http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/9584265.htm?1c

Graham book: Inquiry into 9/11, Saudi ties blocked

By FRANK DAVIES
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

WASHINGTON - Two of the Sept. 11, 2001, hijackers had a support network in
the United States that included agents of the Saudi government, and the
Bush administration and FBI blocked a congressional investigation into
that relationship, Sen. Bob Graham wrote in a book to be released Tuesday.

The discovery of the financial backing of the two hijackers ''would draw a
direct line between the terrorists and the government of Saudi Arabia, and
trigger an attempted coverup by the Bush administration,'' the Florida
Democrat wrote.

And in Graham's book, Intelligence Matters, obtained by The Herald
Saturday, he makes clear that some details of that financial support from
Saudi Arabia were in the 27 pages of the congressional inquiry's final
report that were blocked from release by the administration, despite the
pleas of leaders of both parties on the House and Senate intelligence
committees.

Graham also revealed that Gen. Tommy Franks told him on Feb. 19, 2002,
just four months after the invasion of Afghanistan, that many important
resources -- including the Predator drone aircraft crucial to the search
for Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda leaders -- were being shifted to prepare
for a war against Iraq.

Graham recalled this conversation at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa with
Franks, then head of Central Command, who was ``looking troubled'':

``Senator, we are not engaged in a war in Afghanistan.''

''Excuse me?'' I asked.

''Military and intelligence personnel are being redeployed to prepare for
an action in Iraq,'' he continued.

Graham concluded: 'Gen. Franks' mission -- which, as a good soldier, he
was loyally carrying out -- was being downgraded from a war to a
manhunt.''

Graham, who was chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee from June
2001 through the buildup to the Iraq war, voted against the war resolution
in October 2002 because he saw Iraq as a diversion that would hinder the
fight against al Qaeda terrorism.

He oversaw the Sept. 11 investigation on Capitol Hill with Rep. Porter
Goss, nominated last month to be the next CIA director. According to
Graham, the FBI and the White House blocked efforts to investigate the
extent of official Saudi connections to two hijackers.

Graham wrote that the staff of the congressional inquiry concluded that
two Saudis in the San Diego area, Omar al-Bayoumi and Osama Bassan, who
gave significant financial support to two hijackers, were working for the
Saudi government.

Al-Bayoumi received a monthly allowance from a contractor for Saudi Civil
Aviation that jumped from $465 to $3,700 in March 2000, after he helped
Nawaf al-Hazmi and Khalid al-Mihdhdar -- two of the Sept. 11 hijackers --
find apartments and make contacts in San Diego, just before they began
pilot training.

When the staff tried to conduct interviews in that investigation, and with
an FBI informant, Abdussattar Shaikh, who also helped the eventual
hijackers, they were blocked by the FBI and the administration, Graham
wrote.

The administration and CIA also insisted that the details about the Saudi
support network that benefited two hijackers be left out of the final
congressional report, Graham complained.

Bush had concluded that ''a nation-state that had aided the terrorists
should not be held publicly to account,'' Graham wrote. ``It was as if the
president's loyalty lay more with Saudi Arabia than with America's
safety.''

Saudi officials have vociferously denied any ties to the hijackers or al
Qaeda plots to attack the United States.

Graham ran unsuccessfully for the Democratic presidential nomination and
then decided not to seek reelection to the Senate this year. He has said
he hopes his book will illuminate FBI and CIA failures in the war on
terrorism and he also offers recommendations on ways to reform the
intelligence community.

On Iraq, Graham said the administration and CIA consistently overplayed
its estimates of Saddam Hussein's threat in its public statements and
declassified reports, while its secret reports contained warnings that the
intelligence on weapons of mass destruction was not conclusive.

In October 2002, Tenet told Graham that ''there were 550 sites where
weapons of mass destruction were either produced or stored'' in Iraq.

''It was, in short, a vivid and terrifying case for war. The problem was
it did not accurately represent the classified estimate we had received
just days earlier,'' Graham wrote. ``It was two different messages,
directed at two different audiences. I was outraged.''

In his book, Graham is especially critical of the FBI for its inability to
track al Qaeda operatives in the United States and blasts the CIA for
``politicizing intelligence.''

He reserves his harshest criticism for Bush.

Graham found the president had ''an unforgivable level of intellectual --
and even common sense -- indifference'' toward analyzing the comparative
threats posed by Iraq and al Qaeda and other terrorist groups.

When the weapons were not found, one year after the invasion of Iraq, Bush
attended a black-tie dinner in Washington, Graham recalled. Bush gave a
humorous speech with slides, showing him looking under White House
furniture and joking, ``Nope, no WMDs there.''

Graham wrote: ``It was one of the most offensive things I have witnessed.
Having recently attended the funeral of an American soldier killed in
Iraq, who left behind a young wife and two preschool-age children, I found
nothing funny about a deceitful justification for war.''

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http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/0907-06.htm

Bush: OB-GYNs Kept from 'Practicing Their Love'

POPLAR BLUFF, Mo. - President Bush offered an unexpected reason on Monday
for cracking down on frivolous medical lawsuits: "Too many OB-GYNs aren't
able to practice their love with women all across this country."

The Republican president, long known for verbal and grammatical lapses,
included the anecdote about obstetrician gynecologists in his stump speech
attacking Democratic presidential rival Sen. John Kerry and his running
mate, Sen. John Edwards, a former trial lawyer.

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