Hearing on Saudi Arabia Weapon's Sale Cites Kingdom's Terror Ties


by IPT
IPT News
September 19, 2007

http://www.investigativeproject.org/article/478

There is no evidence that Saudi Arabia "has taken public punitive actions
against any individual for financing terror" since 9/11, a former top
security aide to two presidents testified Tuesday before a congressional
subcommittee.

Lee S. Wolosky, former director of the National Security Council's Office of
Transnational Threats under Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, told
the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on the Middle East and South Asia
that six years after the attacks on America, the Saudi government has still
not reigned in charities with ties to al Qaeda.

"I think we've let the billionaires of Saudi Arabia off the hook," said
Congressman Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA).

The subcommittee met to explore America's relationship with Saudi Arabia in
light of a $20 billion dollar weapons sale being offered by the White House
to the member states of the Gulf Cooperation Council. That includes Saudi
Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates. The bulk
of the sale will be going to Saudi Arabia.

In a display of bipartisan agreement, both Subcommittee Chairman Gary
Ackerman (D-NY) and Ranking Member Mike Pence (R-IN) expressed skepticism
about the wisdom of the sale. The question for Ackerman was simple: "Saudi
Arabia will make its own calculations about the region and about its
relations with the United States on the same basis it always has: What's in
it for the House of Saud? So, I think it's time we ask ourselves a similar
question: What's in it for the House of Uncle Sam?"

Pence offered another question: "Are they [Saudi Arabia] really an ally in
the War on Terror?"

The two witnesses before the subcommittee attempted to answer these
questions. F. Gregory Gause, III, an associate professor of political
science at the University of Vermont explained that this arms sale would not
serve to affect security in the region one way or the other. He incorrectly
noted that Saudi Arabia had never deployed its military outside its borders
(In 1948, Saudi Arabia sent a contingent of roughly a thousand soldiers to
fight Israel), using that as evidence to claim that any operations in Iraq
or Iran are unlikely. Gause said the only reason to make the sale other than
economic gain for our arms industry was that the sale would demonstrate that
the United States is committed to the security of Saudi Arabia, making it
less likely that the kingdom would pursue nuclear technology should Iran
succeed in producing nuclear weapons.

Wolosky explained Saudi Arabia's connections to the financing of terrorism
and the propagation of extremism. Of the failure to regulate charities that
have financed terrorism, he stated: "Passing legislation is one thing, and
implementation and enforcement are another. Certain steps announced to
increase oversight over problematic Saudi-based charities have not been
fully implemented."

One of these charities is the Muslim World League, a multi-million dollar
organization based in Mecca, Saudi Arabia. It is funded by both the Saudi
government and private donations. Since its founding, the League has
functioned as the quasi-official religious missionary and propaganda arm of
Saudi Arabia. In March 1997, Secretary General Abdullah Al-Obaid of MWL
thanked King Fahd for his continued support of the organization, noting that
the Saudi government had officially provided more than $1.33 billion in
financial aid since 1962.

MWL continues to operate dozens of offices around the world. MWL has two in
the United States - in Virginia and New York City. The FBI raided the
Virginia office in March 2002 as part of a still-open investigation into a
network of Virginia-based Islamic charities and corporate entities suspected
of having ties to terrorist groups. The office was raided again in July
2005.

Another of these Saudi charities is the International Islamic Relief
Organization (IIRO). Western intelligence sources have traced IIRO money
transfers to bank accounts in London and in Amman, Jordan and then from
front groups to Hamas-backed organizations in Gaza and the West Bank. The
sources believe the annual amount the IIRO channels to these groups totals
about $20 million.

Fayez Ahmed Alshehri, one of the 9/11 hijackers, told his father he was
going to work for IIRO and never saw his family again. Mohammed Al-Zawahiri,
the brother of Dr. Ayman al-Zawahiri (second in command of al Qaeda), worked
around the world on behalf of IIRO.

Following the 1998 U.S. embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania, six Islamic
NGOs, including MWL and IIRO were banned from Kenya for "endangering the
lives of Kenyans" and "working against the interests of Kenyans in terms of
security," according to John Etmesi, Chairman of the Nongovernmental
Coordinating Board in Kenya. In mid-December of 1998, the Kenyan Supreme
Court lifted the ban against MWL and IIRO after the Islamic community in
Kenya applied strong pressure.

In August 2006, the U.S. Treasury Department designated IIRO's branch
offices in the Philippines and Indonesia for "facilitating for al Qaeda and
affiliated terrorist groups."

Wolosky stopped short of accusing the Saudi government itself of financing
terrorism, neglecting to note the existence of an official Hamas office in
Saudi Arabia and two official Saudi committees that were dedicated to
supporting the Second Intifada. In April of 2002, Saudi television aired a
state-run telethon encouraging donors to raise money for the Saudi Committee
for the Support of the Al Quds Intifada, bringing in over $109 million
dollars. In 2002, Israeli officials raided a Hamas charity and found
spreadsheets giving a detailed account of how the charity received $545,000
from the same Saudi committee to allocate to 102 families of so-called
martyrs - roughly $5300 per family. The spreadsheet included the names of
eight suicide bombers. IPT Executive Director Steven Emerson laid out the
evidence of Saudi's support for Hamas and other Palestinian terrorist
organizations in his 2005 testimony
<http://www.investigativeproject.org/documents/testimony/324.pdf>  on the
subject.

When asked by Ackerman how the U.S. can ensure that the Saudis follow
through with their commitments to regulate their charities, Wolosky replied,
"Only be compelling Saudi Arabia by conditions of some policy.will you have
leverage to find out if those chains are being pulled."

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