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View Full Version : more saudi arabians than originally reported left the US in the days after 9/11




zimv20
Jun 2, 2004, 01:03 AM
link (http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/01/opinion/01UNGE.html)


June 1, 2004
OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

The Great Escape
By CRAIG UNGER

mericans who think the 9/11 commission is going to answer all the crucial questions about the terrorist attacks are likely to be sorely disappointed — especially if they're interested in the secret evacuation of Saudis by plane that began just after Sept. 11.

We knew that 15 out of 19 hijackers were Saudis. We knew that Osama bin Laden, a Saudi, was behind 9/11. Yet we did not conduct a police-style investigation of the departing Saudis, of whom two dozen were members. of the bin Laden family. That is not to say that they were complicit in the attacks.

Unfortunately, though, we may never know the real story. The investigative panel has already concluded that there is "no credible evidence that any chartered flights of Saudi Arabian nationals departed the United States before the reopening of national airspace." But the real point is that there were still some restrictions on American airspace when the Saudi flights began.

In addition, new evidence shows that the evacuation involved more than the departure of 142 Saudis on six charter flights that the commission is investigating. According to newly released documents, 160 Saudis left the United States on 55 flights immediately after 9/11 — making a total of about 300 people who left with the apparent approval of the Bush administration, far more than has been reported before. The records were released by the Department of Homeland Security in response to a Freedom of Information Act request filed by Judicial Watch, a conservative, nonpartisan watchdog group in Washington.

The vast majority of the newly disclosed flights were commercial airline flights, not charters, often carrying just two or three Saudi passengers. They originated from more than 20 cities, including Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Detroit and Houston. One Saudi Arabian Airlines flight left Kennedy Airport on Sept. 13 with 46 Saudis. The next day, another Saudi Arabian Airlines flight left with 13 Saudis.

The panel has indicated that it has yet to find any evidence that the F.B.I. checked the manifests of departing flights against its terror watch list. The departures of additional Saudis raise more questions for the panel. Richard Clarke, the former counterterrorism czar, told The Hill newspaper recently that he took full responsibility for approving some flights. But we don't know if other Bush administration officials participated in the decision.

The passengers should have been questioned about any links to Osama bin Laden, or his financing. We have long known that some faction of the Saudi elite has helped funnel money to Islamist terrorists —inadvertently at least. Prince Ahmed bin Salman, who has been accused of being an intermediary between Al Qaeda and the House of Saud, boarded one of the evacuation planes in Kentucky. Was he interrogated by the F.B.I. before he left?

If the commission dares to address these issues, it will undoubtedly be accused of politicizing one of the most important national security investigations in American history — in an election year, no less.

But if it does not, it risks something far worse — the betrayal of the thousands of people who lost their lives that day, not to mention millions of others who want the truth.



Spizzo
Jun 2, 2004, 01:19 AM
WOW!!

I had heard that there was a private jet that was allowed to fly around the country in the days after and pick up Osama's saudi realitves who where here for various reasons, but i didnt realize there were more that were allowed to leave. I heard that the FBI wanted to detain and interrorgate all these people, but good ol' Bush wouldnt let that happen.

What's really going on? Or do i want to know....

Desertrat
Jun 2, 2004, 08:13 AM
From the article: "The panel has indicated that it has yet to find any evidence that the F.B.I. checked the manifests of departing flights against its terror watch list."

The FBI has had plenty of time to do that check, even if *possible* terrorists flew away. SFAIK, manifests stay on record for a long time.

Me, I'd suggest the panel ask, "What did you find out, even later on?"

'Rat