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| pumpitoutRadio - 9/11: Bandar Bush and the ISI | |
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| Topic Started: Feb 13 2011, 06:10 PM (2,610 Views) | |
| broken sticks | Feb 15 2011, 07:24 PM Post #16 |
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Cheney's Law - jeff, the link on the previous page is for Dark Forces. http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=2655260104684404687# These videos are all EXCELLENT - Black Money is amazing, i had to find the second half on youtube because the PBS page ended the video early for some reason. Great links. |
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| shure | Feb 16 2011, 12:10 AM Post #17 |
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Thanks sticks. Links fixed
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| shure | Mar 17 2011, 01:53 PM Post #18 |
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911 - Saudi Arabia, Prince Bandar and the Cover Up http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DH8IYs6Nl9s |
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| broken sticks | Mar 17 2011, 03:40 PM Post #19 |
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Obama is a british agent? Wish they'd have had some evidence of that other than saying he was friends with blair. Well, i'm british, and apparently this guy is in a war with the british empire. That's a bit weird. I didn't think the super-elites were of any nation in particular, you know, one world govt and all that. I don't like that this video tries to get emotional support with the whole 'british empire' thing, drawing on the same emotions as racial hatred as a rally cry. Its a tactic used by racist groups quite commonly, and is despicable. Shame, coz the bandar information and the inquiry into BAe should both be massive issues. The way they are presented in the media makes people just not care i think - the BAe thing was in the press here quite a bit for such a scandal, but very rarely was it presented as the scandal-upon-scandal that it was. |
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| shure | Mar 17 2011, 04:10 PM Post #20 |
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The bulk of the video has good information. I don't agree with some of it, including the part you brought up. I guess I should have edited the video before I put it up Maybe you could make an edited version of the video stick
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| shure | Mar 17 2011, 07:50 PM Post #21 |
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That part bothered me too much, so I took the video down. It kind of discredits all the good information... (even if what they say is true, I sure can't prove it, or find any credible info to back it up). The only thing to do is make my own video about Bandar with sourced info to back up what I say. |
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| broken sticks | Mar 17 2011, 09:03 PM Post #22 |
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absolutely. and important and under-covered information too. sorry you took it down man, maybe just trim it? |
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| shure | Mar 17 2011, 10:03 PM Post #23 |
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Yeah, I'll get something up in the next few days
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| shure | Mar 18 2011, 11:35 AM Post #24 |
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Con Games: Prince Bandar Can't Go Home to Aspen Again Michael Conniff. Posted: November 15, 2010 01:46 PM http://www.huffingtonpost.com/michael-conniff/con-games-prince-bandar-c_b_783216.html ![]() ASPEN, COLORADO -- Prince Bandar bin Sultan bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud, for 22 years the Saudi Arabian foreign minister to the United States and the uncrowned prince of our little ski town, is almost certain never to return to his $135 million Starwood spread here in Aspen. How do we know? Neither the Bible nor the Koran told us so, but we do know a dozen or more workers at his heavenly Hala Ranch were given the heave-ho without explanation last week sans severance. Because Bandar's fortress of solitude was taken off the market in 2007, we also know it is likely to sit there on the site overlooking the mountains of Aspen like an ancient fossil from the age of fossil fuel. What happened to our bonny Prince? Of course, on the most basic level, 9/11 -- perpetrated by the Saudi Osama bin Laden and fourteen of his Saudi countrymen -- happened to Prince Bandar. His chummy relationship with the Bush family and the West would never be the same. Yes: he managed to liberate over 100 Saudis from the United States after the terrorist attacks, during a period when no planes were flying. And yes: President George W. Bush told "Bandar Bush" about the invasion of Iraq before Secretary of State Colin Powell got the word. Even more to the point, consider the charges of kickbacks Bandar faces in the matter of Saudi arms sales. The Prince stands accused of siphoning off $100 million per year in a $2 billion contract between his country and BAE, based in the United Kingdom. But his country's billion-dollar efforts to export Wahabbism, the state religion of Saudi Arabia, produced lingering effects that would ultimately doom his charming act in most of the West, up to and including Aspen. And then there's the particularly annoying evidence that one of his many wives aided the 9/11 terrorists. As I've written before: The new information comes from The Commission: The Uncensored History Of The 9/11 Investigation by Philip Shenon, an investigative reporter for the New York Times. The revelation is contained in a portion of a House-Senate Joint Intelligence Committee report with 28 pages on Saudi links to the 9/11 attacks that destroyed the twin towers of the World Trade Center, struck the Pentagon, caused the crash of jet in a Pennsylvania field--and killed more than 3,000 people in the most deadly terrorist attack ever on United States soil. The 28 pages on the Saudi connections never saw the light of day because the White House invoked executive privilege. President George W. Bush is so close to the Saudi royal family he is known by the nickname 'Bandar Bush.' Bandar's connection to Aspen is wide and deep. He has given to charities and is generally considered a fine old chum around town. And he continues to wage his Western public relations campaign, including this tidbit from Tactical Report, a subscription-based intelligence service: "Secretary-General of the Saudi National Security Council (NSC) Prince Bandar Bin Sultan Bin Abdulaziz is said to be cooperating now with his uncle 2nd Deputy PM and Interior Minister Prince Nayef on issues related to Al-Qaeda in Yemen and the Gulf region." As you can see, Prince Bandar is not exactly our favorite son here in Aspen -- and in the United States -- and there's growing evidence he's never coming back this way again. Instead it would be best to think of him as the ultimate Aspen absentee landord: out of sight, and out of his mind. |
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| shure | Jun 27 2011, 05:27 PM Post #25 |
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Saudi Links to Sept. 11 Not Probed Enough, Congress Says Saturday, November 23, 2002 http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,71273,00.html WASHINGTON — Lawmakers investigating the Sept. 11 attacks believe the FBI has not aggressively pursued the possibility that the Saudi government provided money to students who helped two of the hijackers, aides said Saturday. The White House denied the assertion as well as claims that the FBI has not done enough to examine fully the financing of the 19 hijackers, 15 of whom came from Saudi Arabia. "The FBI has been investigating this and I'm not going to prejudge the conclusion of that investigation," said Bush administration spokesman Dan Bartlett. The debate over a possible Saudi link raises a sensitive political issue for the Bush administration, since Saudi Arabia is one of the United States' closest and most important allies in the Persian Gulf at a time when the administration is considering war with Iraq. A draft report by a joint congressional committee probing the terrorist attacks says the CIA and FBI ignored the possibility that two of the hijackers, Khalid Almidhar and Nawaf Alhazmi, both Saudis, were given Saudi money from two Saudi men they met in California in the year before the attacks, The New York Times reported in its Saturday editions. Almidhar and Alhazmi were on the plane that crashed into the Pentagon. The committee, whose final classified report will be finished in December, also accused the Saudi government of not fully cooperating with American investigators. Bartlett disputed congressional critics of the probe. "As anyone who knows this issue will tell you, it's very difficult to track financing of terrorist networks because most of it is done in cash," he said. "I don't agree with the assessment it's not been aggressively pursued." The two hijackers met with Omar al-Bayoumi and Osama Basnan, who were receiving financial support from the Saudi government, the Times said. Officials were not sure what kind of stipends they were receiving, the newspaper said. Newsweek said, however, the FBI uncovered financial records showing payments to the family of al-Bayoumi from a Washington bank account held in the name of Princess Haifa Al-Faisal, wife of the Saudi ambassador to the United States and daughter of the late King Faisal. Sources said the payments amounted to about $3,500 a month. The money filtered into the al-Bayoumi family's bank account in early 2000, just a few months after Almidhar and Alhazmi arrived in Los Angeles from an Al Qaeda planning summit, Newsweek said in a report posted on its Web site Friday night. Payments for roughly the same amount began flowing every month to Basnan. Administration officials told Newsweek they didn't know the purpose of the payments from Princess Haifa's account. They also were uncertain whether the money was given to the hijackers by al-Bayoumi or Basnan. A spokesman for the Saudi embassy said the allegations that the wife of the Saudi ambassador supported terrorists are "untrue and irresponsible." Nail al-Jubeir, the spokesman, said the princess hasn't given money to al-Bayoumi at all, and that she is fully cooperating with the FBI. "She wants her name cleared," al-Jubeir said. The princess did help the Basnan family with a check for $15,000 in April 1998 and regular payments from Dec. 4, 1999 through May, and Saudi officials are trying to find out why they needed assistance, al-Jubeir said. In a statement, the FBI refused to give details of its investigation but said: "Since the terrorist attacks of 9-11, the FBI has aggressively pursued investigative leads regarding terrorist support and activity." It said al-Bayoumi and Basnan face visa fraud charges. Al-Bayoumi was detained on that charge in Britain, but it was not an extraditable offense and he was released. It is not known whether Basnan is in custody. Basnan was deported to Saudi Arabia on Nov. 17 and they believe his wife was deported to Jordan two weeks earlier, al-Jubeir said. "There was no linkage found between them and the terrorists," he said. "The only reason he became a person of interest to the FBI was his relation to al-Bayoumi." In other terrorism news, there has been a preliminary decision in the immigration case of a Lebanese national arrested in Detroit, Mich., in December 2001 for overstaying his visa. Rabih Haddad was the proprietor of the Global Relief Foundation, and Islamic charity that the U.S. government said provided funds and support to terrorist organizations, including Al Qaeda. Haddad was detained under "special circumstances" following Sept. 11, 2001, but the immigration court proceedings were closed to the press. An appeals court recently said the case be open to the public. Although there has been no final resolution to open the hearing portion of Haddad's case, the Executive Office of Immigration Review's Immigration Court in Detroit late Friday denied Haddad's recent request for asylum -- he had claimed he would subject to religious and political persecution if returned to Lebanon -- and ordered him removed to Lebanon. The court also ordered members of his family out. But the immigration portion of his case could drag out a bit longer, and Haddad will continue to be a guest of the United States government until it's over. The Justice Department released a statement saying it's "pleased" with the decision to deny Haddad asylum, citing the court's opinion that he presents "a substantial risk to the national security of the United States.' "The safety and security of the American people are the highest priority of the Justice Department," Justice spokeswoman Barbara Comstock said in the statement. "We will continue to dedicate all efforts to using every constitutional tool available to protect our citizens." |
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6:14 PM Jun 19