BIN LADEN: THE FORBIDDEN TRUTH ABOUT BUSH, OIL AND WASHINGTON'S SECRET 
NEGOTIATIONS WITH THE TALIBAN

At Democracy Now! we have often called the Bush administration the 
Oiligarchy. Vice-President Dick Cheney of course was the president of 
Halliburton, a company that provides services for the oil industry. For 
nearly a decade, National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice worked with 
Chevron, while secretaries of commerce and energy, Donald Evans and Spencer 
Abraham, worked for another oil giant. Many of the US officials now working 
on the administration's Afghanistan policy also have extensive backgrounds 
in the world of multinational oil giants.

An explosive new book published originally in France is revealing some 
extraordinary details of the extent to which US oil corporations influenced 
the Bush administration's policies toward the Taliban regime prior to 
September 11th. The book is called Bin Laden: The Forbidden Truth. And it 
paints a detailed picture of the Bush administration's secret negotiations 
with the Taliban government in the months and weeks before the attacks on 
the World Trade Center. It charges that under the influence of US oil 
companies the Bush administration blocked U.S. secret service investigations 
on terrorism. It tells the story of how the administration conducted secret 
negotiations with the Taliban to hand-over Osama bin Laden in exchange for 
political recognition and economic aid. The book says that Washington's main 
aim in Afghanistan prior to September 11th was consolidating the Taliban 
regime, in order to obtain access to the oil and gas reserves in Central 
Asia.

The authors claim that before the September 11th attacks, Christina Rocca, 
the head of Asian Affairs in the US State Department, met the Taliban 
Ambassador to Pakistan Abdul Salam Zaeef in Islamabad on August 2. Rocca is 
a veteran of US involvement in Afghanistan. She was previously in charge of 
contacts with Islamist guerrilla groups at the CIA, where she oversaw the 
delivery of Stinger missiles to Afghan mujahideen fighting the Soviet 
occupation forces in the 1980s.

The book also reveals that the Taliban actually hired an American public 
relations' expert for an image-making campaign in the US. What's amazing is 
that the PR officer was a woman named Laila Helms, who is the niece of 
former CIA director Richard Helms. Helms is described as the Mata Hari of 
US-Taliban negotiations. The authors claim that she brought Sayed 
Rahmatullah Hashimi, an advisor to Mullah Omar, to Washington for five days 
in March 2001 - after the Taliban had destroyed the ancient Buddhas of 
Bamiyan. Hashimi met the Directorate of Central Intelligence at the CIA, and 
the Bureau of Intelligence and Research at the State Department.

The book also says that the Deputy Director of the FBI, John O'Neill, 
resigned in July in protest of the Bush administration's obstruction of an 
investigation into alleged Taliban terrorist activities. O'Neill then became 
head of security at the World Trade Center. He died in the September 11th 
attacks.



Jean-Charles Brisard, co-author of Bin Laden: The Forbidden Truth. He has 
worked for the French Secret Services and wrote a report for them in 1997 on 
Bin Laden's Al Qaeda network.
Guillaume Dasquie, co-author of Bin Laden: The Forbidden Truth. He is an 
investigative journalist and publisher of Intelligence Online.
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