Saudi Arabia claims that the 9/11 Commission Report, the official American inquiry published in 2003, cleared it of responsibility for the attacks.
After twenty years of 9/11, the role of Saudi Arabia in the attack remains in dispute despite
unrelenting efforts by the US and Saudi governments to neutralise it as a live political issue.The Saudi Arabia embassy in Washington
this week issued a statement detailing its anti-terrorist activities and
ongoing hostility to Al-Qaeda. This was briskly rejected by the lawyers for the
families of the 9/11 victims who said that, “what Saudi Arabia desperately does
not want to discuss is the substantial and credible evidence of the complicity
[in the attack] of their employees, agents and sponsored agents”.
In fact, it found no evidence that the
Saudi government as an institution or senior Saudi officials as individuals had
funded Al-Qaeda. But this is not an exoneration since the Saudi government
traditionally retains deniability by permitting Saudi sheikhs and wealthy
individuals to finance radical Sunni Muslim movements abroad. A former Taliban
finance minister, Agha Jan Motasim, revealed in an interview with the New York
Times in 2016 that he went to Saudi Arabia several times a year to raise funds
from private donors for his movement.
The evidence has always been strong that at various points the hijackers, who flew the planes into the twin towers and the Pentagon, had interacted with Saudi state employees, though how much the latter knew about the plot has never been clarified. What is impressive is the determination with which the US security services have tried to conceal or play down intelligence linking Saudi officials to 9/11, something which may be motivated by their own culpability in giving Saudis a free pass when suspicions about the hijackers were aroused prior to 9/11.
In Sarasota, Florida, the FBI at first
denied having any documents relating to the hijackers who were living there,
but eventually handed over 80,000 pages that might be relevant under the
Freedom of Information Act. Last week President Joe Biden decided to release
other documents from the FBI’s overall investigation.
A striking feature of 9/11 is the
attention which President George W Bush gave to diverting blame away from Saudi
Arabia. He allowed some 144 individuals, mostly from the Saudi elite, to fly
back to Saudi Arabia without being questioned by the FBI. A photograph shows
Bush in cheerful conversation on the White House balcony a few days after 9/11
with the influential Saudi ambassador to Washington, Prince Bandar bin Sultan.
Senator Bob Graham, chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee at the time, told me in an interview with The Independent in 2014 that, “there were several incidents [in which US officials] were inexplicably solicitous to Saudis”. This solicitude did not ebb over the years and it was only in 2016 that the wholly redacted 28 pages in the 9/11 Report about the financial links of some hijackers to individuals working for the Saudi government was finally made public.
I have never been a believer in direct
Saudi government complicity in 9/11, because they had no motive and they
usually act at one remove from events. When the Saudi state acts on its own –
as with the murder and dismemberment of journalist Jamil Khashoggi by a death
squad at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in 2018 – the operation is commonly
marked by shambolic incompetence.
Conspiracy theories about 9/11 divert
attention away from two areas of Saudi culpability that are beyond dispute. The
first is simply that 9/11 was a Saudi-led operation through and through, since
Osama bin Laden, from one of the most prominent Saudi families, was the leader
of Al-Qaeda and 15 out of the19 hijackers were Saudi nationals. The 9/11
attacks might have happened without Afghanistan, but not without Saudi
participation.
Another kind of Saudi government
culpability for 9/11 is more wide-ranging but more important because the
factors behind it have not disappeared. A weakness of the outpouring of
analyses of the consequences of 9/11 is that they treat the attacks as the
point of departure for a series of events that ended badly, such as the “war on
terror” and the invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq. This is very much a western
viewpoint because what happened in New York and Washington in 2001 was not the
beginning, but the midpoint in a struggle, involving both open and covert
warfare, that began more than 20 years earlier and made Saudi Arabia such a
central player in world politics.
This preeminent status is attributed to
Saudi oil wealth and partial control over the price of oil. But more than 20
years before 9/11 two events occurred which deepened the US-Saudi alliance and
made it far more important for both parties. These genuine turning points in
history, both of which took place in 1979, were the overthrow of the Shah of
Iran and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. These together generated 40 years
of conflict and war which have not yet come to an end, and in which 9/11 was
but one episode and the Taliban victory in Afghanistan last month another.
Saudi Arabia and the US wanted to stop
communism in Afghanistan and the rise of Iran as a revolutionary Shia power.
The former motive vanished with the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991 (though
not the permanent crisis in Afghanistan), but the Saudi aim to build a wall of
fundamentalist Sunni movements in the 50 Muslim majority states in the world
did not.
Saudi policy is to bet on all players in
any conflict, so it can truthfully claim to be backing the Afghan government
and fighting terrorism, though it is also indirectly funding a resurgent
Taliban. The US was not blind to this, but only occasionally admitted so in
public. Six years after 9/11, in 2007, Stuart Levy, the under secretary of the
US Treasury in charge of putting a stop to the financing of terrorism, told ABC
news that regarding Al-Qaeda, “if I could somehow snap my fingers and cut off
funding from one country, it would be Saudi Arabia”. He added that not a single
person identified by the US and the UN as a funder of terrorism had been
prosecuted by the Saudis.
Most candid admissions by senior US
officials were classified and are only known because of leaks. In a cable
published by WikiLeaks, for instance, the then US secretary of state, Hillary
Clinton, wrote that, “Saudi Arabia remains a critical financial support base
for Al-Qaeda, the Taliban, LET [Lashkar-e-Taiba in Pakistan] and other
terrorist groups.”
Many US politicians and officials came to feel over the years that the price paid by the US for its alliance with the Saudi rulers was too great because their interests had come to diverge too radically. Senator Graham told me that, “I believe that the failure to shine a full light on Saudi actions, and particularly its involvement in 9/11” had damaged the US and opened the door to violent jihadis. A direct line connects exonerating Saudi Arabia over 9/11 and the Taliban victory in Afghanistan 20 years later.
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