August 21, 2007 
9/11 Blame Game: CIA Falls on Its Sword Again

If 3,000 people had not died on September 11, 2001, a report released by the 
CIA’s inspector general would be laughable. “A CIA report released Tuesday 
blames the top leadership of the agency for major lapses in fighting al-Qaida 
and outlines how intelligence officials missed numerous opportunities to thwart 
two hijackers prior to the Sept. 11 attacks,” reports NBC. “The 19-page 
executive summary, written by the CIA’s inspector general, finds extensive 
fault with the actions of former director George Tenet and other CIA leaders.”

And what, pray tell, are these “major lapses” in “fighting al-Qaida,” the 
mostly smoke and mirrors terrorist organization named after a mujahideen 
database?


“Tenet and the agencies under his supervision lacked a comprehensive strategic 
plan to counter al-Qaida prior to Sept. 11.” In fact, as Dan Rather reported, 
Osama was admitted to a Pakistani hospital on September 10, 2001. “If the CBS 
report by Dan Rather is accurate and Osama had indeed been admitted to the 
Pakistani military hospital on September 10, 2001, courtesy of America’s ally, 
he was in all likelihood still in hospital in Rawalpindi on the 11th of 
September, when the attacks occurred,” writes Michel Chossudovsky, citing 
mainstream news reports. “In all probability, his whereabouts were known to US 
officials on the morning of September 12, when Secretary of State Colin Powell 
initiated negotiations with Pakistan, with a view to arresting and extraditing 
bin Laden.” In the months leading up to Osama’s hospital visit, the CIA head of 
station at the American Hospital in Dubai, UAE, paid Osama a visit. Le Figaro 
reported:

  Dubai… was the backdrop of a secret meeting between Osama bin Laden and the 
local CIA agent in July [2001]. A partner of the administration of the American 
Hospital in Dubai claims that “public enemy number one” stayed at this hospital 
between the 4th and 14th of July. While he was hospitalized, bin Laden received 
visits from many members of his family as well as prominent Saudis and 
Emiratis. During the hospital stay, the local CIA agent, known to many in 
Dubai, was seen taking the main elevator of the hospital to go [up] to bin 
Laden’s hospital room. A few days later, the CIA man bragged to a few friends 
about having visited bin Laden. Authorized sources say that on July 15th, the 
day after bin Laden returned to Quetta [Pakistan], the CIA agent was called 
back to headquarters. In the pursuit of its investigations, the FBI discovered 
“financing agreements” that the CIA had been developing with its “Arab friends” 
for years. The Dubai meeting is, so it would seem, within the logic of “a 
certain American policy.’”

Of course, we are not supposed to know about this “certain American policy,” 
although it is common knowledge, at least to readers of Le Figaro and the 
London Times.

The CIA would have us believe Tenet and “other CIA leaders” were clueless—and 
maybe they were. However, as Chossudovsky noted in November, 2003, the hospital 
mentioned above “is directly under the jurisdiction of the Pakistani Armed 
Forces, which has close links to the Pentagon. U.S. military advisers based in 
Rawalpindi. work closely with the Pakistani Armed Forces. Again, no attempt was 
made to arrest America’s best known fugitive, but then maybe bin Laden was 
serving another ‘better purpose’. Rumsfeld claimed at the time that he had no 
knowledge regarding Osama’s health…. Needless to say, the CBS report is a 
crucial piece of information in the 9/11 jigsaw. It refutes the 
administration’s claim that the whereabouts of bin Laden are unknown. It points 
to a Pakistan connection, it suggests a cover-up at the highest levels of the 
Bush administration.”

But, for the neocons, ever aware of the feeblemindedness of the average 
American (except when it comes to football scores), such refutations are less 
than meaningless, as such a “report” can be splashed across corporate media 
headlines and few challenge the bankrupt and wholly transparent premise that 
the CIA was out to lunch on September 11, 2001. In fact, the CIA was squarely 
in the driver’s seat.

Moreover, if the CIA was indeed interested in hunting down and smoking out 
Osama and his dour cave-dwelling patsy terrorists, they may have asked General 
Mahmoud Ahmad, head of Pakistan’s military intelligence, the ISI—responsible, 
at the behest of the CIA, for creating “al-Qaeda” in the first place—as he was 
in Washington at the time of the attacks, brunching it up with then Republican 
Congress critter Porter Goss and Democratic critter Bob Graham. It is said they 
were discussing Osama. In fact, as the Guardian reported at the time, Ahmad had 
a bagman, one Omar Sheikh, deliver $100,000 to Mohammed Atta, or somebody who 
claimed to be Atta.

Small world, no?

Sure it is—and I have a bridge in Brooklyn you might be interested in 
purchasing.

http://adereview.com/blog/?p=10

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