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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DuckTapeSunroof who wrote (330974)12/19/2002 12:39:41 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 769669
 
Bush is in SO deep with enemies....

Bush and the Saudi princess
Mark Steyn says that the President’s cosying up to the
Saudis is making a mockery of the war on terrorism

New Hampshire

I always like the bit in the Bond movie where 007 and the supervillain meet
face to face — usually at the supervillain’s marine research facility or golf
course or, in this latest picture, his Icelandic diamond mine. Bond knows
the alleged marine biologist is, in fact, an evil mastermind bent on world
domination. The evil mastermind knows Bond is a British agent. But both
men go along with the pretence that the other fellow is what he’s claiming
to be, and the exquisitely polite encounter invariably ends with the
mastermind purring his regrets about being unable to be more helpful. ‘But
perhaps we shall meet again, Mr Bond,’ he says, as the Oriental manservant
shows 007 to the door.

It must have been a bit like that when Prince Bandar and his family dropped
by the Bush ranch at Crawford a couple of months ago. Bush must have
known for the best part of a year that in the run-up to 11 September
Bandar’s wife, Princess Haifa, had been making regular transfers from her
Washington bank account to a couple of known associates of the terrorists.
Bandar must have known Bush knew. Each party knows the other party
knows they’re engaged in a charade, but they observe the niceties, with
Laura showing Princess Haifa the ranch, Bush hailing the ‘eternal
friendship’ between the Saudi and American people, and Bandar regretting,
as the Saudis always do, that they’re unable to be more helpful.

It would be nice if George W. Bond would kick over the cocktails and lob a
grenade into Oilfingers refinery, but instead he and the sheikhs are still
teasing each other. In this latest curious episode, the official explanation, if
I can type it without giggling, goes something like this: Princess Haifa, the
wife of the Saudi ambassador to Washington, gets a letter from a woman in
Virginia she’s never heard of complaining about steep medical bills. Being a
friendly sort of princess, she immediately authorises the Riggs Bank in
Washington to make payment by cashier’s cheque of several thousand
dollars per month to this woman, no questions asked. How come I can
never get hold of a princess like that when I need one?

Of the $130,000 she receives from the benevolent ambassadress, Majeda
Ibrahin signs at least some of the cheques over to a friend of hers, who’s
married to a guy in San Diego who’s helping two of the 11 September
plotters. Pure coincidence, say the smooth-talking Saud princelings put up
on the talk-show circuit since Newsweek broke the story at the weekend.
Could happen to any good-hearted princess.

How did Omar al Bayoumi, the penultimate recipient of the royal largesse,
get to hook up with the two terrorists anyway? Well, there’s another
amazing coincidence. Omar happened to be at the airport in Los Angeles,
heard a couple of fellows speaking Arabic, struck up a conversation with
them and waddayaknow, one thing led to another, they seemed like decent
coves and so, even though he’d never met ’em before, before you know it
he’s throwing ’em a big welcome party in San Diego and paying up the
first couple of months’ rent for them on the apartment next door to his.
How was he to know Khalid Almidhar and Nawaf Alhamzi had just jetted in
from an al-Qa’eda training camp and would go on to hijack Flight 77 and
plough it into the Pentagon? Just one of those things, coulda happened to
any guy who wanders round airport concourses looking for perfect
strangers to cover the accommodation expenses of.

Meanwhile, Majeda Ibrahin, the woman the princess was sending all that
money to, turns out to be married to Osama Basnan, another buddy of the
al-Qa’eda duo, and one who subsequently celebrated 11 September as a
‘wonderful, glorious day’. But here’s an odd little thing: Mr Basnan is
known to have been in Texas in April when Crown Prince Abdullah and his
entourage flew in to the state to see Bush at the ranch. Just another
coincidence? Well, sorta: he’s supposed to have had a meeting in Houston
with some big-time Saudi prince who deals with ‘intelligence matters’. This
seems an unusual degree of access for some schlub from San Diego who’s
in the US illegally, as it transpires. He is variously described as a Saudi
government agent and al-Qa’eda sympathiser, as if these positions are
mutually exclusive.

The reaction of the government-controlled Saudi press is that this is all a lot
of hooey put about by ‘circles linked to the Zionist lobby’. According to
Saudi interior minister Prince Nayef, ‘these are nothing but lies’; not the
facts of the case — the Saudis don’t dispute those — only their meaning.
The official line is that it’s just one of those cultural differences between
the West and Islam: it’s very common, we’re told, for House of Saud
bigshots to help out their financially strapped subjects. As it happens,
Majeda Ibrahin is Jordanian. But it would be interesting to know how many
others, Saudi or Jordanian, were getting $130,000 from Princess Haifa in
this period. Couple of dozen? Two or three? The US has no banking
confidentiality worth speaking of: I’ll bet the feds had traced the money trail
back to the princess’s Riggs Bank account within a few days of 11
September, and I’ll bet they know where any other monthly payments were
going. As things stand, whether intentionally or not, there’s a reasonable
probability that funds from the ambassador’s wife helped pay for the
scheme that murdered thousands of Americans. And that the President
knew this when he lunched with her at Crawford a few weeks ago.

The Saudi embassy say they’ve only received queries about this matter
from the media, not from the FBI. Odd that. The federal government claims
it needs vast new powers to track every single credit-card transaction and
every single email of every single American, yet a prima facie link between
the terrorists and Prince Bandar’s wife isn’t worth going over to the
embassy to have a little chat about. I doubt very much whether Princess
Haifa is deliberately bankrolling al-Qa’eda, but I’m not so sure one could
make the same confident claims of those embassy staffers running the
begging letters past her. And, even if their hands are clean, the widespread
support for Osama among Saudis at home and abroad means it’s only a
degree or two of separation from hardcore terrorists via their supporters to
the Saudi royal family. The fawning legions of ex-ambassadors to Riyadh
have been all over the TV assuring us that, oh, no, al-Qa’eda hate the House
of Saud and want to overthrow it. But, interestingly, though Osama’s boys
are happy to topple New York landmarks, slaughter Balinese nightclubbers,
blow up French oil tankers, kill Philippine missionaries, take out Tunisian
synagogues and hijack Moscow musicals, you can’t help noticing they do
absolutely zip against the regime they allegedly loathe. There are 6,000
Saudi princes, but none of ’em ever gets assassinated. And, if anything
mildly explosive goes off in the Kingdom, it somehow manages to get
blamed on Western bootleggers. Statistically speaking, if you’re looking for
the spot on the planet where you’re least likely to be blown to shreds by an
al-Qa’eda nutcake, it’s hard to beat Riyadh. If al-Qa’eda hated the rest of
us the way they supposedly hate King Fahd and co., the world would be as
harmonious as a Seventies Coke commercial.

Clearly, the House of Saud has come to an arrangement with al-Qa’eda, and
this arrangement involves, among other things, money. More interesting is
why the administration insists on pretending otherwise. On 20 September,
George W. Bush said, ‘You’re either with us or you’re with the terrorists.’
A couple of weeks later, a small number of us began pointing out the
obvious: the Saudis are with the terrorists. But the US–Saudi relationship is
now so unmoored from reality that it’s all but impossible to foresee how it
could be tethered to anything as humdrum as the facts. Seven of the nine
biggest backers of al-Qa’eda are Saudi, and Riyadh has no intention of
doing a thing about it; but the White House insists, as it did on Monday, that
the Kingdom remains — all together now — ‘a good partner in the war on
terrorism’. Fifteen out of the 19 terrorists were Saudi, but the state
department’s ‘visa express’ programme for young Saudi males remained in
place for almost a year after 11 September and, if it weren’t for public
outrage, Colin Powell would reintroduce it tomorrow. The overwhelming
majority — by some accounts, 80 per cent — of the detainees at
Guantanamo are Saudi, but the new rules requiring fingerprinting of Arab
male visitors to the US apply to Iraqis, Libyans, Syrians, Sudanese,
Lebanese, Algerians, Tunisians, Yemenis, Bahrainis, Moroccans, Omanis,
Qataris, but not Saudis. You can pretty much bet they’ll be fingerprinting
British and Australians before the Saudis. In his interview with The
Spectator, my old friend Ghazi Algosaibi, the much-missed ambassador to
the Court of St James’s, was doing so many gags it was easy to overlook
the most telling nugget. Asked by Boris Johnson why so many Saudis were
among the 9/11 killers, Ghazi replied with disarming candour. ‘The answer
is easy,’ he said. ‘It was much easier to get a visa for a Saudi.’ In other
words, the murderers took advantage of the privileged access Saudis have
to the United States. Given that Muslims from Eritrea to Afghanistan now
have even more onerous entry requirements, come the next atrocity the
Saudis are likely to score a perfect 19 out of 19.

This privileged access to America begins with Prince Bandar. The
humdrum rank of ‘ambassador’ hardly begins to cover the special status
the prince enjoys in Washington. For one thing, the title implies a posting,
and Bandar isn’t going anywhere: he’s the longest-serving ambassador in
town; he’s held the job for two decades and he’s still only in his early
fifties; he has more homes in America than most Americans do; he’s seen
Reagan, Bush Sr and Clinton come and go, and he’s figuring on seeing the
back of George W. too. By comparison, American ambassadors in Riyadh
are passing fancies. At the specific request of the Saudi government, no
Arabic speakers are appointed to the post, a unique self-handicap by the
US. Their chaps in the Kingdom spend a couple of years out there getting
everything explained to them by the royal inner circle, and then they come
home and serve out their day’s shilling for the House of Saud on Middle
Eastern think-tanks lavishly subsidised by Riyadh. That’s the way Bandar
likes it. ‘If the reputation then builds that the Saudis take care of friends
when they leave office,’ he once said, ‘you’d be surprised how much
better friends you have who are just coming into office.’ Just so. The
columnist Matt Welch observed a while back that, if you close your eyes,
America’s ex-ambassadors sound like they’re Saudis. Effectively, there’s
no US ambassador to Saudi Arabia but a whole platoon of Saudi
ambassadors to the US — Prince Bandar and full supporting chorus.

And what was he doing with Bush at the ranch in September? Most heads
of government don’t get invited to Crawford. As I’ve said before,
Australia’s John Howard, unlike Crown Prince Abdullah, is a real ally in the
war on terror, but he’s still waiting for ranch privileges; Alberta, not Saudi
Arabia, is America’s principal foreign source of energy, but premier Ralph
Klein can’t get past the assistant deputy under-secretary. Meanwhile,
Bandar, a humble ambassador from an economically moribund theocratic
dictatorship, gets received like a head of state. Nothing quite explains the
administration’s willingness to assist the Saudis in making a mockery of
America’s war on terror. Even murkier rumours that the royal house has
the goods on Bush and Cheney for some dark oil-biz shenanigans can’t
account for the scale of the administration’s denial. We have a huge
Saudi-financed pile of American corpses, the Saudis are openly
unco-operative, and meanwhile back at the ranch it’s ribs with Princess
Haifa.

As for Bandar, he seems far more likely than most Washington diplomats
casually ensnared in some embarrassment to have had a reasonable idea of
just who exactly his wife was mailing cheques to. For two decades, he’s
swanked around the capital as a deal-maker with a long reach extending
way beyond the accepted role of a diplomat; as Bandar’s publicity has it, it
was he who negotiated a Sino-Soviet missile deal that caught the US on the
hop, he who hand-picked Robert McFarlane as Reagan’s national security
adviser, he who helped Chad ward off a potential invasion by Libya (really),
he who determined the post-Soviet character of Afghanistan. That last one
he doesn’t talk about so much these days. But that’s the kinda guy he is:
the Taleban’s Talleyrand, the cosmopolitan front man for the exporters of
feudalism. Even without his wife’s bank statements, it’s simply not credible
that the global fixer isn’t completely aware of his family’s and his country’s
complicity in Islamist terror. Instead of pondering a ‘90-day ultimatum’ to
the Saudis, the administration should remove the symbol of the diseased
relationship. If the Pakistani ambassador’s wife had been funnelling money
to al-Qa’eda supporters, they’d both be on the plane home. The day Bandar
is, we’ll know Bush is serious.

One day the Democrats will stop sleepwalking over the cliff and realise that
this is Bush’s weak spot, and they’ve got incriminating pictures and all that
sycophantic audio. And, if the Dems don’t realise it, then John McCain will,
shortly before he runs for president.
CC



To: DuckTapeSunroof who wrote (330974)12/19/2002 12:42:41 PM
From: PROLIFE  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769669
 
Democrats criticized the White House

yeah....that's big news for sure, dude.