September 12, 2001: How Bush saved his Saudi friends



 Politics > Politics-USA > September 12, 2001: How Bush saved his Saudi friends

LINK TO THIS PAGE  


rating :  0   |  0


  Page 1 of 1

1

 
Topic: Politics > Politics-USA
User: "Harry Hope"
Date: 19 Jul 2004 06:25:15 PM
Object: September 12, 2001: How Bush saved his Saudi friends
From The Independent, 7/18/04:
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/politics/story.jsp?story=542117

The biggest crime in American history and planes are grounded.
Yet the House of Saud gets safe passage home
By Craig Unger
It was the second Wednesday of September 2001.
Terrorist attacks had grounded all commercial and private aviation
throughout the entire United States for the first time in history.
Former vice-president Al Gore was stranded in Austria because his
flight to the United States was cancelled.
Former president Bill Clinton was stuck in Australia.
Major League Baseball games were postponed.
American skies were nearly as empty as they had been when the Wright
brothers first flew at Kitty Hawk.
America was paralysed by terror, and for 48 hours, virtually no one
could fly.
No one, that is, except for the Saudis.
[In Washington] Prince Bandar bin Sultan bin Abdul Aziz, the Saudi
Arabian ambassador to the United States, was orchestrating the exodus
of more than 140 Saudis scattered throughout the country.
They included members of two families:
One was the royal House of Saud, the family that ruled the kingdom of
Saudi Arabia, and which, thanks to the country's vast oil reserves,
was without question the richest family in the world.
The other family was the Sauds' close friends and allies, the Bin
Ladens, who in addition to owning a multibillion-dollar construction
conglomerate had spawned the notorious terrorist Osama bin Laden.
At 52, Prince Bandar had long been the most recognisable figure from
his country in America.
Widely known as the Arab Gatsby, with his trimmed goatee and tailored
double-breasted suits, Bandar was the very embodiment of the
contradictions inherent in being a modern, jet-setting,
Western-leaning member of the royal House of Saud.
Profane, flamboyant, and cocksure, Bandar entertained lavishly at his
spectacular estates all over the world.
When it came to embracing the culture of the infidel West, Bandar
outdid even the most ardent admirers of Western civilisation - that
was him patrolling the sidelines of Dallas Cowboys football games with
his friend Jerry Jones, the team's owner.
To militant Islamic fundamentalists who loathed pro-West
multibillionaire Saudi royals, no one fit the bill better than Bandar.
And yet, his guise as Playboy of the Western World notwithstanding,
deep in his bones, Prince Bandar was a key figure in the world of
Islam.
His father, defence minister Prince Sultan, was second in line to the
Saudi crown, Bandar was the nephew of King Fahd, the ageing Saudi
monarch, and the grandson of the late king Abdul Aziz, the founder of
modern Saudi Arabia, who initiated his country's historic
oil-for-security relationship with the US when he met Franklin D
Roosevelt on the USS Quincy in the Suez Canal on 14 February, 1945.
The enormous royal family in which Bandar played such an important
role oversaw two of the most sacred places of Islamic worship, the
holy mosques in Medina and Mecca.
Now, in the immediate aftermath of 9/11, the ugly seams of the
relationship [between the US and the House of Saud] had been laid
bare.
Because thousands of innocent people had been killed and most of the
killers were said to be Saudi, it was up to Bandar, ever the master
illusionist, to assure Americans that everything was just fine between
the US and Saudi Arabia.
Bandar had always been a smooth operator, but now he and his
unflappable demeanour would be tested as never before.
Bandar desperately hoped that early reports of the Saudi role had been
exaggerated - after all, al-Qa'ida terrorist operatives were known to
use false passports.
But at 10pm on the evening of 12 September, about 36 hours after the
attack, a high-ranking CIA official - according to Newsweek magazine,
it was probably CIA director George Tenet - phoned Bandar at his home
and gave him the bad news: 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudis.
Afterward, Bandar said: "I felt as if the Twin Towers had just fallen
on my head."
Public relations had never been more crucial for the Saudis.
Bandar swiftly retained PR giant Burson-Marsteller to place newspaper
ads all over the country condemning the attacks and dissociating Saudi
Arabia from them.
But Osama bin Laden was Saudi, of course, and he was not just any
Saudi.
The Bin Ladens were one of a handful of extremely wealthy families
that were so close to the House of Saud that they effectively acted as
extensions of the royal family.
Like Bandar, the Bin Laden family epitomised the marriage between the
United States and Saudi Arabia.
Their huge construction company, the Saudi Binladin Group (SBG),
banked with Citigroup and invested with Goldman Sachs and Merrill
Lynch.
[The family company and various family members use the spelling
Binladin rather than Bin Laden, the spelling most frequently used for
Osama.]
Over time, the Bin Ladens did business with such icons of Western
culture as Disney, the Hard Rock Café, Snapple and Porsche.
In the mid-Nineties, they joined various members of the House of Saud
in becoming business associates with former secretary of state James
Baker and former president George Bush by investing in the Carlyle
Group, a gigantic Washington, DC-based private equity firm.
As Charles Freeman, the former US ambassador to Saudi Arabia, told The
Wall Street Journal:
"If there were ever any company closely connected to the US and its
presence in Saudi Arabia, it's the Saudi Binladin Group."
The Bin Ladens and members of the House of Saud who spent time in the
United States were mostly young professionals and students attending
high school or college.
Many lived in the Boston area, thanks to its high concentration of
colleges.
One of at least four members of the family to have the name Abdullah
bin Laden, a young brother of Osama, was a 1994 graduate of Harvard
Law School and had offices in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Several Bin Ladens had attended Tufts University, near Boston.
Two Bin Ladens - Mohammed and Nawaf - owned units in the Flagship
Wharf condominium complex in Charlestown Navy Yard on Boston Harbor.
Some of the young, chic, sophisticated members of the family appeared
even more Westernised than Bandar.
Wafah Binladin, a 26-year-old graduate of Columbia Law School, lived
in a $6,000-a-month rented loft in New York's fashionable SoHo and was
considering pursuing a singing career.
As for the Saudi royal family, many of them were scattered all over
the United States.
Shortly after the attack, one of the Bin Ladens, an unnamed brother of
Osama's, frantically called the Saudi embassy in Washington seeking
protection.
He was given a room at the Watergate Hotel and told not to open the
door.
King Fahd, the ageing and infirm Saudi monarch, sent a message to his
emissaries in Washington.
"Take measures to protect the innocents," he said.
Meanwhile, a Saudi prince sent a directive to the Tampa Police
Department in Florida that young Saudis who were close to the royal
family and went to school in the area were in potential danger.
Bandar went to work immediately.
If any foreign official had the clout to pull strings at the White
House in the midst of a grave national security crisis, it was he.
A senior member of the Washington diplomatic corps, Bandar had played
racquetball with Secretary of State Colin Powell in the late
Seventies.
He had run covert operations for the late CIA director Bill Casey that
were so hush-hush they were kept secret even from President Ronald
Reagan.
He was the man who had stashed away 30 locked attaché cases that held
some of the deepest secrets in the intelligence world.
And for two decades, Bandar had built an intimate personal
relationship with the Bush family that went far beyond a mere
political friendship.
All over the country, members of the extended Bin Laden family, the
House of Saud, and their associates were assembling in various
locations.
At least eight planes were available for their transportation.
Officially, the FBI says that it had nothing to do with the
repatriation of the Saudis.
"I can say unequivocally that the FBI had no role in facilitating
these flights one way or another," says Special Agent John Iannarelli.
Bandar, however, characterised the role of the FBI very differently.
"With coordination with the FBI," he said on CNN, "we got them all
out."
Meanwhile, the Saudis had at least two of the planes on call to
repatriate the Bin Ladens.
One of them began picking up family members all across the country.
Starting in Los Angeles on an undetermined date, it flew first to
Orlando, Florida, where Khalil Binladin, a sibling of Osama bin
Laden's, boarded.
From Orlando, the plane continued to Dulles International Airport
outside Washington, before going on to Logan Airport in Boston on 19
September, picking up members of the Bin Laden family along the way.
As the planes prepared for take-off at each location across the
country, the FBI repeatedly got into disputes with Rihab Massoud,
Bandar's chargé d'affaires at the Saudi embassy in Washington.
"I recall getting into a big flap with Bandar's office about whether
they would leave without us knowing who was on the plane," said one
former agent who participated in the repatriation of the Saudis.
"Bandar wanted the plane to take off and we were stressing that that
plane was not leaving until we knew exactly who was on it."
In the end, the FBI was able to check papers and identify everyone on
the flights.
Spokesmen for the FBI assert that the Saudis had every right to leave
the country.
The top brass at Logan Airport [in Boston] did not know what was going
on.
The FBI's counterterrorism unit should have been a leading force in
the domestic battle against terror, but here it was not even going to
interview the Saudis.
[One private jet landed at Logan to pick up more members of the Bin
Laden family who wanted to leave.]
On September 19, under the cover of darkness, they did.
The Bin Laden family had expressed "the strongest denunciation and
condemnation" [of the attacks].
A persuasive case could be made that it was against the interests of
the royal family and the Bin Ladens to have aided the terrorists.
On the other hand, this was the biggest crime in American history.
How is it possible that Saudis were allowed to fly, even when all of
America, FBI agents included, was grounded?
Had the White House approved the operation - and, if so, why?
When Bandar arrived at the White House on Thursday September 13, 2001,
he and President Bush retreated to the Truman Balcony, a casual
outdoor spot behind the pillars of the South Portico that also
provided a bit of privacy.
The two men lit up Cohiba cigars and began to discuss how they would
work together in the war on terror.
Bush said that the United States would hand over any captured
al-Qa'ida operatives to the Saudis if they would not cooperate.
The implication was clear: the Saudis could use any means necessary -
including torture - to get the suspects to talk.
But the larger points went unspoken.
The two men were scions of the most powerful dynasties in the world.
The Bush family and its close associates - the House of Bush, if you
will - included two presidents of the United States;
former secretary of state James Baker, who had been a powerful figure
in four presidential administrations;
key figures in the oil and defence industries, the Carlyle Group, and
the Republican Party;
and much, much more.
As for Bandar, his family effectively was the government of Saudi
Arabia, the most powerful country in the Arab world.
They had hundreds of billions of dollars and the biggest oil reserves
in the world.
The relationship was unprecedented.
Never before had a president of the United States - much less, two
presidents from the same family - had such close personal and
financial ties to the ruling family of another foreign power.
Yet few Americans realised that these two dynasties, the Bush family
and the House of Saud, had a history dating back more than 20 years.
Not just business partners and personal friends, the Bushes and the
Saudis had pulled off elaborate covert operations and gone to war
together.
They had shared secrets that involved unimaginable personal wealth,
spectacular military might, the richest energy resources in the world.
They had been involved in the Iran-contra scandal, and in secret US
aid in the Afghanistan war that gave birth to Osama bin Laden.
Along with then vice-president Bush, the Saudis has joined the United
States in supporting the brutal Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein for
seven full years after knowing that he had used weapons of mass
destruction.
In the private sector, the Saudis had supported George W Bush's
struggling oil company, Harken Energy, and in the Nineties they made
common cause with his father by investing in the Carlyle Group.
In the 1991 Gulf War, the Saudis and the elder Bush had fought side by
side.
And now there was the repatriation of the Bin Ladens, which could not
have taken place without approval at the highest levels of the
executive branch of President George W Bush's administration.
Only Bush and Bandar know what transpired that day on the Truman
Balcony.
But the ties between the two families were so strong that allowing the
Saudis to leave America would not have been difficult for Bush.
It would also have been in character with a relationship in which
decisions were often made through elaborate and contrived deniability
mechanisms that allowed the principals to turn a blind eye to unseemly
realities and to be intentionally "out of the loop".
The ties between the two families were an open secret that in some
ways was as obvious as the proverbial elephant in the living room.
Yet at the same time it was somehow hard to discern even for the most
seasoned journalists.
Perhaps that was because the relationship had been forged all over the
globe and arced across different eras - from the Reagan-Bush years to
the Clinton administration to the presidency of George W Bush.
To understand its scope and its meaning, one would have to search
through tens of thousands of forgotten newspaper stories, read scores
of books by journalists and historians, and study myriad "secret"
classified documents and the records of barely remembered
congressional probes of corporate intrigue and Byzantine government
scandals.
One would have to journey back in the time to the birth of al-Qa'ida
at the terrorist training camps during the Afghanistan war.
One would have to study the Iran-Iraq War of the Eighties, the 1991
Gulf War, and the Iraq War of 2003.
One would have to try to deduce what had happened within the corporate
suites of oil barons in Dallas and Houston, in the executive offices
of the Carlyle Group, in the Situation Room of the White House, and in
the grand royal palaces of Saudi billionaires.
One would have to interview scores of politicians, oil executives,
counterterrorism analysts, CIA operatives and businessmen from
Washington and Saudi Arabia and Texas.
One would have to decipher brilliantly hidden agendas and purposefully
murky corporate relationships.
Finally, one would have to put all this information together to shape
a continuum, a narrative in which the House of Bush and the House of
Saud dominated the world stage together in one era after another.
Having done so, one would come to a singular inescapable conclusion:
namely, that, horrifying as it sounds, the secret relationship between
these two great families helped to trigger the Age of Terror and give
rise to the tragedy of 9/11.
_______________________________________________________
The ties between the Bush family and the Saudi royals are revealed in
a hard-hitting new book 'House of Bush, House of Saud' by Craig Unger,
a key source for Michael Moore's film 'Fahrenheit 9/11'.
What you have read is an exclusive extract.
Harry
.

User: "Eltanin"

Title: Re: September 12, 2001: How Bush saved his Saudi friends 19 Jul 2004 11:04:40 PM
That was the best thing about the Moore film because this fact was being
buried and cemented over as urban legend by the neocon owned media.
In article <n2mof0psgvlf01l2dfuo8ggb0lro9hg16v@4ax.com>, Harry Hope
<rivrvu@ix.netcom.com> wrote:

From The Independent, 7/18/04:
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/politics/story.jsp?story=542117

The biggest crime in American history and planes are grounded.

Yet the House of Saud gets safe passage home

By Craig Unger


It was the second Wednesday of September 2001.

Terrorist attacks had grounded all commercial and private aviation
throughout the entire United States for the first time in history.

Former vice-president Al Gore was stranded in Austria because his
flight to the United States was cancelled.

Former president Bill Clinton was stuck in Australia.

Major League Baseball games were postponed.

American skies were nearly as empty as they had been when the Wright
brothers first flew at Kitty Hawk.

America was paralysed by terror, and for 48 hours, virtually no one
could fly.

No one, that is, except for the Saudis.

[In Washington] Prince Bandar bin Sultan bin Abdul Aziz, the Saudi
Arabian ambassador to the United States, was orchestrating the exodus
of more than 140 Saudis scattered throughout the country.

They included members of two families:

One was the royal House of Saud, the family that ruled the kingdom of
Saudi Arabia, and which, thanks to the country's vast oil reserves,
was without question the richest family in the world.

The other family was the Sauds' close friends and allies, the Bin
Ladens, who in addition to owning a multibillion-dollar construction
conglomerate had spawned the notorious terrorist Osama bin Laden.

At 52, Prince Bandar had long been the most recognisable figure from
his country in America.

Widely known as the Arab Gatsby, with his trimmed goatee and tailored
double-breasted suits, Bandar was the very embodiment of the
contradictions inherent in being a modern, jet-setting,
Western-leaning member of the royal House of Saud.

Profane, flamboyant, and cocksure, Bandar entertained lavishly at his
spectacular estates all over the world.

When it came to embracing the culture of the infidel West, Bandar
outdid even the most ardent admirers of Western civilisation - that
was him patrolling the sidelines of Dallas Cowboys football games with
his friend Jerry Jones, the team's owner.

To militant Islamic fundamentalists who loathed pro-West
multibillionaire Saudi royals, no one fit the bill better than Bandar.

And yet, his guise as Playboy of the Western World notwithstanding,
deep in his bones, Prince Bandar was a key figure in the world of
Islam.

His father, defence minister Prince Sultan, was second in line to the
Saudi crown, Bandar was the nephew of King Fahd, the ageing Saudi
monarch, and the grandson of the late king Abdul Aziz, the founder of
modern Saudi Arabia, who initiated his country's historic
oil-for-security relationship with the US when he met Franklin D
Roosevelt on the USS Quincy in the Suez Canal on 14 February, 1945.

The enormous royal family in which Bandar played such an important
role oversaw two of the most sacred places of Islamic worship, the
holy mosques in Medina and Mecca.

Now, in the immediate aftermath of 9/11, the ugly seams of the
relationship [between the US and the House of Saud] had been laid
bare.

Because thousands of innocent people had been killed and most of the
killers were said to be Saudi, it was up to Bandar, ever the master
illusionist, to assure Americans that everything was just fine between
the US and Saudi Arabia.

Bandar had always been a smooth operator, but now he and his
unflappable demeanour would be tested as never before.

Bandar desperately hoped that early reports of the Saudi role had been
exaggerated - after all, al-Qa'ida terrorist operatives were known to
use false passports.

But at 10pm on the evening of 12 September, about 36 hours after the
attack, a high-ranking CIA official - according to Newsweek magazine,
it was probably CIA director George Tenet - phoned Bandar at his home
and gave him the bad news: 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudis.

Afterward, Bandar said: "I felt as if the Twin Towers had just fallen
on my head."

Public relations had never been more crucial for the Saudis.

Bandar swiftly retained PR giant Burson-Marsteller to place newspaper
ads all over the country condemning the attacks and dissociating Saudi
Arabia from them.

But Osama bin Laden was Saudi, of course, and he was not just any
Saudi.

The Bin Ladens were one of a handful of extremely wealthy families
that were so close to the House of Saud that they effectively acted as
extensions of the royal family.

Like Bandar, the Bin Laden family epitomised the marriage between the
United States and Saudi Arabia.

Their huge construction company, the Saudi Binladin Group (SBG),
banked with Citigroup and invested with Goldman Sachs and Merrill
Lynch.

[The family company and various family members use the spelling
Binladin rather than Bin Laden, the spelling most frequently used for
Osama.]

Over time, the Bin Ladens did business with such icons of Western
culture as Disney, the Hard Rock Café, Snapple and Porsche.

In the mid-Nineties, they joined various members of the House of Saud
in becoming business associates with former secretary of state James
Baker and former president George Bush by investing in the Carlyle
Group, a gigantic Washington, DC-based private equity firm.

As Charles Freeman, the former US ambassador to Saudi Arabia, told The
Wall Street Journal:

"If there were ever any company closely connected to the US and its
presence in Saudi Arabia, it's the Saudi Binladin Group."

The Bin Ladens and members of the House of Saud who spent time in the
United States were mostly young professionals and students attending
high school or college.

Many lived in the Boston area, thanks to its high concentration of
colleges.

One of at least four members of the family to have the name Abdullah
bin Laden, a young brother of Osama, was a 1994 graduate of Harvard
Law School and had offices in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Several Bin Ladens had attended Tufts University, near Boston.

Two Bin Ladens - Mohammed and Nawaf - owned units in the Flagship
Wharf condominium complex in Charlestown Navy Yard on Boston Harbor.

Some of the young, chic, sophisticated members of the family appeared
even more Westernised than Bandar.

Wafah Binladin, a 26-year-old graduate of Columbia Law School, lived
in a $6,000-a-month rented loft in New York's fashionable SoHo and was
considering pursuing a singing career.

As for the Saudi royal family, many of them were scattered all over
the United States.

Shortly after the attack, one of the Bin Ladens, an unnamed brother of
Osama's, frantically called the Saudi embassy in Washington seeking
protection.

He was given a room at the Watergate Hotel and told not to open the
door.

King Fahd, the ageing and infirm Saudi monarch, sent a message to his
emissaries in Washington.

"Take measures to protect the innocents," he said.

Meanwhile, a Saudi prince sent a directive to the Tampa Police
Department in Florida that young Saudis who were close to the royal
family and went to school in the area were in potential danger.

Bandar went to work immediately.

If any foreign official had the clout to pull strings at the White
House in the midst of a grave national security crisis, it was he.

A senior member of the Washington diplomatic corps, Bandar had played
racquetball with Secretary of State Colin Powell in the late
Seventies.

He had run covert operations for the late CIA director Bill Casey that
were so hush-hush they were kept secret even from President Ronald
Reagan.

He was the man who had stashed away 30 locked attaché cases that held
some of the deepest secrets in the intelligence world.

And for two decades, Bandar had built an intimate personal
relationship with the Bush family that went far beyond a mere
political friendship.

All over the country, members of the extended Bin Laden family, the
House of Saud, and their associates were assembling in various
locations.

At least eight planes were available for their transportation.

Officially, the FBI says that it had nothing to do with the
repatriation of the Saudis.

"I can say unequivocally that the FBI had no role in facilitating
these flights one way or another," says Special Agent John Iannarelli.

Bandar, however, characterised the role of the FBI very differently.

"With coordination with the FBI," he said on CNN, "we got them all
out."

Meanwhile, the Saudis had at least two of the planes on call to
repatriate the Bin Ladens.

One of them began picking up family members all across the country.

Starting in Los Angeles on an undetermined date, it flew first to
Orlando, Florida, where Khalil Binladin, a sibling of Osama bin
Laden's, boarded.

From Orlando, the plane continued to Dulles International Airport
outside Washington, before going on to Logan Airport in Boston on 19
September, picking up members of the Bin Laden family along the way.

As the planes prepared for take-off at each location across the
country, the FBI repeatedly got into disputes with Rihab Massoud,
Bandar's chargé d'affaires at the Saudi embassy in Washington.

"I recall getting into a big flap with Bandar's office about whether
they would leave without us knowing who was on the plane," said one
former agent who participated in the repatriation of the Saudis.

"Bandar wanted the plane to take off and we were stressing that that
plane was not leaving until we knew exactly who was on it."

In the end, the FBI was able to check papers and identify everyone on
the flights.

Spokesmen for the FBI assert that the Saudis had every right to leave
the country.

The top brass at Logan Airport [in Boston] did not know what was going
on.

The FBI's counterterrorism unit should have been a leading force in
the domestic battle against terror, but here it was not even going to
interview the Saudis.

[One private jet landed at Logan to pick up more members of the Bin
Laden family who wanted to leave.]

On September 19, under the cover of darkness, they did.

The Bin Laden family had expressed "the strongest denunciation and
condemnation" [of the attacks].

A persuasive case could be made that it was against the interests of
the royal family and the Bin Ladens to have aided the terrorists.

On the other hand, this was the biggest crime in American history.

How is it possible that Saudis were allowed to fly, even when all of
America, FBI agents included, was grounded?

Had the White House approved the operation - and, if so, why?

When Bandar arrived at the White House on Thursday September 13, 2001,
he and President Bush retreated to the Truman Balcony, a casual
outdoor spot behind the pillars of the South Portico that also
provided a bit of privacy.

The two men lit up Cohiba cigars and began to discuss how they would
work together in the war on terror.

Bush said that the United States would hand over any captured
al-Qa'ida operatives to the Saudis if they would not cooperate.

The implication was clear: the Saudis could use any means necessary -
including torture - to get the suspects to talk.

But the larger points went unspoken.

The two men were scions of the most powerful dynasties in the world.

The Bush family and its close associates - the House of Bush, if you
will - included two presidents of the United States;

former secretary of state James Baker, who had been a powerful figure
in four presidential administrations;

key figures in the oil and defence industries, the Carlyle Group, and
the Republican Party;

and much, much more.

As for Bandar, his family effectively was the government of Saudi
Arabia, the most powerful country in the Arab world.

They had hundreds of billions of dollars and the biggest oil reserves
in the world.

The relationship was unprecedented.

Never before had a president of the United States - much less, two
presidents from the same family - had such close personal and
financial ties to the ruling family of another foreign power.

Yet few Americans realised that these two dynasties, the Bush family
and the House of Saud, had a history dating back more than 20 years.

Not just business partners and personal friends, the Bushes and the
Saudis had pulled off elaborate covert operations and gone to war
together.

They had shared secrets that involved unimaginable personal wealth,
spectacular military might, the richest energy resources in the world.

They had been involved in the Iran-contra scandal, and in secret US
aid in the Afghanistan war that gave birth to Osama bin Laden.

Along with then vice-president Bush, the Saudis has joined the United
States in supporting the brutal Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein for
seven full years after knowing that he had used weapons of mass
destruction.

In the private sector, the Saudis had supported George W Bush's
struggling oil company, Harken Energy, and in the Nineties they made
common cause with his father by investing in the Carlyle Group.

In the 1991 Gulf War, the Saudis and the elder Bush had fought side by
side.

And now there was the repatriation of the Bin Ladens, which could not
have taken place without approval at the highest levels of the
executive branch of President George W Bush's administration.

Only Bush and Bandar know what transpired that day on the Truman
Balcony.

But the ties between the two families were so strong that allowing the
Saudis to leave America would not have been difficult for Bush.

It would also have been in character with a relationship in which
decisions were often made through elaborate and contrived deniability
mechanisms that allowed the principals to turn a blind eye to unseemly
realities and to be intentionally "out of the loop".

The ties between the two families were an open secret that in some
ways was as obvious as the proverbial elephant in the living room.

Yet at the same time it was somehow hard to discern even for the most
seasoned journalists.

Perhaps that was because the relationship had been forged all over the
globe and arced across different eras - from the Reagan-Bush years to
the Clinton administration to the presidency of George W Bush.

To understand its scope and its meaning, one would have to search
through tens of thousands of forgotten newspaper stories, read scores
of books by journalists and historians, and study myriad "secret"
classified documents and the records of barely remembered
congressional probes of corporate intrigue and Byzantine government
scandals.

One would have to journey back in the time to the birth of al-Qa'ida
at the terrorist training camps during the Afghanistan war.

One would have to study the Iran-Iraq War of the Eighties, the 1991
Gulf War, and the Iraq War of 2003.

One would have to try to deduce what had happened within the corporate
suites of oil barons in Dallas and Houston, in the executive offices
of the Carlyle Group, in the Situation Room of the White House, and in
the grand royal palaces of Saudi billionaires.

One would have to interview scores of politicians, oil executives,
counterterrorism analysts, CIA operatives and businessmen from
Washington and Saudi Arabia and Texas.

One would have to decipher brilliantly hidden agendas and purposefully
murky corporate relationships.

Finally, one would have to put all this information together to shape
a continuum, a narrative in which the House of Bush and the House of
Saud dominated the world stage together in one era after another.

Having done so, one would come to a singular inescapable conclusion:
namely, that, horrifying as it sounds, the secret relationship between
these two great families helped to trigger the Age of Terror and give
rise to the tragedy of 9/11.

_______________________________________________________

The ties between the Bush family and the Saudi royals are revealed in
a hard-hitting new book 'House of Bush, House of Saud' by Craig Unger,
a key source for Michael Moore's film 'Fahrenheit 9/11'.

What you have read is an exclusive extract.

Harry

.


  Page 1 of 1

1

 


Related Articles
Mr. Bush continues to make friends
Making Friends with the Iraqis, Winning Hearts, American Style
With Friends Like Us
~ U.S. MAKING MORE 'FRIENDS' IN IRAQ ~ [With 'friends' like this who needs someone to occupy your land for oil?]
OH THE 'FOX & FRIENDS' CHEERLEADERS ARE ON - NO MENTION OF THE 6 DEAD MARINES YET
Republican Sex Fiend Jack Ryan and Friends
Friends don't let friends drink Slim-Fast - - - Hollywood Blacklist Redux
Quotes For Our Republican Friends. giggle.
~ 6 MORE OIL SOLDIERS DIE FOR BUSH'S OIL FRIENDS WED. - NO WMDs YET ~
How to Lose Friends and Alienate People
Election, USSC, a Chat among friends
FRIENDS OF SADDAM - U.N. Oil for Food scandal
US Makes Friends in Iraq
Addition to 'The Criminal Mind Tom Cruise "friends" publicly now with 'Scientology'-owner David Miscavige' (Version 2.0.1 on 2 Mar 2005)
DeLay Desperate For Friends
 

NEWER

pg.3585     pg.2749     pg.2106     pg.1612     pg.1232     pg.940     pg.716     pg.544     pg.412     pg.311     pg.234     pg.175     pg.130     pg.96     pg.70     pg.50     pg.35     pg.24     pg.16     pg.10     pg.6     pg.3     pg.1

OLDER