Log in

View Full Version : Investigating Khobar Towers: How a Saudi Deception Protected bin Laden



mom person
06-25-2009, 05:01 PM
by Gareth Porter (Parts 1-4 of a 5 part series)

From part one:
Investigating Khobar Towers: How a Saudi Deception Protected bin Laden

Part 1: Al Qaeda Excluded from the Suspects List

by Gareth Porter / June 25th, 2009

WASHINGTON — On Jun. 25, 1996, a massive truck bomb exploded at a building in the Khobar Towers complex in Khobar, Saudi Arabia, which housed U.S. Air Force personnel, killing 19 U.S. airmen and wounding 372.

Immediately after the blast, more than 125 agents from the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) were ordered to the site to sift for clues and begin the investigation of who was responsible. But when two U.S. embassy officers arrived at the scene of the devastation early the next morning, they found a bulldozer beginning to dig up the entire crime scene.

The Saudi bulldozing stopped only after Scott Erskine, the supervisory FBI special agent for international terrorism investigations, threatened that Secretary of State Warren Christopher, who happened to be in Saudi Arabia when the bomb exploded, would intervene personally on the matter.

U.S. intelligence then intercepted communications from the highest levels of the Saudi government, including interior minister Prince Nayef, to the governor and other officials of Eastern Province instructing them to go through the motions of cooperating with U.S. officials on their investigation but to obstruct it at every turn.

That was the beginning of what interviews with more than a dozen sources familiar with the investigation and other information now available reveal was a systematic effort by the Saudis to obstruct any U.S. investigation of the bombing and to deceive the United States about who was responsible for the bombing.

The Saudi regime steered the FBI investigation toward Iran and its Saudi Shi’a allies with the apparent intention of keeping U.S. officials away from a trail of evidence that would have led to Osama bin Laden and a complex set of ties between the regime and the Saudi terrorist organizer.

The key to the success of the Saudi deception was FBI director Louis Freeh, who took personal charge of the FBI investigation, letting it be known within the Bureau that he was the “case officer” for the probe, according to former FBI officials.

Freeh allowed Saudi Ambassador Prince Bandar bin Sultan to convince him that Iran was involved in the bombing, and that President Bill Clinton, for whom he had formed a visceral dislike, “had no interest in confronting the fact that Iran had blown up the towers,” as Freeh wrote in his memoirs.

The Khobar Towers investigation soon became Freeh’s vendetta against Clinton. “Freeh was pursuing this for his own personal agenda,” says former FBI agent Jack Cloonan.

Parts 1 and 2:

http://forum.grasscity.com/politics/414114-khobar-towers-investigated-how-saudi-deception-protected-bin-laden.html


Part 3:

http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=47347

Part 4:

http://ipsnorthamerica.net/print.php?idnews=2362

No link yet to part 5.

seemslikeadream
06-25-2009, 09:20 PM
http://i109.photobucket.com/albums/n67/seemslikeadream/gifts/CuteKittiens.gif

mom person
06-26-2009, 05:25 PM
Purr.

mom person
07-02-2009, 08:06 AM
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=47376

EXCLUSIVE-PART 5: Freeh Became "Defence Lawyer" for Saudis on Khobar*
By Gareth Porter

WASHINGTON, Jun 26 (IPS) - In early November 1998, Louis Freeh sent an FBI team off to observe Saudi secret police officials interviewing eight Shi’a detainees from behind a one-way mirror at the Riyadh detention centre. He planned to use the Shi’a testimony to show that Iran was behind the bombing.

As expected, the stories told by the detainees recapitulated the outlines of the Shi’a plot that had already been described by the Saudis two years earlier. Now there were even more tantalising details of direct Iranian involvement.

One of the detainees said Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps General Ahmad Sherifi had personally selected the Khobar barracks as a target. Another said the Saudi Hezbollah members had been not only trained but paid by the Iranians.

"We came away with solid evidence that Iran was behind it," says a former FBI agent.

There was one problem with the evidence the FBI team collected: the Saudi secret police had already had two and half years to coach the Saudi Hezbollah detainees on what to say about the case, with the ever-present threat of more torture to provide the incentive.

But Freeh was not about to let the torture issue interfere with his mission. "For Louis, if they would let us in the room, that was the important thing," one former high-ranking FBI official told IPS. "We would have gone over there and gotten the answers even if they had been propped up."

more at link.