The following piece, by Gerald Posner at Huffington Post, has been forwarded to me. In full:
"On December 5, the CIA's director, General Michael V. Hayden, issued a
statement disclosing that in 2005 at least two videotapes of
interrogations with al Qaeda prisoners were destroyed. The tapes, which
the CIA did not provide to either the 9/11 Commission, nor to a federal
court in the case of Zacarias Moussaoui, were destroyed, claimed
Hayden, to protect the safety of undercover operatives.
Hayden did not disclose one of the al Qaeda suspects whose tapes were
destroyed. But he did identify the other. It was Abu Zubaydah, the top
ranking terror suspect when he was tracked and captured in Pakistan in
2003. In September 2006, at a press conference in which he defended
American interrogation techniques, President Bush also mentioned Abu
Zubaydah by name. Bush acknowledged that Zubaydah, who was wounded when
captured, did not initially cooperate with his interrogators, but that
eventually when he did talk, his information was, according to Bush,
"quite important."
In my 2003 New York Times bestseller, Why America Slept: The Failure to
Prevent 9/11, I discussed Abu Zubaydah at length in Chapter 19, "The
Interrogation." There I set forth how Zubaydah initially refused to
help his American captors. Also, disclosed was how U.S. intelligence
established a so-called "fake flag" operation, in which the wounded
Zubaydah was transferred to Afghanistan under the ruse that he had
actually been turned over to the Saudis. The Saudis had him on a wanted
list, and the Americans believed that Zubaydah, fearful of torture and
death at the hands of the Saudis, would start talking when confronted
by U.S. agents playing the role of Saudi intelligence officers.
Instead, when confronted by his "Saudi" interrogators, Zubaydah showed
no fear. Instead, according to the two U.S. intelligence sources that
provided me the details, he seemed relieved. The man who had been
reluctant to even confirm his identity to his U.S. captors, suddenly
talked animatedly. He was happy to see them, he said, because he feared
the Americans would kill him. He then asked his interrogators to call a
senior member of the Saudi royal family. And Zubaydah provided a
private home number and a cell phone number from memory. "He will tell
you what to do," Zubaydah assured them
That man was Prince Ahmed bin Salman bin Abdul-Aziz, one of King Fahd's
nephews, and the chairman of the largest Saudi publishing empire.
Later, American investigators would determine that Prince Ahmed had
been in the U.S. on 9/11.
American interrogators used painkillers to induce Zubaydah to talk --
they gave him the meds when he cooperated, and withdrew them when he
was quiet. They also utilized a thiopental sodium drip (a so-called
truth serum). Several hours after he first fingered Prince Ahmed, his
captors challenged the information, and said that since he had
disparaged the Saudi royal family, he would be executed. It was at that
point that some of the secrets of 9/11 came pouring out. In a short
monologue, that one investigator told me was the "Rosetta Stone" of
9/11, Zubaydah laid out details of how he and the al Qaeda hierarchy
had been supported at high levels inside the Saudi and Pakistan
governments.
He named two other Saudi princes, and also the chief of Pakistan's air
force, as his major contacts. Moreover, he stunned his interrogators,
by charging that two of the men, the King's nephew, and the Pakistani
Air Force chief, knew a major terror operation was planned for America
on 9/11.
It would be nice to further investigate the men named by Zubaydah, but
that is not possible. All four identified by Zubaydah are now dead. As
for the three Saudi princes, the King's 43-year-old nephew, Prince
Ahmed, died of either a heart attack or blood clot, depending on which
report you believe, after having liposuction in Riyadh's top hospital;
the second, 41-year-old Prince Sultan bin Faisal bin Turki al-Saud,
died the following day in a one car accident, on his way to the funeral
of Prince Ahmed; and one week later, the third Saudi prince named by
Zubaydah, 25-year-old Prince Fahd bin Turki bin Saud al-Kabir, died,
according to the Saudi Royal Court, "of thirst." The head of Pakistan's
Air Force, Mushaf Ali Mir, was the last to go. He died, together with
his wife and fifteen of his top aides, when his plane blew up --
suspected as sabotage -- in February 2003. Pakistan's investigation of
the explosion -- if one was even done -- has never been made public.
Zubaydah is the only top al Queda operative who has secretly linked two
of America's closest allies in the war on terror -- Saudi Arabia and
Pakistan -- to the 9/11 attacks. Why does Bush, and the CIA, continue
to protect the Saudi Royal family and the Pakistani military, from the
implications of Zubaydah's confessions? It is, or course, because the
Bush administration desperately needs Pakistani and Saudi help, not
only to keep Afghanistan from spinning completely out of control, but
also as counterweights
to the growing power of Iran. The Sunni governments in Riyadh and
Islamabad have as much to fear from a resurgent Iran as does the Bush
administration. But does this mean that leads about the origins of 9/11
should not be aggressively pursued? Of course not. But this is
precisely what the Bush administration is doing. And now the cover-up
is enhanced by the CIA's destruction of Zubaydah's interrogation tapes.
The American public deserves no less than the complete truth about
9/11. And those CIA officials now complicit in hiding the truth by
destroying key evidence should be held responsible."
Link here
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Gerald Posner article on Saudis and Pakis backing 9/11 attacks
by
margieburns
on Sat 08 Dec 2007 04:57 PM EST | Permanent Link
Comments
Re: Gerald Posner article on Saudis and Pakis backing 9/11 attacks
by
Mary-Anne
on Sun 13 Jan 2008 11:32 AM EST | Profile | Permanent Link
The Zeit Gheist documentary is the latest to deal with the 9/11 events. It has some informations we've already heard but it also lights up some facts I never heard of before. foreign online pharmacy
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