oped: Ok this is starting to make sense now..:
Posted earlier on SharlasLabyrinth : http://sharlaslabyrinth.blogspot.com/2013/04/released-saudi-man-member-of-al-qaida.html
oped: I see a coverup coming down the pike from the Obama administration...he opened the gates allowing Saudis free entry access to the US and now he reaps the rewards!
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by: Aaron Klein
JERUSALEM – The Saudi national questioned by police in the investigation into the Boston Marathon attack shares the same last name as a major Saudi clan that includes scores of al-Qaida operatives.
Some in the clan are senior al-Qaida members while others are reportedly being held by the U.S. in the Guantanamo Bay detention camp in Cuba.
Two Saudi nationals were reportedly injured in the bombings in Boston, with one, 20-year-old foreign student Abdul Rahman Ali Alharbi, initially put under armed guard at a hospital. Alharbi is reportedly studying in the U.S. on a student visa.
A large group of federal and state law enforcement agents reportedly raided Alharbi’s apartment in Revere, Mass.
CNN reported the search took place by consent, according to a federal law enforcement source, meaning no search warrant was needed
Now the Saudi embassy in Washington has said Alharbi was no longer under detention and is not a suspect in the bomb blasts.
Purchase a copy of “Fool Me Twice” by Aaron Klein and Brenda Elliott and receive a FREE copy of their New York Times bestseller “The Manchurian President.”
Saudi diplomat Azzam bin Abdel Karim reportedly visited Alharbi in the hospital.
Nail Al-Jubeir, a spokesman for the Saudi mission in Washington, stated that U.S. authorities told the embassy “no Saudi national was a suspect in the Boston Marathon attack and that the Saudi national in question was a witness, not a suspect.”
While it is not clear whether the Alharbi questioned as part of the marathon probe is a member of the well-known Saudi clan, his Facebook page, reviewed by WND, lists him as Facebook friends with at least seven other Alharbis, located in both Boston and in Saudi Arabia.
One of the Alharbis on his Facebook friends list, Ahmed Alharbi, is listed as a pharmacy technician at the Saudi Ministry of Health. Most others live in Riyadh.
The Alharbi clan has long been active in al-Qaida. Khaled bin Ouda bin Mohammed al-Harbi, for example, is a Saudi national who joined Osama bin Laden’s mujahadeen group in the 1980s. He reportedly became an al-Qaida member in the mid-1990s. He turned himself in to Saudi authorities in 2004 as part of an amnesty deal.
The BBC reported Khaled Alharbi was married to the daughter of al-Qaida’s number two, Ayman al-Zawahri. He reportedly appeared with bin Laden in a video praising the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
Another top al-Qaida operative is Adel Radi Saqr al-Wahabi al-Harbi, a Saudi national identified by the State Department as “a key member of an al-Qaida network operating in Iran.”
The State Department has offered a multimillion-dollar reward for the capture of Abdel Alharbi, saying he is an Iran-based al-Qaida facilitator who serves as the deputy to Muhsin al-Fadhl, who runs al-Qaida’s Iran network.
On his website, former Palestinian Liberation Organization operative Walid Shoebat translated a list of the Saudi government’s 85 wanted al-Qaida members.
The list includes several members of the Alharbi clan:
Posted earlier on SharlasLabyrinth : http://sharlaslabyrinth.blogspot.com/2013/04/released-saudi-man-member-of-al-qaida.html
Released Saudi man member of al-Qaida clan?
oped: I see a coverup coming down the pike from the Obama administration...he opened the gates allowing Saudis free entry access to the US and now he reaps the rewards!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
by: Aaron Klein
JERUSALEM – The Saudi national questioned by police in the investigation into the Boston Marathon attack shares the same last name as a major Saudi clan that includes scores of al-Qaida operatives.
Some in the clan are senior al-Qaida members while others are reportedly being held by the U.S. in the Guantanamo Bay detention camp in Cuba.
Two Saudi nationals were reportedly injured in the bombings in Boston, with one, 20-year-old foreign student Abdul Rahman Ali Alharbi, initially put under armed guard at a hospital. Alharbi is reportedly studying in the U.S. on a student visa.
A large group of federal and state law enforcement agents reportedly raided Alharbi’s apartment in Revere, Mass.
CNN reported the search took place by consent, according to a federal law enforcement source, meaning no search warrant was needed
Now the Saudi embassy in Washington has said Alharbi was no longer under detention and is not a suspect in the bomb blasts.
Purchase a copy of “Fool Me Twice” by Aaron Klein and Brenda Elliott and receive a FREE copy of their New York Times bestseller “The Manchurian President.”
Saudi diplomat Azzam bin Abdel Karim reportedly visited Alharbi in the hospital.
Nail Al-Jubeir, a spokesman for the Saudi mission in Washington, stated that U.S. authorities told the embassy “no Saudi national was a suspect in the Boston Marathon attack and that the Saudi national in question was a witness, not a suspect.”
While it is not clear whether the Alharbi questioned as part of the marathon probe is a member of the well-known Saudi clan, his Facebook page, reviewed by WND, lists him as Facebook friends with at least seven other Alharbis, located in both Boston and in Saudi Arabia.
One of the Alharbis on his Facebook friends list, Ahmed Alharbi, is listed as a pharmacy technician at the Saudi Ministry of Health. Most others live in Riyadh.
The Alharbi clan has long been active in al-Qaida. Khaled bin Ouda bin Mohammed al-Harbi, for example, is a Saudi national who joined Osama bin Laden’s mujahadeen group in the 1980s. He reportedly became an al-Qaida member in the mid-1990s. He turned himself in to Saudi authorities in 2004 as part of an amnesty deal.
The BBC reported Khaled Alharbi was married to the daughter of al-Qaida’s number two, Ayman al-Zawahri. He reportedly appeared with bin Laden in a video praising the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
Another top al-Qaida operative is Adel Radi Saqr al-Wahabi al-Harbi, a Saudi national identified by the State Department as “a key member of an al-Qaida network operating in Iran.”
The State Department has offered a multimillion-dollar reward for the capture of Abdel Alharbi, saying he is an Iran-based al-Qaida facilitator who serves as the deputy to Muhsin al-Fadhl, who runs al-Qaida’s Iran network.
On his website, former Palestinian Liberation Organization operative Walid Shoebat translated a list of the Saudi government’s 85 wanted al-Qaida members.
The list includes several members of the Alharbi clan:
- Badr Saud Uwaid Al-Awufi Al-Harbi
- Muhammad Atiq Uwaid Al-Awufi Al-Harbi
- Khalid Salim Uwaid Al-Lahibi Al-Harbi
- Raed Abdullah Salem Al-Thahiri Al-Harbi
- Abdullah Abdul Rahman Muhammad Al-Harbi (leader)
- Fayez Ghuneim Humeid Al-Hijri Al-Harbi
Background points:
- A Saudi national originally identified as a “person of interest” in the Boston Marathon bombing was set to be deported under section 212 3B — “Security and related grounds” — “Terrorist activities” after the bombing
- As the story gained traction, TheBlaze’s Chief Content Officer Joel Cheatwood received word that the government may not deport the Saudi national, originally identified as Abdul Rahman Ali Alharbi
- Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano refused to answer questions on the subject when confronted by Rep. Jeff Duncan (R-SC) on Capitol Hill.
- An ICE official said a different Saudi national is in custody, but is “in no way” connected to the bombings.
- A congressional source, however, says that the file on Alharbi was created, that he was “linked” in some way to the Boston bombings (though it is unclear how), and that documents showing all this have been sent to Congress.
- Key congressmen of the Committee on Homeland Security request a classified briefing with Napolitano
- Fox News’ Todd Starnes reports that Alharbi was allegedly flagged on a terrorist watch list and granted a student visa without being properly vetted. Sources close to the investigation also told him the Saudi is still set for deportation.
- New information provided to TheBlaze reveals Alharbi’s file was altered early Wednesday evening to disassociate him from the initial charges
- Sources say the Saudi’s student visa specifically allows him to go to school in Findlay, Ohio, though he appears to have an apartment in Boston, Massachusetts
- Sources tell us this will most likely now be kicked from the DHS to the DOJ and labeled an ongoing investigation that can no longer be discussed.
But now a number of congressional
sources have confirmed that the story is as TheBlaze reported last week,
and Beck is presenting more pieces of the big picture.
“This week has changed me,” he said at
the top of his radio program on Monday. “The events in Boston changed
me….The events in Washington around Boston changed me.”
We crossed an “extraordinarily disturbing threshold” last week, Beck said, but we know “exactly who we’re dealing with now.”
After a discussion of how Dzhokhar
Tsarnaev, who is currently under guard in the hospital, wasn’t read his
Miranda rights, Beck proceeded to lay out a number of key points on the
case.
“While the media continues to look at what the causes were of these two guys, there are, at this hour, three people involved,” he said. “The first one is the one we are going to address.”
Beck proceeded to highlight the
background of the Saudi national first identified as a “person of
interest” in the Boston bombings, Abdul Rahman Ali Alharbi, noting that
the the NTC issued an event file calling for his deportation using
section 212, 3B which is proven terrorist activity.
“We are not sure who actually tagged
him as a ’212 3B,’ but we know it is very difficult to charge someone
with this — it has to be almost certain,” Beck explained. “It is the
equivalent in civil society of charging someone with premeditated murder
and seeking the death penalty — it is not thrown around lightly.”
Beck continued, noting that after
Secretary of State John Kerry met with Saudi Foreign Minister Saud on
Tuesday, the FBI began backtracking on the Saudi national from suspect,
to person of interest, to witness, to victim, to nobody.
Then, on Wednesday, President Obama
had a “chance” encounter with Saudi Foreign Minister Saud and Saudi
Ambassador Adel al-Jubeir.
“Wednesday at 5:35 p.m. the file is
altered,” Beck said. “This is unheard of, this is impossible in the
timeline due to the severity of the charge….You don’t one day put a 212
3B charge against somebody with deportation, and then the next day take
it off. It would require too much to do it.”
“There are only two people that could
revoke the deportation order — the director of the NTC could do it after
speaking with each department, the FBI, the ATC, etc. — which is
impossible to do in such a short period of time, — or, somebody at the
very highest levels of the State Department could do it. We don’t have
any evidence to tell you which one did it,” Beck said.
A photo allegedly of Abdul Rahman Ali Alharbi in the hospital.
Congressman Duncan has detailed information about the Saudi national in his possession, and he and other members of the House Homeland Security Committee have sent a formal letter of request (which we have a copy of) to Napolitano for a classified briefing on the Saudi national and the deportation order.
Beck proceeded to highlight more key points: The Saudi national was allegedly once flagged on a terror watch list and granted a student visa without being properly vetted.
If, as an ICE official said last week, there is actually a second
Saudi in custody, who is it? Beck asked. “Why were there were no names,
no pictures presented? The fact is, an event was created for one Abdul
Rahman Ali Al-Harbi indicating he was to be deported for terrorism
activity related to the Boston bombing. If this file was created with
another Abdul Rahman Ali Al-Harbi in mind, don’t you think we should
know about it?”
Beck continued with more exclusive information:
The Saudi’s student visa specifically allows him to go to school in Findley, Ohio. He has been in this country six months. He has an apartment in Boston, Massachusetts.If this is a case of mistaken identity, then who is the person named in the file, with the same name, with the 3B charge? And If DHS was working with the person as a source to out the bombers, then why was there a 3B Charge?Exclusive: Why wasn’t the Congressional Committee on Homeland Security notified? Why are they being cut out of all information? This is protocol.We are working on the family connections, and there is more to come.Sources tell us this will most likely now be kicked from the DHS to the DOJ and labeled an ongoing investigation that can no longer be discussed. This will be the reason Napalitano won’t answer the Homeland Security Committee’s request for a briefing. Like Benghazi they have heavy into a disinformation campaign floating a variety of scenarios to confuse the media — but that apparently doesn’t take much — to prevent the story from being pursued… They are also working very hard to discredit those on the scent.
It is still unclear why the government
is stonewalling the media on information as to why the file initially
labeled Alharbi as a threat, only to change that designation later in
the week. Is there a legitimate threat that’s being covered up? Did
the government have actual concerns about Alharbi, but was too quick to
connect him in this instance and is now trying to stave off
embarrassment?
Bottom line, Beck said: “I need you to
call your congressmen right now. There are congressmen who are aware
of this, have seen the documentation — they need your support, they need
your help…If we do not stand up, he is on a plane tomorrow or he is
already gone.”
“We demand answers from the Justice Department and this administration.”
Beck proceeded to put the issue in a larger perspective, noting that multiple news outlets reported after 9/11 that prominent Saudis were allowed to leave the country, even as all flights were grounded.
“The Bush administration would later
block the investigation into Saudi involvement into 9/11, even though 15
of the 19 hijackers were Saudis, and would eventually force the
redaction of a 28-page chapter of the 9/11 Commission report regarding
foreign, specifically Saudi, support for some of the Al-Qaeda
hijackers,” Beck said, noting that the questionable relationship between
Saudi Arabia and the United States goes back further than the current
administration.
But, he said, we have now taken that relationship to a whole new level. “On
January 14, 2013 President Obama met with Saudi Minister of Interior,”
Beck remarked. “Two days later Janet Napolitano signed agreement with
Saudi minister allowing ‘trusted traveler’ status on Saudi student
visitors, meaning greatly reduced security checks and scrutiny.”
“This is trusted traveler status that
we don’t give to some of our most trusted allies, and we gave it to
Saudi Arabia last January?” Beck said. “So they can just walk into our
country no questions asked?”
“There is a pattern,” he said.
“There is a relationship between the U.S. and Saudi Arabia the American
public doesn’t know about. The case of Abdul Rahman Ali Al-Harbi is only
the latest example.”
Editor’s note: We discussed this story and all the day’s news during our live BlazeCast at 12 p.m. ET:
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