The Saudis
Did 9/11
That's What The 28 Pages Tell Us
By Justin
Raimondo
July 18,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Antiwar"
-
News reports
about the
recently released 28 pages of the Joint Inquiry
into the 9/11 attacks are typically dismissive: this
is nothing new, it’s just circumstantial evidence,
and there’s no “smoking gun.” Yet given what the
report actually says – and these news accounts are
remarkably sparse when it comes to verbatim quotes –
it’s hard to fathom what would constitute a smoking
gun.
To begin
with, let’s start with what’s not in these pages:
there are numerous redactions. And they are rather
odd. When one expects to read the words “CIA” or
“FBI,” instead we get a blacked-out word. Entire
paragraphs are redacted – often at crucial points.
So it’s reasonable to assume that, if there is a
smoking gun, it’s contained in the portions we’re
not allowed to see. Presumably the members of
Congress with access to the document prior to its
release who have been telling us that it changes
their entire conception of the 9/11 attacks – and
our relationship with the Saudis – read the unredacted
version. Which points to the conclusion that the
omissions left out crucial information – perhaps
including the vaunted smoking gun.
In any
case, what we have access to makes more than just a
substantial case: it shows that the Saudi government
– including top officials, such as then Saudi
ambassador to the US, Prince Bandar bin Sultan, and
other members of the royal family – financed and
actively aided the hijackers prior to September 11,
2001.
Support for
at least two of the hijackers when they arrived in
the US was extended by three key individuals:
-
Omar al-Bayoumi
– Bayoumi was clearly a Saudi intelligence
agent: the FBI all but identifies him as such.
His salary was paid for by companies directly
owned and operated by the Saudi government,
although he apparently rarely showed up for
“work.” He was directly subsidized by the wife
of then Saudi ambassador Prince Bandar, and
these subsidies were substantially increased
when the hijackers arrived in the US. It was
Bayoumi who hovered over two of the hijackers –
Nawaf al-Hamzi and Khalid al-Midhar – as soon as
they arrived in the United States. He got them
an apartment, co-signed the rental agreement,
chauffeured them around – and helped them obtain
information on flight schools.
-
Osama Bassnan
– This individual, who, according to the report,
has “many ties to the Saudi government,” boasted
to an informant that he did more for the two
hijackers than Bayoumi. He was certainly in a
position to do so, since he lived directly
across the street from them in San Diego. The
FBI characterized him as “an extremist and
supporter of Osama bin Laden”: like Bayoumi, his
longtime associate – with whom he was in
constant communication at the time of the
hijackers’ American sojourn – Bassnan was
subsidized by the Saudi royal family, and
specifically Prince Bandar and his wife. A
search of Basnan’s apartment turned up
indications that he had cashiers checks
amounting to $574,000. Bandar’s wife’s account
had a standing arrangement to send monthly
checks to Basan’s wife for “nursing services.”
There is no evidence that such services were
ever performed. The suppressed 28 pages cite
direct payments from Prince Bandar to
Basnan:
“On
at least one occasion, Bassnan received a check
directly from Prince Bandar’s account. Accordion
to the FBI, on May 14, 1998, Bassnan cashed a
check from Bandar in the amount of $515,000.
Bassnan’s wife also received at least one check
directly from Bandar She also received one
additional check froth Bandar’s wife, which she
cashed on January 8,1998 for 510,000.”
-
Shayk Fahah al-Thumairy
– He was a diplomat at the Saudi consulate in
Los Angeles and imam of the King Fahad mosque,
which is a focal point of Muslim-Saudi activity
in the area. US intelligence avers that “initial
indications are that al-Thumairy may have had a
physical or financial connection to al-Hamzi and
al-Midhar.” Both attended the King Fahad mosque.
Thumairy was interviewed by US law enforcement
after fleeing to Saudi Arabia, and denied having
any contact with the two hijackers – in spite of
evidence that he was in telephonic contact with
them. This, he asserted, was an attempt to
“smear” him.
The two
hijackers had extensive contacts with Saudi naval
officers in the United States, according to
telephone records. And when Abu Zubaydah, one of the
9/11 conspirators, was captured in Pakistan, they
found the phone number of a Colorado company that
managed “the affairs of the Colorado residence of
the Saudi Ambassador.” Prince Bandar is practically
the star of the suppressed 28 pages – no wonder the
Bush administration, which had close ties to him,
fought so hard to keep this secret.
The 28
pages also reveal that an individual – name redacted
– associated with al-Qaeda and the hijackers sneaked
into the US, avoiding Customs agents and the INS due
to the fact that he was traveling with a member of
the Saudi royal family. We are also told that
“Another Saudi national with close ties to the Saudi
Royal Family, [redacted], is the subject of FBI
counterterrorism investigations and reportedly was
checking security at the United States’ southwest
border in 1999 and discussing the possibility of
infiltrating individuals into the United States.”
The Saudi
government’s financial and operational ties to at
least two of the 9/11 hijackers are myriad, and
largely substantiated. Furthermore, although some of
these links as detailed in the 28 pages are
tentative, it’s important to remember that this
report was written in 2002, and that the
intelligence community was strongly admonished to
follow up because lawmakers deemed the lack of
investigation into the Saudi connection
“unacceptable.” So what did they find out in the
fourteen years after that admonition was delivered?
Inquiring minds want to know….
Prince
Bandar went on to become head of Saudi intelligence:
his personal relationship with the Bush family is
well-known, and his access to US government
officials – and his powerful influence in Washington
– makes his starring role in the nurturing of the
two hijackers into a gun that, while not quite
smoking, is exuding vapors of a highly suggestive
nature.
“Circumstantial evidence”? Perhaps – but people have
been convicted of murder on the basis of such
evidence, and, in this case, there is such a
preponderance of evidence that a guilty verdict is
unavoidable.
It would
not be stretching the evidence to bluntly state that
the suppressed 28 pages of the Joint Inquiry report
on the 9/11 terrorist attacks places agents of the
Saudi government at the epicenter of the plot. In
short, there’s no two ways about it: the Saudis did
9/11.
Why did our
government cover up this shocking evidence for so
long?
The reason
is because they had no desire to retaliate against
the real perpetrators of 9/11. Instead, as we now
know, they were determined to pin the blame on
Saddam Hussein: indeed, the Bush administration
pressed this talking point relentlessly, until it
was forced to backtrack. We attacked Iraq, in the
words of neocon grise eminence and top Bush
administration official Paul Wolfowitz, because it
was “doable.” A years long neoconservative campaign
to target Iraq gained new impetus in the wake of
9/11, and the administration and its journalistic
camarilla pushed the lie that Iraq was behind the
attack. The evidence that the Saudis were involved
had to be suppressed – because the Bush
administration’s war plans depended on it.
Now that we
know the truth, what do we do about it?
To begin
with, if any other government had connections to a
terrorist attack on the US of this nature, their
capital would’ve been a smoking ruin. I’m not
suggesting we do that, but at the very least the
Saudis must be made to pay a high price for their
complicity, starting with a moratorium on all US aid
and arms sales to the Kingdom. We imposed trade
sanctions on Russia for far less. Cutting off the
Saudis from the US banking system should put a crimp
in their extensive international network of
terror-financing and money-laundering. And I know
it’s too much to expect a public statement from our
President pointing out that a US “ally” aided and
abetted those who murdered over 3,000 people on
9/11, but I can dream, can’t I?
The Saudis
aren’t our allies: as the 28 pages make all too
clear, they are our deadly enemies. And they ought
to be treated as such.
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].
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