Posted on 09/20/2002 6:07:41 PM PDT by tomball
WASHINGTON Saudi Arabia was "shocked" to learn the Justice Department has added Saudi to a list of terrorist-sponsoring countries subject to immigration restrictions, a spokesman for the royal government told WorldNetDaily yesterday.
According to a highly sensitive four-page Justice memo (page 1, page 2, page 3, page 4) publicly revealed for the first time yesterday by WND Attorney General John Ashcroft has authorized U.S. immigration inspectors to begin fingerprinting, photographing and tracking Saudi nationals who enter the U.S. on visas.
Certain Saudi visitors will be scrutinized to the same degree as those from Iran, Iraq, Sudan, Libya and Syria known Middle Eastern terrorist-sponsoring countries.
The new Saudi screening, which targets males between 16 and 45, goes into effect Oct. 1. Fifteen of the 19 Sept. 11 hijackers, all young males, were Saudi citizens.
"No one had any knowledge of this memo," said the Saudi spokesman. "The Saudi government is obviously quite shocked and surprised to be added to that list."
The Bush administration has tried to keep the new watchlist which also includes Pakistan and Yemen, Saudi's southern neighbor as quiet as possible. Diplomatically, it's radioactive; both Saudi and Pakistan are viewed as U.S. allies.
Justice officials have been ordered not to talk to the press on the record about the list, called "Phase 2" of the new special registration of high-risk foreign visitors mandated under The Patriot Act, the homeland security measure passed last year after the Sept. 11 attacks.
The memo, dated Sept. 5, warns Immigration and Naturalization Service officials to limit its circulation.
"This information is not to be discussed or shared with the media or the public," the memo says (emphasis in the original).
On page 3 of the document, it says Ashcroft has authorized immigration inspectors to consider for special registration any foreign visitor to the U.S. who has traveled to Saudi Arabia, among several other Muslim countries, and can't give a credible explanation for their trip.
The Saudi spokesman, who wished not to be identified until the royal family prepares a more formal reaction, said the kingdom feels betrayed in light of what he characterized as a "high level of support for America and cooperation" in its war on terrorism.
"You can imagine why the Saudi government will have a very tough time swallowing this," he said.
The Saudi government has been accused, however, of financing al-Qaida operations through Saudi-based charities, such as the Muslim World League and the International Islamic Relief Organization.
Its cooperation in the war also has come under question.
Saudi Arabia has been slow in freezing assets tied to al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, who hails from Saudi, and has been reluctant to let U.S. forces use air bases there.
One Pentagon briefer recently called Saudi Arabia the "kernel" of terrorism in the world, spreading Wahhabism or militant Islamic supremacy through mosques it funds throughout the Middle East, as well as in the West.
BWAHAHAHAHA!!!.....I knew it was FRiday!
FMCDH
So, if it's so sensitive, what is it doing being spread all over the news?????
Bleep! Saudi Arabia. And Bleep! their young men. Bleep! their women and Bleep! their dogs and cats.
Oh yeah, Bleep! them all and Bleep! the camel they rode in on
"Shocked," aye - wait 'till the silly b@st@rds find out they're also on the hitlist.
Well, that's just Shuff Tit !!!
Moral: It is not what you say, it is what you do.
Yeh it would be, but kind of expensive. Why not some nice used 707s currently sitting out in the desert in Arizona or California? Maybe even something smaller, old Lear Jets perhaps. They'd do the job just as well, especially if augmented with extra fuel or other goodies using the weight saved by lack of passengers and crew.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.