Posted on 01/09/2002 5:23:57 AM PST by a_witness
Former CIA director:Saudis partially to blame for 9/11
By George Gedda, The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Saudi Arabia, says former CIA Director James Woolsey, "deserves a very large part of the blame for Sept. 11. I do not think we should do anything more with them right now than be cordial." Woolsey's is a minority view. It certainly is at odds with that of the Bush administration and of other outside experts, several of whom believe the United States has no choice but to enhance cooperation with the reclusive but strategically placed oil-rich kingdom. Woolsey's biting comment about Saudi Arabia refers in part to the Saudi practice, both at the government and private levels, of financing true-believing Muslim activists in distant lands, including Central and South Asia. In some cases, their militancy has been transformed into support for terrorism, and the Saudis' lack of internal controls to keep tabs on these radicals has come back to haunt them. American diplomats report that the Saudis were horrified to learn that 15 of the 19 al-Qaida terror network operatives who participated in the Sept. 11 suicide hijackings were Saudi nationals. Woolsey, who served as CIA director from 1993 to 1995, says the United States should hold the Saudis accountable. "The Saudis have exported an extreme form of Islamist philosophy," he says. "Much of the money for al-Qaida has come from Saudi Arabia." James Philips of the Heritage Foundation agrees that the Saudis acted irresponsibly in "allowing their money to slosh around in volatile parts of the world." But he says the Bush administration is right to look at the big picture, pointing to the Saudi role as the world's single largest oil exporter and as a voice of moderation in the Arab world. Phillips adds that if the Saudi monarchy were to fall, th successor regime almost certainly would be far more hostile to the United States. The Bush administration has been unswerving in defense of Saudi cooperation in the war on terrorism, insisting that the Saudis have willingly done all that has been asked of them. This has not prevented a slew of media accounts suggesting that the Saudis have been less than fully cooperative. A recently retired US diplomat who is a veteran Saudi-watcher says Saudi cooperation has been grudging. The Saudis have been engaged in a delicate balancing act, taking steps to preserve their long-standing alliance with Washington in a way that doesn't alienate local Islamic militants long opposed to the United States for its support of Israel, the former diplomat said. The most notorious Saudi militant, of course, is Osama bin Laden, purported mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks. One of his chief grievances is the presence of US forces - "infidels," as he sees them - on Saudi territory. Many of bin Laden's compatriots share his outrage. Anthony Cordesman of the Center for Strategic and International Studies said the Saudis thought they were buying stability by financing Islamic emissaries, but the strategy backfired. It was the United States, he said, that persuaded the Saudis to carry out these activities in Afghanistan during the 1980s to counter the Soviet military presence there. After the Soviet withdrawal and the breakup of the Soviet Union, he said, many Americans urged the Saudis to continue their operations as a hedge against Russian expansion into the former Soviet republics of Central Asia. Cordesman proposes increased cooperation with the Saudis, including data sharing on terrorist finances, on Saudis who leave their homeland and on those who live in the United States. He added that the Saudis must also do a better job of monitoring Islamic radicals operating inside their own country. "If you want to get results, you need partnership," he said. Cordesman has little patience with what he calls the lobby in Washington trying to blame the Saudis for the events of Sept. 11.
The Saudis have been engaged in a delicate balancing act, taking steps to preserve their long-standing alliance with Washington in a way that doesn't alienate local Islamic militants terrorists long opposed to the United States for its support of Israel, the former diplomat said.
The most notorious Saudi militant terrorist, of course, is Osama bin Laden, purported mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks. One of his chief grievances is the presence of US forces - "infidels," as he sees them - on Saudi territory. Many of bin Laden's compatriots share his outrage.
Purported ? purported ??!!!
"Many Americans," or the Clinton administration?
By the way, what was the reason for such hostility to the post-Communist Russians? Why regard them as a greater threat than Islamists who continually denounced this country and had already carried out the first WTC bombing in '93?
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