[ / / / / / / / / / / / / / ] [ dir / random / 93 / biohzrd / hkacade / hkpnd / tct / utd / uy / yebalnia ]

/midnightriders/ - QR Midnight Riders

Dig, Meme, Pray.. WIN!
Name
Email
Subject
REC
STOP
Comment *
File
Password (Randomized for file and post deletion; you may also set your own.)
Archive
* = required field[▶Show post options & limits]
Confused? See the FAQ.
Embed
(replaces files and can be used instead)
Oekaki
Show oekaki applet
(replaces files and can be used instead)
Options

Allowed file types:jpg, jpeg, gif, png, webp,webm, mp4, mov, pdf
Max filesize is16 MB.
Max image dimensions are15000 x15000.
You may upload5 per post.


MIDNIGHT RIDERS

We Are Q


Q's Board: /projectdcomms/ | Bakers Board: /Comms/ | Legacy Boards: /CBTS/ /TheStorm/ /GreatAwakening/

File: 8bfdea693be1e1d⋯.png (223.29 KB,534x1232,267:616,Screenshot_2024_02_18_at_2….png)

3686b5 No.182864

What family was permitted to leave immediately after 9-11?

Who authorized the departure?

Why is this relevant?

Was anyone else permitted to leave?

Repeat.

Was anyone else permitted to leave?

Was it a private plane?

What can private planes carry v commercial?

What airport did they arrive/depart from?

What was carried on a private plane to Iran?

Why was the Bin Laden family here during 9-11?

Coincidence?

How does SA connect to the Bin Laden family?

Who in SA is connected specifically to the Bin Laden family?

What did they deliver?

To who?

Why?

What does money buy?

Why are the events in SA relevant to the above?

Who is the financial backer for human trafficking?

Who is the ‘broker’ for underage sex?

Think SA.

How does FB & Instagram play a role in capture?

Think ‘Taken’.

Fantasy right?

Why do select senior political officials have foundations/institutes?

What is money laundering?

What does money buy?

Why is this relevant?

What other people were arrested in SA?

What are their backgrounds?

Are any connected to the Podesta Group?

Why is this relevant?

What do you need in order to prosecute senior political officials?

How do you avoid public misconception?

How do you justify counter-political attacks to the mass public?

Why is information so vital?

Is the country divided?

Why does the MSM portray the country as being divided?

Why is this relevant?

Q

____________________________
Disclaimer: this post and the subject matter and contents thereof - text, media, or otherwise - do not necessarily reflect the views of the 8kun administration.

3686b5 No.182865

File: 74fbd58ab971eb4⋯.png (963.58 KB,2108x2078,1054:1039,Screenshot_2024_02_18_at_2….png)

https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/blog/author/john-brennan

John Brennan

Former Assistant to the President for Homeland Security

Mr. Brennan served as Assistant to the President for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism.

Mr. Brennan served as President and CEO of The Analysis Corporation (TAC) in McLean, VA from November 2005 to January 2009. Prior to entering the private sector, Mr. Brennan had a distinguished 25-year career with the Central Intelligence Agency, serving in a variety of senior positions throughout the Intelligence Community. His last assignment was (interim) Director of the National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC). Mr. Brennan was appointed to that position, with the approval of the President, by the Director of Central Intelligence in October 2004. He served as head of the NCTC until August 2005. Mr. Brennan also was the founding Director of NCTC’s predecessor organization, the Terrorist Threat Integration Center (TTIC), serving in that capacity from 12 March 2003 until 6 December 2004.

Mr. Brennan began his career as an intelligence officer in 1980 with the Central Intelligence Agency's Directorate of Operations as a Career Trainee. After joining the Directorate of Intelligence in 1981, he served with the Department of State as a political officer at the U.S. Embassy in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia from 1982 to 1984. From 1984 to 1989, he served in a variety of analytic assignments in the Office of Near Eastern and South Asian Analysis in the Directorate of Intelligence. Mr. Brennan was in charge of terrorism analysis in the DCI's Counterterrorist Center between 1990 and 1992, including during Desert Shield and Desert Storm. After a management position in the Office of Near Eastern and South Asian Analysis, Mr. Brennan served as the CIA’s daily intelligence briefer at the White House in 1994 and 1995. Mr. Brennan was the Executive Assistant to then-DDCI George Tenet from 1995 to 1996, and he served as CIA Chief of Station in a major Middle Eastern capital 1996 to 1999. Mr. Brennan served as DCI Tenet’s Chief of Staff from 1999 to 2001 and as Deputy Executive Director of the Central Intelligence Agency from March 2001 to March 2003.

In April 2007, Mr. Brennan was appointed Chairman of the Board of The Intelligence and National Security Alliance (INSA), a not-for-profit professional association of public and private sector leaders of the intelligence and national security communities. Mr. Brennan also serves on the Board of Directors of Global Strategies Group (North America) Inc, the parent company of TAC. He has appeared on television and radio programs as an analyst and commentator on national security affairs and has published articles on intelligence reform and terrorism matters.

Mr. Brennan is the recipient of numerous awards and commendations including the National Security Medal, the Distinguished Intelligence Medal, the Distinguished Career Intelligence Medal, the Director of Central Intelligence Director’s Medal, and the Defense Intelligence Agency’s Director’s Award.

Mr. Brennan earned a BA in Political Science from Fordham University in 1977, including study at the American University of Cairo in 1975/1976. He received a MA in Government with a concentration in Middle Eastern Studies from the University of Texas at Austin in 1980.

Disclaimer: this post and the subject matter and contents thereof - text, media, or otherwise - do not necessarily reflect the views of the 8kun administration.
Post last edited at

3686b5 No.182866

File: 0ca5ce44fc23402⋯.png (2.77 MB,2314x2872,1157:1436,Screenshot_2024_02_18_at_2….png)

https://www.axios.com/2018/08/03/what-were-reading-osama-bin-ladens-mother-speaks

What we're reading: Osama bin Laden's mother breaks her silence

Shannon Vavra

Osama Bin Laden holds a gun and looks surprised.

Photo: Mir Hamid/Daily Dawn/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images

Members of Osama bin Laden's family, including his mother, spoke with The Guardian's Martin Chulov, after nearly 17 years of silence since 9/11.

Context: Saudi Arabian "senior officials believe that, by allowing the bin Ladens to tell their story, they can demonstrate that an outcast – not an agent – was responsible for 9/11," per Chulov. Critics of Saudi Arabia have long claimed that the kingdom backed Osama bin Laden in his terrorism.

The family's reaction after learning of 9/11: “I don’t think I’m very proud of him as a man," his brother, Hassan, said. Upon learning he had become a terrorist, “we were extremely upset," his mother said. "I did not want any of this to happen. Why would he throw it all away like that?”

The family tried to stop him from radicalizing, according to Saudi intelligence: "There were efforts by the family to dissuade him – emissaries and such – but they were unsuccessful," Prince Turki al-Faisal, who was the head of Saudi intelligence between 1977 and September 1, 2001, told Chulov.

“He was a very good child until he met some people who pretty much brainwashed him in his early 20s," his mother said. "I would always tell him to stay away from them, and he would never admit to me what he was doing, because he loved me so much.”

Osama bin Laden's brother Ahmad said his mother "loved him so much and refuses to blame him. Instead, she blames those around him."

On how Osama bin Laden radicalized: “There are two Osama bin Ladens…One before the end of the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, and one after it," the prince explained. "Before, he was very much an idealistic mujahid. He was not a fighter…He developed a more political attitude from 1990…He used to fax statements to everybody. He was very critical."

On why Osama bin Laden radicalized: "It was probably his feeling that he was not taken seriously by the government," the prince said.

Saudi intelligence knew something was going to happen before 9/11: Turki told Chulov, “in the summer of 2001, I took one of the warnings about something spectacular about to happen to the Americans, British, French and Arabs. We didn’t know where, but we knew that something was being brewed.”

Osama bin Laden's sister, Fatima al-Attas, was in Paris and did not attend the interview and opposed her mother interviewing.

Hamza, bin Laden’s son, who the U.S. designated as a “global terrorist” last year, is thought to be in Afghanistan.

If Hassan could speak to Hamza, he would say: “God guide you. Think twice about what you are doing. Don’t retake the steps of your father. You are entering horrible parts of your soul.”

Disclaimer: this post and the subject matter and contents thereof - text, media, or otherwise - do not necessarily reflect the views of the 8kun administration.

3686b5 No.182867

File: 18d599056b406aa⋯.png (2.9 MB,1570x2578,785:1289,Screenshot_2024_02_18_at_2….png)

https://nypost.com/2020/09/05/osama-bin-ladens-niece-says-only-trump-can-prevent-another-9-11/

Osama bin Laden’s niece says only Trump can prevent another 9/11(NewYorkPost.com)

Jon Levine

Osama bin Laden and his niece Noor Bin Ladin

Osama bin Laden and his niece Noor bin Ladin AFP/Getty Images

Another 9/11-style attack may be just around the corner if Joe Biden is elected president, warns Noor bin Ladin, the niece of Sept. 11 terror mastermind Osama bin Laden.

“ISIS proliferated under the Obama/Biden administration, leading to them coming to Europe. Trump has shown he protects America and us by extension from foreign threats by obliterating terrorists at the root and before they get a chance to strike,” bin Ladin, 33, told The Post in her first-ever interview.

Bin Ladin (whose branch of the family has always spelled their name differently than her infamous uncle) lives in Switzerland but said she considers herself “an American at heart.” A full-size US flag hung in her childhood room at age 12 and her dream vacation is an RV trip across America.

The stunning, Swiss-born bin Ladin says she is all in for Trump in 2020, calling the election the most important in a generation.

“I have been a supporter of President Trump since he announced he was running in the early days in 2015. I have watched from afar and I admire this man’s resolve,” she said. “He must be re-elected … It’s vital for the future of not only America, but Western civilization as a whole.”

“You look at all the terrorist attacks that have happened in Europe over the past 19 years. They have completely shaken us to the core … [Radical Islam] has completely infiltrated our society,” bin Ladin continued. “In the US it’s very worrying that the left has aligned itself completely with the people who share that ideology.”

Osama bin Laden

Osama bin LadenAP

While Trump has long been a polarizing figure in the United States, he is even more toxic in Europe, where views of US leadership have plummeted since he took office. A 2018 Gallup poll found just 18% of Swiss citizens approved of his job performance.

Noor, who said she regularly wears a “Make America Great Again” hat (and occasionally a Trump bedtime onesie), has had to confront many Trump-haters on her side of the Atlantic. During a recent trip to the grocery store while wearing the iconic red cap, Noor was accosted.

“I am minding my own business and this woman in her late 50s charges toward me and starts speaking very loudly and aggressively to me,” she recalled. “She’s yelling at me and saying how can I be wearing this and Trump is the worst president ever and she’s basically dumping on my beloved president … She told me three times, ‘You’re stupid.’ I kept my cool, and needless to say I kept my hat!”

And it’s not just Trump. From her perch in Western Europe, Noor bin Ladin has been a keen and meticulous consumer of conservative media and advocate of their most hot-button causes. Though soft-spoken with aristocratic graces, she can offer lengthy monologues railing against Spygate, tech censorship of conservative voices, mandatory mask-wearing, the New York Times’ discredited 1619 Project, and even Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s controversial executive order requiring nursing homes to accept seniors with COVID-19.

Her favorite television show is Fox News’ “Tucker Carlson Tonight” and she’s chummy with Laura Loomer. The rising GOP star running for Congress in Florida is a ferocious opponent of radical Islam, but has also been accused by critics of Islamophobic remarks.

“Laura has been very vocal about this and I commend her for being brave enough and speaking out,” said bin Ladin, who was not raised with any religion.

Bin Ladin didn’t mince words about The Squad either, and offered high praise to The Post’s front page calling out Rep. Ilhan Omar’s “some people did something” remarks about 9/11.

“You do have a situation now in America where you have people like Ilhan Omar who actively hate your country,” bin Ladin said, noting how Omar had urged “compassionate” sentences for 13 ISIS recruits busted in her home state of Minnesota.

“It’s an honor to be able to go and live in the United States and make the most out of all the opportunities,” bin Ladin said, choking up. “If she hates it so much, why doesn’t she leave.”

Bin Ladin is the daughter of Carmen Dufour, a Swiss author, and Yeslam bin Ladin — an older half-brother of Osama. Dufour and Yeslam split in 1988 and Noor, along with her two sisters, Wafah and Najia, were raised in Switzerland.

Yeslam Bin Ladin

Yeslam bin LadinAP

For most of her adult life, Noor helped her mother with a nasty and years-long divorce from Yeslam, who has played no role in her life. After the 9/11 attacks, Carmen became a brief international sensation with her 2004 tell-all account of her life in the bin Laden family: “Inside the Kingdom: My Life in Saudi Arabia.”

Unlike her older sister Wafah, an international pop singer and socialite, Noor bin Ladin has kept a low profile. She has a bachelor’s degree in business administration from the University of Geneva, a master’s in commercial law from the University of London, and a computer coding bootcamp under her belt. She’s worked in startups and is currently writing a book analyzing the first 20 years of the 21st century.

“My life would have been very different had I been raised in Saudi Arabia,” she said. “I really grew up with this deep appreciation for freedom and basic individual rights.”

Bin Ladin recalled how she played soccer in school for 13 years. “My mom would come to all the games and she would say, ‘When I see you play, I know that all the hardship was worth it because you get to do what you choose and what you love.’”

Noor was just 14 when her uncle perpetrated the deadliest attack on US soil in history. From the moment the second plane hit, she knew her life would never be the same.

“I was so devastated,” she recalled. “I had been going to the States with my mom several times a year from the age of 3 onwards. I considered the US my second home.”

Bin Ladin said part of the reason she rejected liberal assertions that America was a “racist country” was based on her own lived experience.

“I have not had a single bad experience with Americans despite the name that I carry. On the contrary, I was overwhelmed by their kindness and understanding,” bin Ladin said, adding she’s been back to the US a few times since the attacks. She hasn’t visited the memorial yet, but is planning on it the next time she is in New York.

“I really want to go and pay my respects.”

Disclaimer: this post and the subject matter and contents thereof - text, media, or otherwise - do not necessarily reflect the views of the 8kun administration.

3686b5 No.182873

File: fa17221216eb709⋯.png (3.03 MB,1904x1938,56:57,Screenshot_2024_02_19_at_0….png)

https://web.archive.org/web/20210911102120/https://www.newyorker.com/news/daily-comment/the-fall-of-the-bin-ladens

The Fall of the bin Ladens(wayback.org)

The family might have thrived indefinitely after Osama’s death but for the ambitions of Mohammed bin Salman.

By Steve CollSeptember 11, 2021

In May, according to Agence France-Presse, Saudi Arabia released Bakr bin Laden—now in his seventies, who has been the patriarch of the bin Laden family since the late nineteen-eighties—after almost four years of detention. He had been confined along with other out-of-favor royals and wealthy Saudi businessmen accused of corruption—without public charges or trials—by Mohammed bin Salman, or M.B.S., the ambitious and authoritarian crown prince of Saudi Arabia, who is trying to remake the kingdom’s political economy. Although bin Laden reportedly may now receive visitors, “he was told to stay home,” a source told the A.F.P.

Bin Laden has roots in Jeddah, the Red Sea port city where, in 1931, his father, Mohammed bin Laden, a poor migrant from Yemen, founded and built a construction company that grew eventually into the largest in the kingdom, as part of the family’s flagship conglomerate, the Saudi Binladin Group. It built palaces, renovated mosques in the holy cities of Mecca and Medina, and expanded across the Arab world. And, of course, it was part of the upbringing of Osama bin Laden, another of Mohammed’s sons, who studied business administration and apprenticed at the family firm before taking up jihad full time.

Bakr bin Laden’s recent travails offer a coda to the story of 9/11’s aftermath inside Saudi Arabia. The recent fall—or at least the economic punishment—of the bin Laden family has coincided with the rise to power of M.B.S., but it also reflects the twilight of the sprawling generation to which Osama belonged. It is a story of privilege, succession, and wildly diverse outlooks within a family whose name is an indelible part of American history.

Mohammed bin Laden died in a private-plane crash, in Saudi Arabia’s southern desert, in 1967, at the age of about sixty. He left behind fifty-four children, whom he had fathered by more than twenty wives. At the time of Mohammed’s death, his eldest son, Salem, was twenty-one and living in London, where he wore jeans and played rock-and-roll guitar and harmonica. Although hardly prepared for his new responsibilities, Salem took charge of the family and its businesses in the manner of a sheikh, and ran it as his fiefdom. He proved to be a charismatic globe-hopper who piloted Learjets, flew hot-air balloons and ultralights, and sang corny tunes (“On Top of Old Smokey” was a favorite) on just about any stage that he could find. Salem bought property in England and in the United States, including a home near Disney World, west of Orlando. In Saudi Arabia, he charmed the family firm’s most important patron, King Fahd, who reigned from 1982 until he suffered a debilitating stroke, in 1995. Fahd effectively controlled contracts that were important to the Saudi Binladin Group, and Salem became part of his court.

In the nineteen-eighties, Salem visited Osama, his younger half brother, in Pakistan, where he had joined the mujahideen fighting against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. At the time, Osama’s participation in that war, which had the backing of both King Fahd and Ronald Reagan’s C.I.A., was an uncontroversial matter. But, in 1988, Salem died in a freak ultralight accident outside San Antonio. He was forty-two. His death unmoored the bin Ladens, and, in the aftermath, Osama became increasingly radical and defiant of the Al Saud royal family, on the ground that it wasn’t Islamic enough and was too close to the United States.

During the several years that I spent researching a book about the bin Ladens, many family members and friends told me that Salem had had a way of keeping Osama in line, and that after his death Osama’s ego and sense of entitlement to leadership swelled. He seemed to believe that he was qualified to run the family after Salem. But he was not from the inner circle of Mohammed’s children. He was the only child of a teen-age girl whom his father had married and divorced hastily in the late nineteen-fifties. Osama was by no means the only child of Mohammed’s in this position, as his father married and divorced many women. Mohammed did fully enfranchise all his children as his heirs, and made them eligible for what was, during the nineteen-seventies, a tax-free allowance of several hundred thousands of dollars a year. But Osama was not among the oldest or the best-connected of his father’s sons. In the end, Bakr, one of Salem’s full brothers, took charge of the family.

Bakr had lived in the United States for several years, where he obtained a degree in civil engineering from the University of Miami. Soon after he took over the family and the company, the Saudi government moved to expel Osama and strip him of citizenship, because of his unrelenting criticism of the royal family. Bakr correspondingly removed him as a shareholder in the family firms. In 1991, Osama went into exile, settling in Sudan and, later, in Taliban-ruled Afghanistan, from where he plotted 9/11.

The headquarters of the Saudi Binladin Group, in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.Photograph by Katie Paul / Reuters

Bakr’s greatest achievement as the family patriarch was to preserve access to lucrative royal contracts after King Fahd’s stroke. The new de-facto ruler was Fahd’s half brother Abdullah bin Abdulaziz, the crown prince. After 9/11, Abdullah protected the bin Ladens, refusing to punish them for Osama’s terrorism or to blame them for the ignominy that Saudi Arabia suffered, particularly in the United States. The contracts kept coming. Bakr pulled this feat off “thanks in part to a keen understanding of what the Al Saud wanted,” just as his father and Salem had done, the Wall Street Journal reporters Bradley Hope and Justin Scheck write in their book, “Blood and Oil.” “If that meant building a palace for a new wife in a matter of months, they’d get the job done. Payment could come much later or never at all; the Bin Ladens wouldn’t make a peep.”

Osama certainly had a few sympathizers among his many brothers and sisters, but the majority of them abhorred his violence and resented the damage he caused them. His killing, in Pakistan, by U.S. Navy SEALs, in May, 2011, relieved the family of any further association with his millenarian terrorism. The bin Ladens might have thrived indefinitely after Osama’s death but for the ambitions of M.B.S., who sought to marginalize rival factions in the Saudi élite while simultaneously authoring economic and social reforms, establishing himself as the most visible and powerful leader in the kingdom. Early in his rise, in 2015, according to a Reuters investigation, the crown prince met with Bakr and asked to become “a partner” in the Saudi Binladin Group, and suggested that Bakr take the company public by listing shares on the Saudi stock exchange. On September 11th of that year, one of the firm’s cranes fell in Mecca, killing more than a hundred people and injuring some four hundred. The Saudi government temporarily suspended contract awards to the bin Ladens. (The eerie coincidence of the date of the accident is one of a number of odd resonances in the bin Laden family history; another is the recurrence of traumatic plane crashes.)

In 2017, M.B.S. staged a broad crackdown on businessmen, in the name of fighting corruption. Bakr and two of his brothers, Saad and Saleh, were among the hundreds of wealthy Saudis detained, many of them at the Ritz-Carlton in Riyadh, where they had to answer allegations of financial crimes. According to the Reuters investigation, the authorities ultimately seized deeds to bin Laden family homes, private jets, luxury cars, cash, and jewelry.

The next year, a Saudi government owned entity took a 36.2-per-cent stake in the Saudi Binladin Group. Then the coronavirus pandemic hit, and the company struggled amid the accompanying economic shocks. There were layoffs and missed payrolls; last year, the firm reportedly hired Houlihan Lokey, the investment bank, to restructure its whopping fifteen-billion-dollar debt load.

The bin Ladens figure in our history as a family because their collective experience of a borderless, technology-enabled, and media-saturated world inadvertently inspired in Osama a vision of terrorism that would exploit the world’s growing connectivity. His innovations as a terrorist—his adoption of a satellite phone to run cells on several continents, and his use of fax machines and satellite TV networks to defeat the censors of Arab authoritarians—arose from his upbringing in a family that embodied the opportunities and the stresses of modernization in Saudi Arabia.. He was an obscurantist who understood globalization.

Salem and then Bakr bin Laden molded that era among the wider bin Laden clan. The family’s difficulties today still attract coverage in the financial press, but, if there is any benefit in the reversals that M.B.S. has forced upon the bin Ladens, it may be that they will hasten their retreat from prominence and allow them, over time, some measure of anonymity. They may fade away, but the family will always offer a more interesting story of Arabia in the oil age than the notorious member who defiled their name.

New Yorker Favorites

The deadliest virus ever known.

A sociologist examines the fragility that prevents white Americans from confronting racism.

Can brain science help us break bad habits?

Why we sleep, and why we often cannot.

Welcoming our new robot overlords.

Can babies learn to love vegetables?

Sign up for our daily newsletter to receive the best stories from The New Yorker.

Disclaimer: this post and the subject matter and contents thereof - text, media, or otherwise - do not necessarily reflect the views of the 8kun administration.

3686b5 No.182875

File: a31dc93235f6d18⋯.png (1.85 MB,1548x2194,774:1097,Screenshot_2024_02_18_at_2….png)

https://www.arabnews.com/node/441526/amp

John Brennan, 57, may have converted to Islam between 1996 and 1999 when he was the CIA station chief in Riyadh, it was reported yesterday.

John Guandolo, who retired from the FBI in 2008, told the US Trento Radio Show on Saturday that there were indications that President Barack Obama’s CIA nominee converted to Islam and visited Makkah and Madinah during Haj along with Saudi officials, who may have induced Brennan to convert, reported Al Arabia.

According to the report, in a Skype interview with the radio show, Guandolo referred to a video showing Brennan saying that during his time in Saudi Arabia, he “marveled at the majesty of the Hajj and the devotion of those who fulfilled their duty as Muslims by making that pilgrimage.”

The report quoted Guandolo as saying that this “video confirms Brennan converted to Islam” since non-Muslims are not allowed to visit the holy cities.

Brennan is a CIA veteran, among his previously held posts are the deputy national security advisor for homeland security and counterterrorism.

Disclaimer: this post and the subject matter and contents thereof - text, media, or otherwise - do not necessarily reflect the views of the 8kun administration.

3686b5 No.182876

File: 05da75fccb2adec⋯.png (4.87 MB,2998x2360,1499:1180,Screenshot_2024_02_19_at_0….png)

Trying to spin the fuckery that the DeepState/Brennan/Bush/BinLaden/CIA started, under PDJT's watch.. not understanding these "issues" it talks about were actually what the Trump Administration was behind, to right the wrong.. FUCK THAT

https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2020/05/31/intelligence-saudi-arabia-290162

How John Brennan and Mike Pompeo Left the U.S. Blind to Saudi Problems(Politicio.com)

It’s our most important ally in the Middle East—and we’ve never known less about what it was really up to.

President Donald Trump holds a working lunch with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia in the Oval Office at the White House on March 20, 2018 in Washington, D.C.

Kevin Dietsch-Pool/Getty Images

By DOUGLAS LONDON

05/31/2020 06:50 AM EDT

Douglas London is a retired senior CIA Operations Officer and Adjunct Associate Professor at Georgetown University’s Center for Security Studies. Mr. London served widely across the Middle East and South Asia over the course of 34 years in the CIA’s Clandestine Service. His assignments included several in the field as Chief of Station and likewise at home as an Executive Manager. Follow him on Twitter @douglaslondon5.

On November 21, 2017, the former National Security Council staffer and CIA analyst Bruce Riedel stood in front of a gathering at the Brookings Institution in Washington, DC, and offered some striking remarks on the US relationship with Saudi Arabia. Riedel had spent 40 years as a “professional Saudi watcher,” closely monitoring the secretive kingdom’s economy, diplomacy and internal politics, and he had two big points to make about America’s most important ally in the Middle East.

His first was that Saudi Arabia had recently undergone a troubling change. What Riedel called the country’s “normally opaque but nevertheless predictable policy” had become, since 2014, “incredibly volatile and unpredictable”—more so than in the preceding 40 years. In his view, it had gotten much harder to understand the kingdom and its leadership. “Saudiology,” he said, “has become more difficult than Kremlinology at the height of the Cold War.”

His second point was that the White House had seemingly decided to give its full backing to the current leadership of Saudi Arabia without making any serious effort to understand it. President Donald Trump, he said, had “given Saudi Arabia a blank check for both their internal and external policies.” Our foreign policy toward Saudi Arabia, long “cautious and risk-averse,” was now “adventurist, interventionist and if not reckless in the extreme.”

Saudi Arabia this spring sent shockwaves through the world when it embarked on an economically disastrous game of chicken with its petro-rival Russia. After walking away from an oil-production conference, the kingdom opened its spigots to drive down prices in protest of what it saw as a lack of Russian support, sending global markets plunging right as Covid-19 began shutting down economies. Not long before that, the Saudi government itself had undergone a dramatic purge led by Mohammad bin Salman, the young prince who appears to have rapidly consolidated power in the past three years, and who enjoys the favor of the Trump administration.

What happened? Who saw all this coming? And what does this behavior say about the person the Trump White House has chosen as an ally?

If Americans assume their intelligence apparatus has a handle on these questions, they should listen more closely to what Riedel and others have been saying.

Expert watchers such as Riedel point out that the Trump administration has embraced Mohammad bin Salman (or MbS, in diplomatic shorthand) in much the same way that the Obama administration embraced his predecessor, Mohammad bin Nayaf: with a highly politicized intelligence apparatus that likely leaves significant holes in what the president knows. Already, the results are bleak: In his time in power, MbS has plunged America into his Yemen quagmire, cavalierly murdered a U.S.-based journalist, destabilized the energy market and courted U.S. rivals Russia, China and Iran.

When it comes to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, American policy has long relied on intelligence-gathering to help determine its true motives and internal dynamics. Saudi Arabia is an opaque country, with rulers subject to no internal transparency and minimal outside accountability. The country is now ruled by the enfeebled 84-year-old King Salman, whose reign is likely to be short and is already largely serving as cover for the actual governing by his son. So trustworthy intelligence on what’s happening there— a country with which the U.S. has a multibillion-dollar military, diplomatic and business relationship—is more important than ever.

However, informed critics such as Riedel, as well as former operatives and others who have spoken out in the media, have been pointing out that the US intelligence community, and particularly its last three CIA directors, have taken a very politicized approach to Saudi intelligence gathering. Rather than asking difficult questions and then empowering collection efforts, intelligence leaders have been choosing their conclusions and then steering away from any inconvenient facts about them.

This trend appears to be continuing: According to recent media reports, Secretary of State (and former CIA director) Mike Pompeo pushed State Department officials to find an after-the-fact justification for an emergency declaration he issued last year, bypassing Congress and allowing an $8 billion arms sale to Saudi Arabia.

Riedel’s comments, and the recently mounting critiques, point to a worrisome turn in America’s approach to Saudi Arabia: Faced with a complex and perhaps dangerous diplomatic partner, successive White Houses have instead sought to look the other way concerning Saudi behavior, allowing themselves to be steered by intelligence chiefs with their own motives, and comfortably basking in feigned ignorance regarding the truth beneath the Kingdom’s pervasive veil.

Politicization of intelligence need not always be heavy-handed to undermine the truth. Often, the decision not to ask certain questions has the same impact as manipulating or discrediting what you already know. There’s no evidence, for example, that the George W. Bush, Obama or Trump White Houses ever sought a National Intelligence Estimate on Saudi Arabia, a thorough and forward-looking analytical document that integrates the knowledge of the entire intelligence community. Such an initiative would have generated the questions and ensuing body of evidence to provide the kind of thorough assessment that might have exposed understanding of Saudi Arabia’s leadership, politics, human rights record and internal stability, generating insights that would be shared far and wide across the government.

Though critics have levied similar charges against both the Obama and the Trump approaches to the intelligence community, the Trump administration’s current behavior is unprecedented in my own nearly four decades of service. Never have I witnessed the National Security Council and CIA so focused on controlling information that might expose, contradict or offend the president. The two most recent CIA directors, Pompeo and Gina Haspel, have prioritized control over the narrative of any public reflections concerning the CIA’s thinking, and more importantly, their own positions and comments, to shape their image with the president.

(The CIA’s objection to this article validated these observations. Despite the absence of any classified information, a CIA board, to whose review my 34 years in the clandestine service obliges me for anything I publish, pushed to redact much of the most critical prose. My ensuing depiction is therefore more vague than the reality warrants.)

For both economic or security reasons, what transpires in the Kingdom directly affects all Americans. So what went wrong with our Saudi intelligence operation—and how can we fix it?

During a visit to Saudi Arabia in the not so distant past by then CIA Director John Brennan, I found myself standing in line for a lunch being hosted by Salman bin Abdul Aziz al-Saud.

At the time Salman was the kingdom’s crown prince, second in command to his brother, then-King Abdullah, but Salman himself was already an elderly man. He was courteous and polite, greeting each of his guests with a handshake that was warm but notably weak. Prince Salman’s hand trembled violently; his engagement with his guests was short, perfunctory and limited to the brief period for which he could remain standing. He did not engage in anything more than an exchange or well scripted platitudes; he took a seat and ultimately exited after but a brief period. (Riedel has speculated in the press that the elderly royal even then was suffering from at least pre-dementia.)

Another character was also present at that lunch, one whose importance was not yet clear. All the while, Prince Salman remained under the watchful eyes of not only his protocol aides, but a serious looking young Saudi male assistant. After greetings, we were ushered to another tent where a traditional Saudi meal had been prepared. The same young Saudi assistant passed a plate with a kind smile and encouraged me to feel welcome. He was deferential with the guests and struck me as a bit unsure about his own English language skills. Still, he was nothing but proper. Intrigued by the young man’s access to the crown prince, I was surprised when protocol aides identified him as Salman’s son, Mohammad bin Salman.

This was not a person that the intelligence community would have expected to be there. In fact, the intelligence community knew practically nothing about MbS beyond where his name placed in the House of Saud’s family tree. I watched as Director Brennan spoke in hushed tones with the young prince in a corner of the tent after his father had retired for the day. There was little animation in this exchange, in part because the United States had already picked its favorite among the Saudi princes.

That person was Mohammad bin Nayef, or MbN for short, then the Saudi interior minister. Appropriately referred to as “ the darling of America’s counterterrorism and intelligence services,” MbN had by then become the CIA’s best friend in Saudi Arabia, if not America’s. Riedel depicted MbN as a legitimate hero in the Kingdom’s fight against terrorism, a royal who survived a nearly successful assassination attempt in 2009 by an al-Qaeda suicide bomber.

Directors of the CIA lavished praise on MbN. Former director George Tenet, who served under Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, called the minister “my most important interlocutor”; Obama’s first CIA director, Leon Panetta, dubbed him “the smartest [Saudi] of his generation.”

MOST READ

1162822392

John Bolton: ‘If Trump is elected, there will be celebrations in the Kremlin’

Can Trump pay? What if he doesn’t? Here’s what to know about Trump’s massive civil judgments.

Biden’s brother used his name to promote a hospital chain. Then it collapsed.

Trump rails against legal perils in battleground Michigan

Turner defends releasing cryptic statement about Russia’s nuclear capabilities in space

Brennan, who Obama appointed as director of the CIA in March, 2013, was all in on MbN, selling President Obama on the value of backing this horse. But Brennan also micromanaged the CIA’s Saudi enterprise, limiting the agency’s agility to report on vibrations within the House of Saud that might reflect poorly on MbN and his prospects, and thus limiting the president’s visibility into his potential weaknesses.

In micromanaging CIA’s Saudi portfolio, and the vision of Saudi Arabia on which the president relied, Brennan effectively crossed the Rubicon: He became MbN’s active advocate with the Obama White House, with the goal of helping install him on the Saudi throne.

Brennan convinced President Obama to invest US interests with MbN that extended well beyond the Kingdom itself. The CIA director sought to leverage Saudi influence and affluence to support US initiatives that spanned the globe. Such objectives were both broad and critical, on issues ranging from Iran, Syria and Middle East peace, to Africa, Russia and even East Asia.

While Brennan could use his powers to assure that MbN was seen in the best light at the White House, he could do nothing to spare his partner’s vulnerabilities at home. And MbN, we now know, was not lacking for vulnerabilities—nor enemies within his own family. He was an intimate of King Abdullah, the ailing monarch who died in 2015, but any Saudi with whom I have ever spoken appreciated royal family dynamics enough to know there wasn’t a great deal of love lost between MbN and Crown Prince Salman and Salman’s branch of the royal family. (Although Salman was Abdullah’s brother, and thus MbN’s paternal uncle, his and Abdullah’s marriages created distinct bloodlines that resulted in friction among their respective heirs.)

It was known that the assassination attempt by Al Qaeda had left MbN dependent on narcotics. Riedel observed that “the weight of the evidence I have seen is that he was more injured in the assassination attempt than was admitted, and that he then got onto a painkiller routine that was very addictive. I think that problem got progressively worse.” In Saudi Arabia, this weakness proved his undoing: According to New York Times reporting, members of the Allegiance Council, a body of princes who approve changes to the line of succession, were told of MbN’s drug problem in justifying what was, in practicality, a palace coup in June 2017, in which Mohammad bin Salman had his cousin placed under house arrest.

So within two years, the horses that the US had bet on were suddenly sidelined. The ailing Salman became king when Abdullah died in January, 2015; in June 2017, MbS engineered his palace coup, leaving the U.S. dealing not with the ally it had cultivated, but with an ascendant star it had known little about.

How did the intelligence community get it so wrong? Despite being himself a self-professed Saudi expert and career CIA analyst, trained to inform decision making with unbiased, intelligence-driven assessments, Brennan had politicized his role, and certainly the CIA’s. As he told NPR in 2015, “we don’t steal secrets.” Rather, he said “we solicit.” To his proud espionage service, trained to uncork information, this was a demoralizing sentiment, but it was deeply reflective of how Brennan fancied himself more policymaker and emissary than spymaster. Implicitly Brennan was not only redefining the Agency’s mission, but grading its analytical homework. The facts, after all, had to align with Brennan’s recommendations to the president. Conveying too much about how the sausage was made could have jeopardized Brennan’s vision of American partnership with the Kingdom concerning Syria, Iran and Yemen—issues all publicly placed within MbN’s official portfolio.

Brennan’s recipe of half-measures, micromanagement and unreliability in delivering on his promises to MbN and other Middle East partners would wind up doing far more harm than good. Ultimately, his conduct torpedoed MbN, whose advisors were savvy enough to see the writing on the wall apparent in MbN’s vulnerabilities and MbS’s ambition, and turned their support to MbS. It could do little to spare their patron from the coming catastrophe to which he had long made himself vulnerable. With MbN out of power and a young, little-known prince in the ascendant, the United States now found itself out of the loop when it came to an important but troublesome ally.

Some seven years after backing the wrong horse, it’s not clear if the US intelligence community has learned its lessons. And in Trump, it has a leader with another problem: an instinctive style in foreign policy, and an unwillingness to hear contradictory information from his own experts.

In Pompeo, during his tenure at both CIA and State, the president has a security and foreign policy adviser who lacks curiosity, depth or a willingness to introduce possibilities and reasoning that do not already align with his boss’s point of view. Moreover, there’s risk in “stealing secrets,” and Pompeo has shown no appetite to rock the boat and enrage the president for the sake of providing him with better information.

Unlike Brennan, current CIA director Gina Haspel has made no pretense of developing or leveraging engagement with MbS or any other Saudi star. That’s not necessarily a bad approach, so long as one empowers and enables those whose job it is to develop allies. But despite being a career operations officer and former Chief of Station herself, her approach is more suited to Europe’s stately capitals than the frontier. Haspel is no Near East hand, and not the type who can cultivate and leverage the personal relationships so critical in Saudi society. Sitting in a tent and affecting a smile, telling stories and swapping politically incorrect jokes over ceaseless cups of green Saudi coffee at hours well past bedtime is not Haspel’s style.

To her credit, Haspel has been more forthright in carrying the CIA’s mail to the president concerning the Kingdom’s realities. She did not divorce herself publicly from what the press reported to have been the CIA’s confidence that MbS was culpable in the despicable 2018 murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi. Unfortunately, much like her predecessor, she’s reluctant to look hard for bad news that might contradict or embarrass her boss. Indeed, Trump, who holds a rather positive personal impression of MbS, publicly derided his own CIA’s assessment of the young crown prince. Were Haspel to support greater collection against the Kingdom, she’d have to answer to Trump for opening a Pandora’s box he preferred kept shut.

As president, Trump has been both boon and source of worry for MbS. Trump has backed him in some areas where another president would hold him accountable—especially the Khashoggi murder and Saudi conduct in Yemen. But at the same time, Trump’s policies with regard to Syria, the Arab-Israeli conflict and Iran have been more problematic for the young Saudi ruler. The president’s deployment of US military personnel and material following the Iranian facilitated September 2019 attack on Saudi Arabia’s refineries was little assurance that American forces would come to the rescue if the Kingdom faced direct hostilities. Indeed, they have since been redeployed to support our own forces in Iraq and address North Korea’s more threatening posture in East Asia.

Saudi Arabia is a complex and fascinating country with all manner of permutations among the various tribes, sub-tribes, cliques and regional bases of power. The House of Saud itself is hardly homogenous, with assorted blocs, bloodlines and drama that influences decision making but known best to insiders. It would behoove President Trump and the US to hedge their bets at least to some degree. After all, MbS currently operates under the protection of his elderly and weakened father. Upon King Salman’s passing, MbS could, like his cousin, face “the night of the long knives,” as Riedel observes, if he is unable to comprehensively check each and every possible internal threat. And MBS is taking no chances.

In actions that reflected MbS’s growing uncertainty over how long King Salman will be able to provide top cover, he ordered the March 2020 arrest of his father’s brother, former Crown Prince Ahmad bin Abdulaziz, along with his son Nayif Bin Ahmad. Former rival MbN was also detained, as was his brother Nawaf bin Nayif. All were accused of treason.

The U.S., which had eased Prince Ahmad’s return from self-imposed exile in London with security assurances, did nothing. It likewise offered no resistance to the detention of stalwart one-time partner MbN, in whom the U.S. had long invested. MbS followed by pressuring

former Saudi intelligence official Dr. Sa’ad Bin Khalid Bin Sa’ad Allah Al Jabri to return to the Kingdom by arresting his two youngest children remaining in the country.

As a senior intelligence official and long-time MbN adviser, Jabri was a key Western partner. He got things done that advanced his country’s interests, as well as America’s, without gamesmanship or pretense. A man who the press correctly suggests “ knows where the bodies are buried,” he prudently fled the Kingdom following MbN’s removal and his own sacking. Despite his close U.S. ties, Jabri is hiding out in Canada, fearful that the Trump administration would deport him to Saudi Arabia.

By arresting those considered close to the U.S. or who otherwise believed themselves safe based on past American security assurances, MbS has shown his ruthlessness, and has sent an unmistakable message about the risks of cooperation with the U.S., the price of dissent and the powerlessness of America to protect its interests within the Kingdom. Meanwhile, the last thing Trump wants is illumination of such dynamics from the intelligence community, which could threaten his unconditional support to the Kingdom and its young prince.

MbS has his own domestic challenges. He needs to contend with the powerful Al-Shaykh family, which includes Saudi Arabia’s Grand Mufti, Abdulaziz bin Abdullah Al-Shaykh. Descendants of Muhammad bin Abd al-Wahhab, the 18th-century Wahhabi founder, the family formed a power-sharing arrangement nearly 300 years ago with the House of Saud, in which the Al-Shaykh family retains authority in religious matters in exchange for supporting the House of Saud’s political authority. The families are also integrated by marriage. One must wonder how supportive the al-Shaykhs are of the social reforms MbS has imposed, allowing women to drive, music to play in restaurants and men and women to mix in public. All that now occurs without the watchful eyes of the since defanged Mutawa, Saudi Arabia’s once pervasive and intimidating religious police.

As in Iran prior to the Shah’s fall, it’s not that CIA can’t learn the realities that foreshadow Saudi Arabia’s future, or assess its decisionmaking today. Rather, it’s a deliberate choice. Knowledge incurs a level of responsibility, and the CIA steals only those secrets and produces assessments that its political leaders request. That the agency’s 2019 Worldwide Threat Assessment reported optimistically on the Kingdom’s stability, reforms and economic progress reflects the reality that little was based on anything but public information, and that information usually comes from palace-controlled media and messaging.

Saudi Arabia’s 34 million people, resources, and military capabilities can’t be ignored or wished away. The Kingdom has for years been spending between 9 and 13 percent of its annual GDP on military procurements, making it one of the best-equipped forces on the globe. The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute and the International Institute for Strategic Studies regularly place Saudi Arabian military spending third after only the US and China.

Saudi’s economic gamesmanship as reflected by the oil machinations of this spring also demonstrates its ability to inflict economic pain on the U.S. as well, when it chooses. Without the foresight of the Covid pandemic’s forthcoming economic impact, MbS’s measures were, like Russia’s, aimed at the competition felt from the U.S. energy sector, with collateral damage more broadly ensuing across the entire American economy.

“See no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil,” is a dangerous business model for the US to embrace concerning this important country, one that likewise reportedly has nuclear ambitions. Whatever the reality is in Saudi Arabia, US interests are best served with a cold look at the facts and more calculated leveraging of its influence. While it’s the president’s prerogative to chart US foreign policy, Americans have the right to see that their duly elected representatives have the opportunity to provide advice, consent and oversight.

Trump should be able to make the case for his positive relationship with the Crown Prince, but based on the facts our intelligence services are charged to provide, and which can withstand scrutiny. Not doing so risks the kinds of failures that have caused America’s greatest embarrassments in the Middle East—failing to see the coming of Iran’s 1979 revolution, and the manipulation of intelligence to justify the 2003 invasion of Iraq—but with perhaps even more frightening consequences yet to come.

Disclaimer: this post and the subject matter and contents thereof - text, media, or otherwise - do not necessarily reflect the views of the 8kun administration.
Post last edited at

3686b5 No.182879

File: d4e5aff6cbe3c4c⋯.png (202.56 KB,514x1108,257:554,Screenshot_2024_02_19_at_0….png)

121

Why were the acts that recently occurred in SA so critically important?

What US assets are in place in/near SA?

What assurances were made to protect the Kingdom?

Who shot down the missile from Yemen?

POTUS declassify_speech_Jap_11_5

Was it really from Yemen?

How do we know?

Why is this relevant?

Who are the puppets?

Who are the puppet masters?

Who pulls the strings?

What provides power?

What if US elections can be rigged?

How are JFK, Reagan, and Trump different from the rest?

Why did JFK surround himself w/ family much like POTUS?

What if it was bought and paid for?

How would this be possible?

Why are there no voting ID laws in place?

What do you need an ID for? List. Compare. Laugh.

What is the argument for not allowing voter ID laws to be enacted?

Why are immigrants important? (MB)(Votes)(Attacks)

Why are illegals important? (MS13)(Votes)(187)

Why is open border important?

What did BO say on the campaign trail last year to illegals within the US?

What did BO encourage?

Was this illegal?

Who owns sizeable stakes in voter machine co’s?

Who decides what voter machines are used in elections?

Why are some ‘important’ counties still manually/hand counted?

God save us.

Q

Disclaimer: this post and the subject matter and contents thereof - text, media, or otherwise - do not necessarily reflect the views of the 8kun administration.



[Return][Go to top][Catalog][Nerve Center][Random][Post a Reply]
[]
[ / / / / / / / / / / / / / ] [ dir / random / 93 / biohzrd / hkacade / hkpnd / tct / utd / uy / yebalnia ]