A little known
conflict between the United States and Saudi Arabia in summer 2001 sheds new
light on 9/11. What role did the tensions back then play? And why did the
attacks occur actually in early September?
Until today it is largely
unknown that the Saudi government planned a radical course change in summer
2001. Via official diplomatic channels the U.S. government was informed that
the Saudis intended to stop coordinating their policy with the United
States. The attacks of 9/11 destroyed these plans to separate and gain more
independence only weeks later.
The intimate relationship between Prince
Bandar bin Sultan, the Saudi ambassador in the United States from 1983 till
2005, and U.S. President George W. Bush is legendary. Yet, the bond between
the two former fighter jet pilots included more than just personal sympathy.
The close friendship of Bandar and Bush represented also the special
business relationship between Saudi Arabia and the United States, dating as
far back as to the first half of the 20th century. Its simple core: the
Saudis are selling their oil and then promptly reinvest the received U.S.
Dollars back in the United States - for weapons and large infrastructure
projects. Thus in the end most of the American money is floating back to
U.S. corporations.
This so-called "Petrodollar recycling" is crucial not
only for the American economy but also for the U.S. currency itself. If the
Arab nations, led by the Saudis, would ever decide to sell their oil for
Euros instead for Dollars - like the Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein had
declared some time before the invasion of his country - then the global need
for Dollars would be reduced so dramatically that U.S. monetary supremacy
would seriously be at risk.
So America and the Saudis are bound
together in a close economic symbiosis. This leads also to a close political
alliance - which tends to be fragile because of the extreme differences in
the political systems of both countries. People in Saudi Arabia are living
in one of the most anachronistic dictatorships in the world. The almighty
rulers there allow political reforms towards more democratic participation
only reluctantly. A further constant factor of instability in Saudi domestic
policy is the conflict between Israel and Palestine.
When the hawkish
Ex-General Ariel Sharon became Israeli president in early 2001, and when
Arab satellite TV stations started to bring more and more pictures of the
Israeli occupation in Palestine directly into Saudi living rooms, then the
pressure on the own leadership became urgent. Normal Saudi citizens clearly
understood that Israel acted with permission of the United States who at the
same time were the closest ally of the own unpopular ruling class. The Saudi
people got more and more upset by this.
In March 2001, when President
Bush was just two months in office, Bandar appeared at the White House. He
brought a message from the Saudi Crown Prince, the de-facto ruler of the
country. Progress in the peace process between Israel and the Palestinians
would be crucial for building a coalition of moderate Arabs, also to
pressure Saddam Hussein. (1)
The U.S. government on the other hand was
under pressure from the Israel lobby, which had a great, historically grown
influence on American politics. The Sharon administration however had little
interest in making diplomatic concessions to the Palestinians but preferred
a policy of military strength and supremacy instead. A characteristic
example was Sharon´s later decision to build a wall between Israel and the
West Bank.
The conflict in summer 2001
The Saudis were severely
irritated by the American passivity in the conflict. They decided to send a
signal. In May Crown Prince Abdullah publicly turned down an invitation into
the White House. He justified this by declaring the United States would
ignore the suffering of the Palestinians.
Early in June 2001 Bandar
was invited to a dinner with Bush. Secretary of State Colin Powell and
National Security Advisor Condoleeca Rice were also present. The Saudi
ambassador spoke very intensely for several hours. The situation in the
Middle East was getting worse, Bandar said. He added:
"This continuous
deterioration will give an opportunity for extremists on both sides to grow
and they will be the only winners. The United States and the moderate Arabs
will pay a very high price. There is no doubt that the moderate Arab
countries, as well as the United States, have lost the media war and the
Arab public opinion. What the average Arab person sees every day is painful
and very disturbing. Women, children, elderly are being killed, tortured by
the Israelis." (2)
Bandar pointed out that more and more the Arab world
´s impression would be that the United States backed Israel completely. This
would seriously damage the American interests in the region. The ambassador
made clear that the United States had to find a way to separate the actions
of the Israeli government and its own interests in the region. He also
admitted that for the first time in 30 years there would be serious problems
with the internal situation in Saudi Arabia - a real threat for the
stability of the administration. (3)
In summer 2001 the conflict in
the Middle East got more tense. Several cease-fires between Israel and
Palestine were broken. The United States still remained passive. On August
27, Bandar again visited Bush. He began:
"Mr. President, this is the most
difficult message I have had to convey to you that I have ever conveyed
between the two governments since I started working here in Washington in
1982."
Again he stressed the close relationship of both countries and the
growing problems of the Middle East conflict. Apparently Bush had allowed
Sharon to "determine everything in the Middle East", he said. Yet, the
Israeli occupation policy would have to fail. Bandar compared it with
British policy in the American colonies in the 18th century and with the
Soviet policy in Afghanistan. (4)
The threat of the Crown
Prince
Then came the key statement: "Therefore the Crown Prince will not
communicate in any form, type or shape with you, and Saudi Arabia will take
all its political, economic and security decisions based on how it sees its
own interest in the region without taking into account American interests
anymore because it´s obvious that the United States has taken a strategic
decision adopting Sharon´s policy." (5)
This message was a shock to
Bush and the whole U.S. administration. It was a clear political break with
the United States, a split that had loomed long before. According to Chas
Freeman, a former American ambassador in Saudi Arabia, a lot of common
interest had disappeared already after the end of the Cold War and the Gulf
War in 1991. More and more Saudis also questioned the ongoing presence of
the U.S. military in their country. (6)
Therefore President Bush decided
to relent. In a quickly drafted letter to the Crown Prince he declared that
he firmly believed in the right of the Palestinian people to have
self-determination and their own state. This was a concession that not even
President Clinton had ever made during his tenure.
The threat of the
Saudis to politically split away and to stop coordinating with the United
States was a major diplomatic earthquake. Everyone involved in any way with
the above mentioned Petrodollar money stream got very nervous because this
special business model highly depended on a safely working political
cooperation of both countries.
It is hard to imagine what might have
happended if Bush had not relented so quickly. At least the Saudis were
inclined to set up an urgent meeting of Arab leaders to form a coalition to
completely back the Palestinians. They were also willing to seriously
question the military and intelligence cooperation with the United States.
(7)
These thoughts got very specific and threatening to the United States
on August 25, when the Crown Prince ordered his military Chief of Staff,
General Salih, who had just arrived in Washington for a high-level review of
Saudi-U.S. military collaboration, to immediately return to Saudi Arabia
without meeting any Americans. The Crown Prince also ordered a delegation of
about 40 senior Saudi officers who were about to leave for Washington to get
off their plane. The annual review of military relations was canceled
abruptly. The Pentagon was in shock. (8)
August 25, was also the day
the first tickets for the presumed 9/11 hijackers were bought.
(9)
Why did the attacks occur in early September?
Of course,
according to all the evidence, it took several months to plan the attacks.
It is almost unimaginable that the whole plot was orchestrated spontaneously
in two weeks. However the question is, as to what extend the attack plan
might have been ready for execution in 2001 - and the masterminds were only
waiting for a politically convenient moment to act. At last no one has ever
given a convincing reason for why the attacks actually occured in early
September - and not in early October, late May, or mid July.
Bush´s
quick concession had temporarily averted the threatening developments. The
Saudi Crown Prince was delighted. Yet, in his answer from September 6, he
insisted that Bush should give also a public statement about the issue. Bush
confirmed to give such an announcement in the week after September 10.
(10)
Over the weekend of September 8-9, diplomats of both countries
discussed what should happen next. A speech by Bush or Powell? Also a
meeting between Bush and Arafat at the United Nations in late September was
considered. The U.S. president welcomed the suggestion, thereby pleasing the
Saudis. Even without a final decision ambassador Bandar was euphoric:
"Suddenly I felt that we really were going to have a major initiative here
that could save all of us from ourselves - mostly - and from each other."
(11)
On September 9, the New York Times reported about these
negotiations. The newspaper confirmed that the "mounting pressure" from
Saudi Arabia had forced the United States to act. The Saudi foreign minister
had just completed a tour of Arab countries during which he called for a
united front on behalf of the Palestinians at the United Nations session in
New York. The New York Times cited diplomats who stressed that this was
highly unusual. The prince rarely traveled and the diplomats could not
recall such a senior Saudi official making "an open appeal for the
Palestinians, and implicitly against the United States".
In the same
article the newspaper cited U.S. administration officials saying that there
was an inclination to go ahead with a meeting with Arafat and to start a
process of serious dialogue "if events unfolded in a more favorable way in
the next 10 days". However, Israeli president Sharon only gave a
"halfhearted blessing" to these plans. Regarding a possible speech of U.S.
Secretary of State Colin Powell at the time of the United Nations General
Assembly in late September, the New York Times reported on September
9:
"A speech now being drafted at the State Department would seek to
explain for the first time the basic tenets of this administration's Middle
East policy, an administration official said. It would deal with such issues
as the Palestinian aspiration for a state, but it was still not decided how
that would be phrased, the official said. It would also deal with the need
for secure borders for Israel and possibly with the sensitive topic of
settlements." (12)
However, nothing of this was accomplished after
several hijacked planes crashed into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon
on the following Tuesday, September 11, 2001.
When news emerged that
15 of the 19 presumed hijackers had been Saudis, the attacks became a huge
burden for Saudi rulers. Their room for political maneuver was promptly
reduced to a minimum. To issue any demands or to press the U.S. government
to something had become totally impossible. Also a political split from the
United States had become unimaginable now. Instead the Saudis were busy to
distance themselves from the attacks.
A motive for
9/11?
Considering that the attacks are still unsolved and a
responsibility of Bin Laden remains - contrary to popular allegations -
unproven, the episode of this planned Saudi split in summer 2001 can be a
starting point for further thoughts. Was it part of the plan of the attacks´
masterminds - whoever they were - to force the Saudi Crown Prince aside the
United States and to permanently stop the threat of a political split? Was
the peace process in the Middle East, the main goal of the Saudi initiative,
also damaged intentionally? If this is true, then 9/11 was a broad
success.
After the attacks Saudi Arabia, like Pakistan and other
countries, became an even closer ally of the United States. This was no free
decision of these administrations, but directly forced by the extreme
polarization after 9/11 (Bush: "Either you´re with us or you are with the
terrorists").
Only two days after the attacks Ambassador Bandar and
President Bush met secretly at the White House to discuss the future
relations of both countries. No dissent was mentioned any more. (13) The
talks went on with a visit of the Saudi foreign minister at the White House
on September 20. In an statement published afterwards the minister stressed
that it had been proven that the FBI´s list of the alleged Saudi hijackers
was erroneous. Yet, investigators - and the press - chose to widely ignore
these remarks. (14)
Since then the suspicion of a Saudi involvement
in the attacks is looming more or less in the open. (15) In 2012 the U.S.
Senate even passed a law allowing legal actions against the Saudis regarding
9/11. (16) The law is the result of a lobbying effort of several influential
senators and the law firm Motley Rice, representing some of the families of
the attack´s victims. (17) This organized public pressure on Saudi Arabia
can also be seen as a useful tool of influential circles in the Unites
States to keep the Saudis under enduring control.
On the one hand it
is true that several Saudis, partly with connections to their government,
had close contacts with the alleged hijackers. Indeed there is even evidence
for an organized Saudi support network in the United States before 9/11.
Furthermore it´s true that the official investigations and the U.S.
government tried hard to avoid or even censor this aspect. Yet, on the other
hand it is still totally unproven if people from this Saudi support network
had any knowledge of the actual terror plans. The missing evidence for this
allegation reminds of the still lacking proof for the official story of the
attack´s planning itself.
One should remember that the main witnesses for
the official account of the planning of the 9/11 plot, like Abu Zubaydah,
Ramzi Binalshibh and Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, were all kidnapped to secret
prisons and tortured after their respective arrests. No official
investigator had ever access to them. Nonetheless their statements still
build the foundation of the 9/11 Commission Report - a fact even criticized
by U.S. media like NBC years ago, however, without any effect. (18) Also the
legal proceedings regarding 9/11, like the trial in Guantánamo, are, by all
legal standards, hardly more than a farce.
Considering this
background one should be careful with "disclosures" about Saudi complicity
in the attacks. There are strong political and economic forces trying to
continue their pressure on Saudi Arabia. At the same time it appears
doubtful how Saudi government circles should have benefited from 9/11 and
what interest they should have had in supporting the attacks. As mentioned
before it was an immediate effect of 9/11 that Saudi rulers lost most of
their room for political maneuver - which was foreseeable.
Questions for
the possible motives of 9/11 should therefore include considerations of the
polarization afterwards and the Saudi-American conflict in summer
2001.
About the author: Paul Schreyer, born 1977, is a German author and
journalist, writing for the online journals Global Research, Telepolis, and
others. He is author of the book "Inside 9/11."
Notes:
(1) Bob
Woodward, "State of Denial", New York, 2006, p. 25
(2) Ibid., p.
45
(3) Ibid., p. 46
(4) Ibid., p. 75
(5) Ibid., p.
76
(6) Robert G. Kaiser, David B. Ottaway, "Saudi Leader's Anger Revealed
Shaky Ties", Washington Post, 10.02.02