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House of Saud in 'panic' over al-Qaida
WorldNetDaily.Com ^ | Posted: December 6, 2003 1:00 a.m. Eastern | © 2003 WorldNetDaily.com

Posted on 12/07/2003 12:52:10 AM PST by Bobby777

Al-Qaida has launched a campaign designed to undermine the security and finances of the Saudi royal family.

Western intelligence sources said the latest al-Qaida attacks indicate a campaign is underway to isolate the Saudi royal family and threaten its financial base. The campaign is based on intimidating leading Arab and Western advisers from remaining in the kingdom.

The Nov. 9 attack on the Muhaya compound appeared to signal a shift in al-Qaida strategy. Until then, the sources said, al-Qaida targeted Western nationals in the kingdom who were not considered crucial to the regime's survival.

But in the Muhaya suicide car bombing, the target was a compound that housed Lebanese financial advisers to the royal family.

The sources said the Muhaya compound included bankers and smugglers who facilitated earnings of billions of dollars in undeclared revenue.

"The royal family is in a panic and now believes al-Qaida is playing for keeps," a senior Western intelligence source said. "Without its financial advisers, the family is completely exposed."

Al-Qaida has sown panic throughout the kingdom's security forces by demonstrating it can penetrate military and other facilities with ease. British and U.S. advisers have been of little use, the sources said, because the Saudi royal family does not want to disclose information that would demonstrate the extent of al-Qaida's influence in the country.

On Nov. 22, a fire was reported in the Riyad Armed Forces hospital. The fire destroyed several rooms and caused security forces to be placed on alert throughout the region. Several foreign nurses were injured.

"This is a deliberate campaign that seeks to increase the pressure on the royal family by telling them they aren't safe anywhere, even within their own military," another Western intelligence analyst said. "This has sparked a debate over how to reconcile with al-Qaida and end this war."

On Dec. 1, Saudi Arabia provided the first official details of the Nov. 9 bombing at the Muhaya compound. Al-Qaida had smuggled in explosives from Yemen to Saudi Arabia. In late November, Saudi authorities found an additional 1.2 tons of explosives believed to have been smuggled in from Yemen.

An interior ministry statement said that in the Nov. 9 attack, al-Qaida insurgents approached the Muhaya compound while firing rifles and hurling grenades toward the gate. While the firefight was taking place, a jeep painted with the insignia of security forces and packed with 300 kilograms explosives drove into the compound.

"Then it was blown up in a suicide operation," the statement said. "Investigators have found out who is behind this operation and measures are still being taken. Security forces are still chasing the perpetrators and, God willing, they will be found and brought to justice."

In Sanaa, meanwhile, Yemeni security forces arrested a senior al-Qaida leader, Mohammed Hamdi Al Ahdal, suspected of masterminding the suicide bombing of the USS Cole.

In 1999 Al Ahdal was arrested in Saudi Arabia and spent 14 months in prison for his ties to Saudi billionaire bomber Osama bin Laden. He was then deported to Yemen.


TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: alahdal; alqaeda; alqaedasaudiarabia; alqaida; elvisbinladen; houseofsaud; maronite; muhaya; ramadan2003; riyadh; saudi; saudiarabia; waronterror
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To: highlander_UW
It was the 23% I was talking about. The ones with disposable income who fund jihad fighers around the globe through "Islamic Charities."
101 posted on 12/08/2003 12:52:14 AM PST by endthematrix
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To: endthematrix
It was the 23% I was talking about. The ones with disposable income who fund jihad fighers around the globe through "Islamic Charities."

That's fine then. I just wanted to make sure that there wasn't an equal sign being drawn between Arab and muslim, especially regarding the growth of Arab population within the U.S. as that would be a false assumption.

I suppose we could look on the bright side. Zakat is only 2.5%.

102 posted on 12/08/2003 1:00:12 AM PST by highlander_UW
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To: highlander_UW
I was kinda quick to post and use my newbie HTML skills to use. Just want to say Saudis are NOT the only terror funding around. Also, it does not take BIG $$ to use terror anyway. Look at those sad West Bank suicide bombers-they use hard to fine scrap wire and old pipe with some gunpowder. Old cheap tech is just as deadly.
103 posted on 12/08/2003 1:12:02 AM PST by endthematrix
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To: endthematrix
I agree entirely. In fact, I had considered making that point to those calling for cutting off the funding as if that'll stop all terrorism. How much did it cost Timothy McVeigh for his bomb? A few thousand dollars for fertilizer and a rental truck? We do not have the ability to harden all targets within the U.S.. The only defense is to try to keep them from getting here...and I have no confidence in that given our porous boarders.
104 posted on 12/08/2003 1:16:52 AM PST by highlander_UW
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To: Cronos
It might work if we offered India a "nuclear umbrella" of Tridents......16 launch vehicles times 10 MIRV's each equals a substantial fraction of the total Chinese nuclear ICBM + IRBM forces. Plus, forward basing of the Tridents would allow for longer patrols. Then there are the cruise and carrier-borne weapons aboard the Fifth and Seventh Fleets.

Might be doable.

And yes, I'm aware that the Saudis were originally Wahhabis, that they nominally still are and that the more religious among them literally are; but most of them have become rather more worldly than Wahhabism permits, and are even as worldly as Cairenes, who are known for their bon-vivant secularism in the Arab world.

A good example of the worldly Saudi prince would be Prince Bandar, a sometime F-15 driver in the Royal Saudi Air Force and lately ambassador to the U.S. and noted figure in the DC social whirl. Bandar is reputed to be one of the best people in the Kingdom and the ideal ambassador to the West, but he's been in eclipse since King Fahd's fell ill and especially since 9/11.

105 posted on 12/08/2003 1:46:34 AM PST by lentulusgracchus
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To: endthematrix
Census: U.S. Arab Population Is Surging

According to the CIA Fact Book, we have about half as many Arabs as the UAE or Oman, 50% more than Qatar, and twice as many as Bahrain. That means we should be ranked somewhere in the list of countries in the Arab world.

106 posted on 12/08/2003 1:59:31 AM PST by lentulusgracchus
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To: Bobby777
what's scary about this, and we really don't want to see nuclear war, is that there are few options in dealing with these guys ...

Nice visuals, but I don't think we need them. The British showed us how to deal with fanatics in the 19th century: you bait them to a climactic battle, as at Omdurman, thrash their asses to a fare-thee-well, and then either you nail their Mr. Mojo, or they'll kill him for you, especially if he's been running his mouth and claiming to speak Truth in God's Name, like the Mahdi did and Osama the Slammer Target does still.

Kill Bin Laden, and this all goes away. The logistics are still there, but nailing their mojo makes turns them all back into cobblers, taxi drivers, and goatherds. That's how you deal with a fanatics' crusade. You dispel the magic and kill their shock force, and everyone else takes it to the house.

107 posted on 12/08/2003 2:07:12 AM PST by lentulusgracchus
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