Saskatoon StarPhoenix

9/11 attackers may have had Saudi help: report

- NAFEESA SYEED

• Saudi nationals connected to the government in Riyadh may have aided some of the 9/11 hijackers in the United States before they carried out their attacks, according to a longclassi­fied portion of a congressio­nal inquiry.

The 28-page section was made public Friday by the House of Representa­tives Intelligen­ce Committee with some portions blacked out after U.S. intelligen­ce agencies delivered on a long-pending promise to declassify it as sought by the families of the almost 3,000 victims of the attacks.

“While in the United States, some of the Sept. 11 hijackers were in contact with, and received support or assistance from, individual­s who may be connected to the Saudi government,” the report said.

Saudi officials and the head of the Central Intelligen­ce Agency have long said the 28 pages provide no evidence that the U.S. ally was involved in the attacks, and American lawmakers underscore­d that in releasing the material.

“It’s important to note that this section does not put forward vetted conclusion­s, but rather unverified leads that were later fully investigat­ed by the intelligen­ce committee,” Rep. Devin Nunes of California, the committee’s Republican chairman, said in a statement.

Complaints have reemerged in recent months from some Americans, including relatives of 9/11 victims, that Saudi Arabia or organizati­ons and individual­s based there have financed groups linked to terrorism or failed to crack down on militants. Fifteen of the 19 hijackers in the attacks were identified as Saudi nationals.

The U.S. commission that investigat­ed the attacks said in its 2004 report that it “found no evidence that the Saudi government as an institutio­n or senior officials within the Saudi government funded al-Qaida.”

But some current and former members of Congress have said that formulatio­n left room for less direct involvemen­t and pressed for the release of the 28 classified pages. A CBS 60 Minutes report in April suggested a Saudi diplomat “known to hold extremist views” may have helped the hijackers after they travelled to the U.S. to prepare for the attacks.

White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters Friday that “we do not think” the 28 pages shed any new light on a Saudi role in the 9/11 attacks. He added release of the “investigat­ive material” is in keeping with the Obama administra­tion’s commitment to transparen­cy, even though he acknowledg­ed that “it did take quite some time for the decision to be made.”

On June 17, Saudi Arabia Foreign Minister Adel alJubeir called the 28 pages an “internal U.S. matter, not a Saudi matter,” and said when to release them was up to U.S. officials. But he added that the Saudi government has urged the U.S. to release the 28 pages since 2002, when they were initially classified. At that time, Prince Saud alFaisal, who was foreign minister, came to Washington with a message from then-Crown Prince Abdullah bin Abdulaziz to president George W. Bush, according to al-Jubeir.

“In the White House we said we would like the 28 pages released so that we can respond to any allegation­s against us and so that we can punish any Saudis that may have been involved in this plot,” he said at the Saudi embassy in Washington. “But we cannot because we don’t think it’s fair or just to respond to blank pages. That has been our position.”

The foreign minister also said the Saudis understand that investigat­ions were “conducted into the allegation­s that are in the 28 pages and that those investigat­ions have revealed that these allegation­s are not correct,” alJubeir said. “They don’t hold. These allegation­s are unsubstant­iated, unproven and nobody should make a big deal out of them.”

Saudi officials have pointed to statements from U.S. officials supporting their position, including an interview CIA Director John Brennan did with the Saudi-owned Arabic news channel Al Arabiya on June 12 in which he said the 28 pages were part of “a very preliminar­y review.”

“People shouldn’t take them as evidence of Saudi complicity in the attacks,” he said. “Indeed, subsequent­ly the assessment­s that have been done have shown it was very unfortunat­e that these attacks took place but this was the work of al-Qaida, al-Zawahiri, and others of that ilk.”

THE ASSESSMENT­S THAT HAVE BEEN DONE HAVE SHOWN IT WAS VERY UNFORTUNAT­E THAT THESE ATTACKS TOOK PLACE, BUT THIS WAS THE WORK OF AL-QAIDA, AL-ZAWAHIRI, AND OTHERS OF THAT ILK. — CIA DIRECTOR JOHN BRENNAN

 ?? CHAO SOI CHEONG / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? A long-classified portion of a congressio­nal inquiry into the 9/11 attacks said that some of the hijackers were in contact with, and received support or assistance from, Saudi nationals connected to the government in Riyadh.
CHAO SOI CHEONG / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES A long-classified portion of a congressio­nal inquiry into the 9/11 attacks said that some of the hijackers were in contact with, and received support or assistance from, Saudi nationals connected to the government in Riyadh.

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