefited from Saudi Arabia and other
Arab gulf largesse.
This is the dark side of
the alliance that Washington has struggled
to keep under wraps. But Moussaoui’s
testimony is an indication that it may not
be able to do so for much longer.
Daniel Lazare is the author
of several books including
The Frozen Republic: How
the Constitution Is Paralyzing Democracy
(Harcourt Brace).