Bin Laden’s End: The Truth Comes Out
What we’re learning from Seymour Hersh’s bombshell story
By Justin Raimondo
May 13, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Antiwar"-
Who
said this?:“I’m not saying that they’re at the
highest levels, but I believe that somewhere in this government are people who
know where Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda is, where Mullah Omar and the leadership
of the Afghan Taliban is, and we expect more cooperation to help us bring to
justice, capture or kill those who attacked us on 9/11."
That was Hillary Clinton, almost exactly four years ago.
Her remarks caused a storm of controversy – not in the US,
where suspicion of the Pakistanis was rife, but in Pakistan, where the US was
already in trouble
due to drone attacks that routinely kill innocent civilians. Presidential
spokesman Farhatullah Babar denied the American Secretary of State’s
accusations, but he did so in a way that, in retrospect, hardly seems like a
denial at all: "If there were officials who knew where bin Laden was,” he
averred, “I can assure you that he would not be a free man.”
But of course, according to Seymour Hersh’s 10,000-word
piece in the London Review of Books, he wasn’t a free man
during his years in protective custody in the Abbottabad hideaway so
conveniently close to ISI headquarters and within spitting distance of the
capital city of Islamabad. There were steel doors on the entrance to his third
story quarters and armed guards posted, all of it subsidized by the Saudis. The
ailing and elderly Osama bin Laden was a prisoner, and had been since 2006.
Amid the hysterics in our state-worshipping “mainstream”
media, where the accomplices of power are busy echoing the denials of various
government officials, the key element of Hersh’s stunning exposé is being
steadfastly ignored, and it is this:
“A worrying factor at this early point,
according to the retired official, was Saudi Arabia, which had been financing
bin Laden’s upkeep since his seizure by the Pakistanis. ‘The Saudis didn’t want
bin Laden’s presence revealed to us because he was a Saudi, and so they told the
Pakistanis to keep him out of the picture. The Saudis feared if we knew we
would pressure the Pakistanis to let bin Laden start talking to us about what
the Saudis had been doing with al-Qaeda And they were dropping money – lots
of it. The Pakistanis, in turn, were concerned that the Saudis might spill the
beans about their control of bin Laden. The fear was that if the US found out
about bin Laden from Riyadh, all hell would break out. The Americans learning
about bin Laden’s imprisonment from a walk-in was not the worst thing.'”
What would have been “the worst thing”?
Imagine if bin Laden, instead of being killed – in a
firefight, according to the Official Government-Approved Story, or simply
murdered, according to Hersh – had been captured alive. If Hersh’s reporting is
correct – and I believe it is – then a whole can of worms Washington has gone to
a great deal of trouble to keep sealed would
have come pouring out.
Peter Bergen, the British born author and terrorism expert,
has come out against the Hersh revelations guns blazing: it’s a “farrago
of nonsense,” he spluttered, because the Saudis are the sworn enemies of
al-Qaeda, which has vowed to overthrow the monarchy. Yet this assumes “the
Saudis” are a monolith, that there are no al-Qaeda supporters or sympathizers
within the royal family and governmental apparatus. But this assumption is
totally unwarranted, as former Senator
Bob Graham of
Florida – once head of the Senate Intelligence Committee – and those members of
Congress who have read the censored 28 pages of the
Joint Inquiry
into Intelligence Community Activities Before and After the Terrorist Attacks of
September 11, 2001 would no doubt argue.
Those
28
pages deal with the involvement of certain foreign governments in the events
leading up to the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the
Pentagon. Members of Congress are allowed to read them, but must do so in the
presence of intelligence officials in a soundproof bug-proof underground room:
they cannot take notes, or reveal what they have read to anyone. President
Obama, when he ran for office,
promised the families of the 9/11 victims he would declassify those pages,
but has so far not done so.
Those who have direct knowledge of the information contained
therein are unequivocal about which country assisted the 9/11 hijackers in their
grisly, fateful task. Graham
says the Saudi government directly aided the hijackers and that the FBI has
covered it up. Rep. Thomas Massie
described his reaction upon
reading the censored 28 pages:
“It was a really disturbing event for me to read those. I
had to stop every two or three pages and rearrange my perception of history. And
it’s that fundamental…it certainly changes your view of the Middle East.”
Rep. Stephen Lynch (D-Massachussets)
says the assertions of Saudi financing of the 9/11 attacks are verified in
the 28 pages: “There are people named; there are transactions identified.”
Speaking of the Obama administration, Lynch went on to say: “What are they
afraid of? Having those 28 pages disclosed to the public will inform our foreign
policy going forward, which would be very helpful at this stage.”
Hersh, in his interview with
Democracy Now!, asserts the Saudis were aiding al-Qaeda both “before and
after” 9/11, and that their fear of bin Laden blabbing to the Americans led to
their support for his Abbottabad internment.
Hersh’s bombshell story has the media in defensive mode:
defensive,
that is, of their patrons and overseers in official Washington. Nothing
illustrates this master-slave relationship more clearly than the ferocity
unleashed on Hersh by the administration’s Praetorian Guard in the “mainstream”
press. Everyone from
Max
Fisher of Vox – a reliably pro-Obama outlet – to
Jamie Kirchick, the neocons’ slimiest smear-monger, are screaming
“Conspiracy theorist!” at the top of their lungs. Within this left-right anti-Hersh
Popular Front various motivations coexist, but all are united in the contention
that our government would never ever lie to us about something so big, so
important, as the circumstances surrounding the killing of bin Laden.
Faith in our government leaders –
blind, worshipful suspension of disbelief – is what unites both wings of the
Washington establishment, and this faith is almost religious in its intensity in
the one institution where it should be entirely absent: the “mainstream” media.
Yet it isn’t at all surprising that, instead of pursuing the many leads provided
by Hersh in his reporting, they are busying themselves smearing and sneering at
the man who exposed the
My
Lai massacre and
Abu
Ghraib atrocities. After all, these are the same people who swallowed every
lie put out by the Bush administration in the run up to the invasion of Iraq,
broadcasting and elaborating on the phony “intelligence” promulgated by the
neocons as justification for what Gen. William E. Odom accurately characterized
as the worst disaster in
American military history.
There is much more to Hersh’s reporting than I can cover in
one column, but his essential contentions – that bin Laden’s location was
revealed by a “walk-in” from Pakistani intelligence, and that the Pakistani
government knew the terrorist chieftain’s location – have already been
corroborated by NBC News.
What’s striking, however, is the embarrassing editorial
addendum to this reporting by NBC’s Andrea Mitchell: in
an interview with Chris Hayes on MSNBC, a very uneasy-looking Mitchell
contented that this doesn’t contradict the Obama administration’s Official Story
in any way.
That’s worse than mere nonsense: it’s a pernicious and
conscious lie, and it’s to Hayes’ eternal shame that he sat there without
calling her on it. The whole administration narrative is based on the concocted
story that we found bin Laden by tracing him through his personal courier: that
it was due to the
heroic
efforts of our intelligence agencies, plus a
little torture, that we got our man. (The bit about torture was later
retracted, although it was featured in “Zero Dark Thirty,” a Pentagon-sponsored
film about the operation).
We are learning a lot more from Hersh’s reporting than how and
why bin Laden met his end: we’re learning that our media is among the
most servile on earth, and that our political leaders lie routinely, and
effortlessly, faking outrage better than the best Hollywood actor. We’re
learning that you can’t trust anyone in government and the media (or do I repeat
myself?) farther than you can throw them. And we’re learning, above all, that
the truth is out there, and will eventually come out no matter what the
Washington know-it-alls say or do.
Justin Raimondo is the editorial director of Antiwar.com, and
a senior fellow at the Randolph Bourne Institute. He is a contributing editor at
The American Conservative, and writes a monthly column for
Chronicles. He is the author of Reclaiming the American
Right: The Lost Legacy of the Conservative Movement [Center for
Libertarian Studies, 1993; Intercollegiate Studies Institute, 2000], and
An Enemy of the State: The Life of Murray N. Rothbard [Prometheus
Books, 2000]. Copyright © Antiwar.com 2015