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SNEAK PREVIEW BY TIMMERMAN - SAUDI'S SUPPORT TERRORISM
Insight on the News - Daily Insight ^ | 6/3/02 ISSUE | Kenneth R. Timmerman

Posted on 05/19/2002 4:52:30 AM PDT by Elkiejg

Only a small portion of the documents Israel seized from Palestinian terrorist cells and governmental offices during the monthlong incursion into the West Bank has been made public, but already one Arab state and its highly paid U.S. lobbyists are crying foul. After Israeli revelations that the Saudi government had been paying blood money to the families of Palestinian suicide bombers, the Saudis put out the word that the Israeli documents were "false."

Not mistakenly interpreted, not taken out of context, not misleading or mistranslated, but false. "It is complete and utter nonsense that the Saudi government has been giving money to the families of suicide bombers," Saudi public-relations agent Michael Petruzzello tells Insight.

The documents come in many flavors. They include Saudi-government accounting schedules showing the amount of money paid to individual Palestinians and their families, with the names of suicide bombers and others who carried out armed attacks against Israelis highlighted in yellow, blue and pink. They include correspondence between Yasser Arafat's Palestinian Authority (PA) and the Saudi government that discusses the payments. They also include a damning letter from the Saudis complaining that the Palestinians had exposed the secret financial ties by allowing the publication of a Feb. 19 report in the PA publication al-Hayat al-Jedida thanking Saudi Arabia for assisting the families of terrorists killed in attacks on Israelis.

The Israelis also captured official PA correspondence praising the bombers and a Hamas leaflet lauding a teen-age "martyr" for his "quality suicide action." The teen-ager, Natir Muhammad Mahmud Hamed, appears as No. 91 on one list of 102 Palestinians whose families received the Saudi blood money. He carried out a shooting at the Afula bus station on Oct. 5, 2001, in which three Israeli civilians were killed and 14 were wounded.

"We have several warehouses full of documents and have finished our preliminary analysis of them," Israeli military-intelligence analyst Col. Miriam Eisen tells Insight. "We will be releasing them as we are able to put them into context, not one by one."

Many of these documents were seized at the offices of the Tulkarm Zakat (Charity) Association, a nongovernmental agency that dispensed social assistance to the families of suicide bombers primarily from foreign donors, including the government of Saudi Arabia. Other foreign donors included the largest Muslim charity in the United States, the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development (HLF) in Richardson, Texas, whose assets were frozen in December 2001 on presidential order because of its alleged ties to terrorist groups.

The HLF frequently has been singled out by the Israelis as a major source of funding for Hamas. Last year, it raised an estimated $13 million, which it boasted of donating to charities in the West Bank and Gaza. HLF supporters, which include groups such as the American Muslim Council and the Islamic Association for Palestine, claim they merely are providing humanitarian aid for Palestinian families, much as the Saudis are doing today.

Khaled Saffuri, a former legislative director of the American Muslim Council who now heads the Islamic Institute in Washington, has met with top Justice Department officials several times since the HLF was shut down — including a private dinner with U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft — questioning the breadth and manner of the FBI crackdown on Muslim charities in America. Saffuri openly boasts of his ties to the Bush White House and to top Republican strategist Grover Norquist, who cofounded the Islamic Institute four years ago.

In a meeting with Insight editors last week, Saffuri firmly denounced Hamas, Hezbollah and all other terrorist groups. He called for Arafat's ouster. Norquist, also present at the meeting, heatedly dismissed critics of his efforts on behalf of Saffuri and other Muslim leaders, some of whom have been tied to Hamas fund-raising efforts in the United States, as "bigots" and "racists spreading lies."

When he announced the closure of the HLF on Dec. 4, 2001, President George W. Bush made clear that the group had violated the law. "Money raised by the Holy Land Foundation is used by Hamas to support schools and indoctrinate children to grow up into suicide bombers. Money raised by the Holy Land Foundation also is used by Hamas to recruit suicide bombers and to support their families," Bush said.

The Israelis seized extensive correspondence between the HLF and the Tulkarm Charity Association, which the Israelis labeled "one of the power centers of Hamas in Tulkarm." The charity "also has ties with the operational apparatus of Hamas which recruits youths in order to perpetrate suicide attacks," an Israeli intelligence analysis of the captured documents states.

Israel's claims about both groups were buttressed by an affidavit in support of shutting down the HLF filed in federal court on Nov. 15, 2001, by Dale L. Watson, assistant FBI director for counterterrorism. The affidavit itemized payments by the HLF to the Tulkarm group and named five top Hamas officials who had received the money.

Documents seized by the Israelis suggest that the substantial payments distributed to the families were a key element in recruiting suicide bombers. The one-time grants amounted to $25,000 per family from the government of Iraq, $5,300 from Saudi Arabia, $2,000 from the PA and $500 each from the United Arab Emirates and Qatar.

The $33,300 total payment amounts to approximately six years of the average Palestinian's annual wage. Saudi government spokesman Adel al-Jubeir acknowledged in a press conference just hours after the Israelis released the first documents that his government had provided "hundreds of millions of dollars to assist Palestinians." But al-Jubeir, until recently the deputy chief of mission at the Saudi Embassy in Washington, stressed: "We do not target suicide bombers. Support will go to every family in need. We do not ask where they come from."

In a written statement, Saudi Ambassador Prince Bandar bin Sultan said Saudi help "includes financial assistance to the families of victims … money to restock hospitals that have no medicines, to rebuild schools, to restore electricity and telephones and to put food on the tables of thousands of starving families."

Petruzzello, speaking separately to Insight, said the Saudi government was providing an estimated $120 million per year to "international organizations such as the U.N., the Red Cross and the Red Crescent Society for distribution [to the West Bank and Gaza]. The U.S. is using the same channels. So you can't say the Saudis are giving money to suicide bombers any more than the U.S. is doing."

Congressional analysts who track the way the United States sends aid to the Palestinians flatly contradict that assertion. "With few exceptions, U.S. aid money since 1995 has been disbursed through the U.S. Agency for International Development, which chooses contractors and monitors local projects such as highways and medical centers," one analyst tells Insight.

The documents released by Israel tell quite a different story from the Saudi claims of benign humanitarian assistance. Tables listing four "payment cycles" made by the Saudi Committee for Support of Intifada al-Quds (also known as the Committee for Support of the al-Aqsa Intifada) contained the names of more than 300 Palestinian victims of the 2000-2001 uprising, many of whom were involved directly in attacks against Israeli civilians.

An Israeli military-intelligence analysis of the most recent payment schedule ($545,000 paid out via the local branch office of the Arab Bank to the families of 102 Palestinians who died in 2001), spelled out in chilling detail the biographies of 36 of the Palestinian "victims." Eight of them were identified by name in the Saudi documents as suicide bombers. The other 28 were Hamas, Fatah and Palestinian Islamic Jihad military commanders and activists directly involved in planning or executing terrorist attacks.

The documents establish clearly that the Saudi money flowed from several sources, all of them closely tied to (and in some cases directly controlled by) senior members of the Saudi royal family. The main source of funding was the Saudi Committee for Support of the Intifada, a governmental agency run by Interior Minister Prince Nayef bin Abdul Aziz. The Saudi Embassy in Washington boasted that the committee had raised more than $109.56 million for "Palestinian martyrs" during a three-day telethon in April. The biggest single donor was Alwaleed bin Talal, who pledged $27 million, including 100 deluxe four-wheel-drive vehicles — gifts that certainly would come in handy to impoverished families out shopping in refugee camps.

This is the same billionaire prince whose offer of $10 million to the city of New York was rejected by mayor Rudy Giuliani after the prince urged the United States to drop its support for Israel. Saudi King Fahd and Crown Prince Abdullah each pledged more than $1 million to the committee during the telethon, and King Fahd's wife, Princess Johara bint Ibrahim al-Ibrahim, pledged an additional $800,000.

Another Saudi donor organization the Israelis claim has been funding Hamas and the suicide bombers is the International Islamic Relief Organization (IIRO). A quasi-official entity that helped funnel billions of dollars of Saudi aid to mujahideen fighters in Afghanistan during the 1980s, the IIRO is supervised by the governor of Riyadh, Prince Salman bin Abdul Aziz. Among the alleged beneficiaries of IIRO funds in the 1980s were Osama bin Laden and his brother-in-law, Mohammad Jamal Khalifah, as well as Iraqi terrorist Ramzi Yousef, the mastermind of both the 1993 World Trade Center bombing and the failed 1995 scheme known as "Project Bojinka" to crash 11 U.S. commercial jetliners into U.S. cities and airports.

In one internal IIRO report captured by the Israelis, the organization listed 14 Islamic committees in the West Bank and Gaza to which it had distributed $280,000. All 14 organizations "are known to be identified with Hamas," the Israelis claim. The IIRO report notes that the Saudi money had been earmarked for the families of victims, including those killed in attacks on Israelis, "as well as the Hamas-identified committees/bodies themselves." The Saudi support for Hamas and its affiliated charities didn't always suit Arafat and the PA. In a separate letter to Prince Salman dated Jan. 1, 2001, a top Arafat aide, Abu Mazen, complained that the Saudi money was not reaching the families of the "martyrs," but was going directly to Hamas.

"I wish to inform you," wrote Mazen, "that [Arafat] phoned me and asked to pass on to you his request to mediate and intervene and express his opinion about what is happening in our homeland. The Saudi committee responsible for transferring the contributions to beneficiaries is sending large sums to radical committees and associations, including the Islamic Association which belongs to Hamas … and brothers belonging to the Jihad in all areas. This has a bad effect on the domestic situation and also strengthens these brothers and thus has a bad impact on everybody."

Saudis Buy Friends, Influence in Washington

The Saudi government is paying large sums to hire Washington public-relations (PR) and lobbying firms — some of them with solid Republican Party credentials — to burnish its image post-Sept. 11.

The biggest winner has been Qorvis Communications, a Washington "spin shop" that formally registered as a foreign agent for the Royal Embassy of Saudi Arabia on March 6. Qorvis declared that it had received $3,797,078 for its services prior to registration, according to records at the Department of Justice.

Qorvis Managing Partner Michael Petruzzello calls his firm "nonpartisan," but it has teamed with one of Washington's best-connected law firms, Patton Boggs, a lead Qorvis investor. Handling the Saudi account are Patton Boggs partners Jack Deschauer, a former legislative counsel for the U.S. Navy during the George H.W. Bush administration, and Ed Newberry, a longtime staff member of Rep. Frank Wolf (R-Va). The firm is receiving $100,000 to "educate Congress and staff on issues that are important to the Saudis," says Kevin McCauley of the industry newsletter, O'Dwyer's PR Daily.

Just after the Sept. 11 attacks, McCauley adds, the Saudis hired the PR firm Burson-Marsteller and spent $2.5 million to buy national newspaper ads to counter the negative image of Saudi Arabia as the home of 14 of the 19 al-Qaeda hijackers.

More recently, the Saudis have worked with former Republican campaign strategist Chris Wilson, a Qorvis partner, to conduct focus groups to craft "soft" TV spots aimed at improving public perceptions of the desert kingdom. Although the spots were rejected by the Weather Channel and some cable operators as "inappropriate," a Qorvis executive tells Insight the advertising campaign had been a success. "Things are starting to turn around," he observes. "The polling numbers are coming back to pre-9/11 levels."

Fred Dutton, who was a White House adviser to President John F. Kennedy, is the dean of registered Saudi agents in Washington and has fought PR battles before. "This is probably a $10 million campaign," he tells Insight. "But that's peanuts in our politics. For every dollar the Saudis are spending, the American Jewish community is spending $10 to influence politicians and public opinion."

Testament to a Suicide Bomber

Abd al-Karim Omar Muhammad Abu Na'asah was No. 17 on a list of 102 Palestinians whose families received a one-time payment of $5,300 from the Saudi Committee for the Support of the al-Aqsa Intifada and is identified in a table bearing the insignia of the Royal Saudi government as the perpetrator of a "suicide operation in Afula." Here is how the Israelis described him in an intelligence analysis that accompanied the captured documents:

"Born in Jenin, in the past served as a policeman in the Palestinian Police in Jenin. An activist of Fatah/al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, directed by the Fatah senior leadership (Abd al Karim Aweis). He was recruited for the Afula suicide attack by Haj Ali Safuri, commander of the PIJ [Palestine Islamic Jihad] military-security apparatus in Jenin.

"The attack was carried out in the city market in Afula on 27 November 2001. Two Israeli civilians were killed in the attack and 50 were wounded, nine severely. Responsibility for the attack was claimed jointly by the PIJ and the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades."

According to captured documents, the expenses of this suicide attack were paid for by the PIJ secretary, Ramadan Shalah, who resides in Damascus, where he directs his organization's terrorist attacks against Israel.

Kenneth R. Timmerman is a senior writer for Insight magazine.


TOPICS: Breaking News; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; Israel; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: saudisprcampaign
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Some disturbing statements in this article - Saudi's can't be trusted - why are we still dealing with them. But bigger question is the connection of PR people to the Bush team. Anyone have information on any of these claims?
1 posted on 05/19/2002 4:52:30 AM PDT by Elkiejg
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To: Elkiejg
Surely we can't expect to believe cold hard evidence over what they're telling us!

The whole lot, including PR firms in Washington, are out for number one, nothing else. I don't think the PR execs have any loyalty to Bush--he just hired them to do a job. Unfortunately, as we found out during the election campaign, those without loyalty or integrity will gladly take private information provided during PR sessions to the side that DOES have their support (e.g., GW's debate-practice video showing up at Dumbocrat's doorstep).

2 posted on 05/19/2002 4:57:56 AM PDT by shezza
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To: Elkiejg
Related, fyi.........

Saudi prince visits Texas
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/673250/posts

Excerpt:

"There is a lot of anger at the U.S. for what is perceived as a lack of restraining Sharon,"
said Adel Al-Jubeir, a foreign policy adviser. "The crown prince wanted to make sure the president
was aware of this."

He added that it is "very clear that allowing this problem to spiral out of control will
have grave consequences for the U.S. and its interests."

3 posted on 05/19/2002 5:12:37 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP
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To: Elkiejg
Some disturbing statements in this article - Saudi's
can't be trusted - why are we still dealing with them?

Well, there's this thing they have over there. It's called oil. And then there's this
thing over here called the U.S. Senate, and DIMocRATS, and obstructionism.
They are gleeful to block effective oil policy legislation so we can buy MORE
Saudi oil instead of becoming independent of it.

4 posted on 05/19/2002 5:20:50 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP
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To: MeeknMing
The ragheads would actually do us a favor by using the oil weapon. We'd know who our friends truly are, plus we'd gain a realistic energy policy (coal, nuclear, etc).
5 posted on 05/19/2002 5:27:44 AM PDT by Eric in the Ozarks
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To: Elkiejg
"Some disturbing statements in this article - Saudi's can't be trusted - why are we still dealing with them."

The simple fact is that NO native Muslim Arab can be trusted. The "backstab from the shadows" is an integral part of their culture AND religion. The only way you can trust a Muslim Arab is to have him constantly in view, and covered with superior firepower. They may be eminently likeable, but, as soon as circumstances arise in which a backstab will benefit them, they WILL use it.

6 posted on 05/19/2002 5:37:18 AM PDT by Wonder Warthog
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To: Wonder Warthog
I think you're on to something.
7 posted on 05/19/2002 5:38:21 AM PDT by Eric in the Ozarks
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To: Elkiejg
I recall the President's statement that nations are either with us or with the terrorists? This pile of documents apparently confirms Saudi Arabia is "with the terrorists."
8 posted on 05/19/2002 5:39:15 AM PDT by NoControllingLegalAuthority
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To: Elkiejg
But bigger question is the connection of PR people to the Bush team.
Anyone have information on any of these claims?

Hmm?? I did a Google Search and it came up with quite a few links to stuff.
If I can get around to it, I'll check the links out. In case I don't, then here's
the Google Search with the links........

Google Search: Grover Norquist Islamic Institute
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=UTF8&oe=UTF8&q=Grover+Norquist+Islamic+Institute+&btnG=Google+Search

9 posted on 05/19/2002 5:50:22 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP
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To: Eric in the Ozarks
I agree. But the Saudis WANT the money and need it. I have NEVER
figured out why, after the '73 oil embargo, the U.S. never got serious
with a responsible energy policy. Politics should NOT be a part of that,
imho.........

10 posted on 05/19/2002 5:54:54 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP
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To: Elkiejg
But bigger question is the connection of PR people to the Bush team.
Anyone have information on any of these claims?

Google Search: Holy Land Foundation Richardson Texas
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF8&oe=UTF8&q=Holy+Land+Foundation+Richardson+Texas&btnG=Google+Search

11 posted on 05/19/2002 5:58:07 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP
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To: MeeknMing
Actually, we did have an energy policy, however briefly, in the late 1970's. Jimmy Carter mandated that natural gas should not be used in large industrial boilers (power generation)in favor of low sulfur coal. While this was a good idea (probably the only one he had in four years) it depressed and caused bankruptcies the gas exploration industry, an unintended karom shot.
Now, because utilities are sucking up nat gas for peaking power, gas is closing in on $4.00 MM/BTU's, and you can buy all the Wyoming coal you'd ever need for $1.50 delivered.
12 posted on 05/19/2002 6:07:36 AM PDT by Eric in the Ozarks
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To: Elkiejg
But bigger question is the connection of PR people to the Bush team.
Anyone have information on any of these claims?

STRANGE BEDFELLOWS
Grover Norquist and Abdurahman Alamoudi

http://www.bostonphoenix.com/boston/news_features/this_just_in/documents/01848515.htm
Excerpt:

But now, as Bush embarks on a war against terrorism, the president may find Norquist more of a liability than an asset: the tax reformer has emerged as one of the leading conservative critics of the administration’s legislative response to terror, the Anti-Terrorism Act of 2001. Certainly, Norquist is no defender of terror or terrorists. Still, he has, in a political and a business capacity, befriended those who have failed to renounce terror. And if you don’t toe the party line on terror these days, you’re not in the party.

The Protestant Norquist is a founding director of the Islamic Institute, a socially conservative Muslim think tank that eschews international issues in favor of domestic issues such as tax cuts and faith-based initiatives. In addition, Norquist’s lobbying firm, Janus-Merritt Strategies LLC, was officially registered as a lobbyist for the Islamic Institute as well as for Abdurahman Alamoudi, the founder and former executive director of the American Muslim Council. Public records show that Alamoudi has done more than $20,000 worth of business with Norquist’s firm, on issues relating to Malaysia. One source says the lobbying involved efforts on behalf of reformist Islamic leader Anwar Ibrahim, imprisoned in Malaysia, whose cause has been taken up by Amnesty International, among others.

To be sure, the bulk of Norquist’s work on behalf of American Muslims merely falls in line with the American tradition of targeting ethnic voters — a tradition that goes back to the days of urban machine politics and before. To that end, Norquist and Khaled Saffuri, the executive director of the Islamic Institute and former director of government relations at the American Muslim Council, brokered meetings between Muslim and Republican leaders during the 2000 presidential campaign. These meetings led Bush to come out against secret evidence (evidence in certain immigration and national-security cases that the accused can’t see) and ethnic profiling by police — tools that some law-enforcement experts now want in the fight against terror.

13 posted on 05/19/2002 6:13:26 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP
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To: Elkiejg
But bigger question is the connection of PR people to the Bush team.
Anyone have information on any of these claims?

FBI Raid On Islamic Group
Turns Up GOP Donors

http://www.rense.com/general21/FBIraidislamic.htm
By Duncan Campbell in Los Angeles
The Guardian - London
3-25-2

The target of an anti-terrorist raid in the United States last week provided funds for an Islamic group with close ties to the Republican party and the White House.

The Safa trust, a Saudi-backed charity, has provided funds for a political group called the Islamic Institute, which was set up to mobilise support for the Republican party. It shares an office in Washington with the Republican activist Grover Norquist.

The institute, founded in 1999 to win influence in the Republican party, has helped to arrange meetings between senior Bush officials and Islamic leaders, according to the report in Newsweek magazine. Its s chairman, Khaled Saffuri, and Mr Norquist cooperated to arrange the meetings.

The trust gave $20,000 (£14,000) to the institute, which also received $20,000 from a board member of the Success Foundation, according to the report. The institute has also received money from abroad, including$200,000 from Qatar and $55,000 from Kuwait. The institute says that none of the money came with strings attached.

Mr Norquist, who is a member of the institute's board, said that it existed "to promote democracy and free markets. Any effort to imply guilt by association is incompetent McCarthyism".

It is understood that a series of raids last week were prompted by the transfer of funds from the Safa trust and other groups to accounts based in the Isle of Man. They have not led to any charges.

Islamic groups have complained that many of the raids being carried out on Islamic organisations are speculative and violate their civil liberties.

In another development, the possibility that one of the September 11 hijackers had been exposed to anthrax has been explored by the FBI.

A Florida doctor who treated Ahmed Ibrahim al-Haznawi for a leg wound last summer concluded that the likeliest cause of the injury was cutaneous anthrax. But the FBI said yesterday that it had found no evidence of a link between the hijackers and anthrax.

14 posted on 05/19/2002 6:20:19 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP
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To: Elkiejg
Qorvis Managing Partner Michael Petruzzello calls his firm "nonpartisan," but it has teamed with one of Washington's best-connected law firms, Patton Boggs, a lead Qorvis investor. Handling the Saudi account are Patton Boggs partners Jack Deschauer, a former legislative counsel for the U.S. Navy during the George H.W. Bush administration, and Ed Newberry, a longtime staff member of Rep. Frank Wolf (R-Va). The firm is receiving $100,000 to "educate Congress and staff on issues that are important to the Saudis," says Kevin McCauley of the industry newsletter, O'Dwyer's PR Daily.

Don't forget SANDLER-INNOCENZI, who is being paid hansomely to join the Axis of Treachery.

This is TOM DELAY'S CAMPAPIGN CONSULTANT. (hopefully not any more).

These backstabbing traitors make me sick.

15 posted on 05/19/2002 6:28:37 AM PDT by montag813
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To: montag813
Sandler-Innoncenzi's client list conveniently leaves out the Saudi murderers they are peddling for.
16 posted on 05/19/2002 6:31:11 AM PDT by montag813
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To: Elkiejg
The big Washington law firms and PR firms work for whoever has power and money. Of course they know Bush's father. And they also have close ties to top Democrats, I'm sure. That's their job, to grease the wheels and know all the right people.

The Bush family has close, long-standing ties to the Saudi royal family, which go back well before the Gulf War. The question is, what is President Bush going to do now? That, we don't yet know.

Hopefully, unlike clinton, he is the kind of man who puts his country before his personal friendships and political ties. Also, hopefully, he is the kind of man who understands that friends don't stab friends in the back, and then refuse to apologize, which is essentially what the Saudis have done to Bush personally as well as to the United States.

17 posted on 05/19/2002 6:57:42 AM PDT by Cicero
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To: Elkiejg
Who's kiddin who?

The Saudi's are terrorists. They have the Wahabi cult which is terroristic. They support terrorism - they even funded bin Laden. They support the worldwide expansion of terrorism through the overseas building and staffing of militant islamic mosques. They quietly fund Hamas, the PLO, Islamic Jihad, and others. They daily broadcast hatred against America on their radio stations. They pay the families of the murderous suicide bombers killing the innocent.

How many more facts do you need to establish that the Saudi Royals are the leaders of terrorism?

They constitue a terrorist state despite what they say, despite their expensive PR campaign, despite their "warnings" to the US as an oil client. No doubt about it - they would do away with us if they did not want our money?

18 posted on 05/19/2002 7:25:20 AM PDT by NetValue
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To: Elkiejg
Some relevant information
19 posted on 05/19/2002 8:09:21 AM PDT by week 71
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To: MeeknMing
The same Norquist who supports massive immigration. The problem with the Pubbies is that they are infected with traitors. The Bush family is too deep in Saudi business deals. All of the actions we take are influenced by preserving those contacts.
20 posted on 05/19/2002 8:29:56 AM PDT by willyone
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