SAUDI ARABIA´S DUBIOUS DENIALS OF INVOLVEMENT IN INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM (JCPA-JERUSALEM CENTER FOR PUBLIC AFFAIRS) Jerusalem Viewpoints No. 504 By DORE GOLD 09/22/03)
Source: http://www.jcpa.org/jl/vp504.htm
JCPA-Jerusalem Center Public Affairs
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Saudi Arabia´s past involvement in international terrorism is
indisputable. While the Bush administration decided to redact 28
sensitive pages of the Joint Intelligence Report of the U.S.
Congress, nonetheless, Saudi involvement in terrorist financing can
be documented through materials captured by Israel in Palestinian
headquarters in 2002-3. In light of this evidence, Saudi denials
about terrorist funding don´t hold water.
Israel retrieved a document of the International Islamic Relief
Organization (IIRO) which detailed the allocation of $280,000 to 14
Hamas charities. IIRO and other suspected global Saudi charities are
not NGOs, since their boards of directors are headed by Saudi cabinet
members. Prince Salman, a full brother of King Fahd, controls IIRO
distributions "with an iron hand," according to former CIA operative
Robert Baer. Mahmoud Abbas, in fact, complained, in a handwritten
December 2000 letter to Salman, about Saudi funding of Hamas. Defense
Minister Prince Sultan has been cited as a major IIRO contributor.
It was hoped, after the May 12 triple bombing attack in Riyadh,
that Saudi Arabia might halt its support for terrorism. Internally,
the Saudi security forces moved against al-Qaeda cells all over the
kingdom. But externally, the Saudis were still engaged in terrorist
financing, underwriting 60-70 percent of the Hamas budget, in
violation of their "roadmap" commitments to President Bush.
Additionally, the Saudis back the civilian infrastructure of
Hamas with extremist textbooks glorifying jihad and martyrdom that
are used by schools and Islamic societies throughout the West Bank
and Gaza Strip. Ideological infiltration of Palestinian society by
the Saudis in this way is reminiscent of their involvement in the
madrassa system of Pakistan during the 1980s, that gave birth to the
Taliban and other pro bin-Laden groups.
Saudi Arabia Provided the Ideological Backdrop for 9/11
Two years ago on September 11, 2001, most well-informed observers of
the Middle East were shocked to hear that 15 out of the 19 hijackers
who carried out the attacks on the World Trade Center and the
Pentagon were Saudi citizens. It was equally surprising that the
mastermind of the worst terrorist attack on the United States in its
history, Osama bin Laden, was born and raised in Saudi Arabia. This
curiosity and wonder about the Saudi role in the attack came up once
more with the release of the September 11 Joint Intelligence Report
by the U.S. Congress and its disclosure of what the U.S. press
called "incontrovertible evidence" linking Saudis to the financing of
al-Qaeda operatives in the United States.
For decades, terrorism had been associated with states like Libya,
Syria, or Iran. Saudi Arabia had been a pro-Western force during the
Cold War and had hosted large coalition armies during the 1991 Gulf
War. Saudi Arabia had not been colonized during its history, like
other Middle Eastern states that had endured a legacy of European
imperialism. This background only sharpened the questions of many
after the attacks: What was the precise source of the hatred that
drove these men to take their own lives in an act of mass murder? The
Saudis were initially in a state of denial about their connection to
September 11; Interior Minister Prince Naif even tried to pin the
blame for the attacks on Israel, saying it was impossible that Saudi
youth could have been involved.1
Yet over time it became clearer how Saudi Arabia could have provided
the ideological backdrop that spawned al-Qaeda´s attack on the United
States. In a series of articles appearing in the Egyptian weekly, Ruz
al-Yousef (the Newsweek of Egypt), this past May, Wael al-Abrashi,
the magazine´s deputy editor, attempted to grapple with this issue.
He drew a direct link between the rise of much of contemporary
terrorism and Saudi Arabia´s main Islamic creed, Wahhabism, and the
financial involvement of Saudi Arabia´s large charitable
organizations:
Wahhabism leads, as we have seen, to the birth of extremist, closed,
and fanatical streams, that accuse others of heresy, abolish them,
and destroy them. The extremist religious groups have moved from the
stage of Takfir [condemning other Muslims as unbelievers] to the
stage of "annihilation and destruction," in accordance with the
strategy of Al-Qa´ida - which Saudi authorities must admit is a local
Saudi organization that drew other organizations into it, and not the
other way around. All the organizations emerged from under the robe
of Wahhabism.
I can state with certainly that after a very careful reading of all
the documents and texts of the official investigations linked to all
acts of terror that have taken place in Egypt, from the assassination
of the late president Anwar Sadat in October 1981, up to the Luxor
massacre in 1997, Saudi Arabia was the main station through which
most of the Egyptian extremists passed, and emerged bearing with them
terrorist thought regarding Takfir - thought that they drew from the
sheikhs of Wahhabism. They also bore with them funds they received
from the Saudi charities.2
Thus, while some Western commentators have sought to explain the
roots of al-Qaeda´s fury at the U.S. by focusing on the history of
American policy in the Middle East or other external factors, a
growing number of Middle Eastern analysts have concentrated instead
on internal Saudi factors, including recent militant trends among
Saudi Arabia´s Wahhabi clerics and the role of large Saudi global
charities in terrorist financing. This requires a careful look at how
Saudi Arabia contributed to the ideological roots of some of the new
wave of international terrorism as well as how the kingdom emerged as
a critical factor in providing the resources needed by many terrorist
groups.
Where Wahhabism Intersects with the Muslim Brotherhood
The particular creed of Islam practiced in Saudi Arabia, which is
known in the West as Wahhabism, emerged in the mid-eighteenth century
in Central Arabia from the teachings of Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahhab.
This Arabian religious reformer sought to rid Islam of foreign
innovations that compromised its monotheistic foundations, and to
restore what he believed were the religious practices of the seventh
century at the time of the Prophet Muhammad and his immediate
successors. He established a political covenant in 1744 with Muhammad
bin Saud, the ruler of Diriyah near modern-day Riyadh, according to
which he received bin Saud´s protection and in exchange legitimized
the spread of Saudi rule over a widening circle of Arabian tribes.
This covenant between the Saudi royal family and Wahhabism is at the
root of modern Saudi Arabia.
In retrospect, Wahhabism was significant for two reasons. First, it
rejuvinated the idea of the militant jihad, or holy war, which had
declined as a central Islamic value to be applied universally. Under
the influence of Sufism, for example, jihad had also evolved into a
more spiritual concept. Second, Wahhabism became associated with a
brutal history of political expansion that led to the massacre of
Muslims who did not adhere to its tenets, the most famous of which
occurred against the Shi´ite Muslims of Kerbala in the early
nineteenth century and against Sunni Muslims in Arabian cities, like
Taif, during the early twentieth century. These Muslims were labeled
as polytheists and thus did not deserve any protection. The highest
spiritual authority of Islam during this period, the Sultan-Caliph of
the Ottoman Empire, regarded the Wahhabis as heretics and waged wars
against them in defense of Islam.
Yet it would be a mistake to focus on Wahhabism alone as the
ideological fountainhead of the new global terrorism. Modern Saudi
Arabia in the 1950s and 1960s hosted other militant movements that
had an important impact, as well. For reasons of regional
geopolitics, King Saud, King Faisal, and their successors provided
sanctuary to elements of the radical Muslim Brotherhood from Egypt,
Sudan, Jordan, and Syria. Some were provided Saudi stipends. Others
were given positions in the Saudi educational system, including the
universities, or in the large Saudi charities, like the Muslim World
League that was created in 1962. For example, while Egyptian
President Abdul Nasser had the Muslim Brotherhood ideologue, Sayyed
Qutb, executed in 1966, his brother, Muhammad Qutb, fled to Saudi
Arabia and taught at King Abdul Aziz University in Jiddah. He was
joined in the 1970s by one of the heads of the Muslim Brotherhood
from Jordan, Abdullah Azzam. In 1979, both taught Osama bin Laden, a
student at the university.
Saudi Arabia´s global charities, like the Muslim World League,
permitted the spread of the new militancy that was forged from the
cooperation between the Wahhabi clerics and the Muslim Brotherhood
refugees. After 1973, these charities benefited from the huge
petrodollar resources dispensed by the Saudi government, which
undoubtedly helped them achieve a global reach. Abdullah Azzam headed
the offices of the Muslim World League in Peshawar, Pakistan, when it
served as the rear base for the war against the Soviet occupation of
Afghanistan. He was joined by his student, bin Laden, who with Saudi
funding also set up the Mujahidin Services Center (Maktab Khadmat al-
Mujahidin) for Muslim volunteers who came to fight the Red Army.
After Moscow´s defeat in Afghanistan, this office became al-Qaeda.
Thus, the Saudi charities became the chosen instrument for Riyadh´s
support of the continuing global jihad.3 Bin Laden´s brother-in-law,
Muhammad Jamal Khalifa, ran the offices of the International Islamic
Relief Organization (IIRO), a Muslim World League offshoot, in the
Philippines. Local intelligence agencies suspected that it served as
a financial conduit to the Abu Sayyaf organization. Muhammad al-
Zawahiri, brother of bin Laden´s Egyptian partner, Ayman al-Zawahiri,
would eventually work for IIRO in Albania. An IIRO employee from
Bangladesh, Sayed Abu Nasir, led a cell broken up by Indian police
that intended to strike at the U.S. consulates in Madras and
Calcutta; Abu Nasir explained that his superiors told him of 40 to 50
percent of IIRO charitable funds being diverted to finance terrorist
training camps in Afghanistan and Kashmir.4 Summarizing this history,
former CIA operative Robert Baer wrote: "When Saudi Arabia decided to
fund the Afghan mujahidin in the early 1980s, the IIRO proved a
perfect fit, a money conduit and plausible denial rolled into one."5
Ideological Roots of the New Terrorism and Its Global Export
While these developments may seem far beyond the horizon of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, a careful examination of some of the
worst suicide bombings by the Hamas organization against the State of
Israel also leads to Saudi Arabia. As of September 2003, Saudi
clerics were featured prominently on Hamas websites as providing the
religious justification for suicide bombings. Of 16 religious leaders
cited by Hamas, Saudis are the largest national group backing these
attacks.6 The formal Saudi position on suicide bombings, in fact, has
been mixed. To his credit, the current Saudi Grand Mufti, Sheikh
Abdul Aziz bin Abdullah Al al-Sheikh, has condemned these acts. Yet
at the same time, Saudi Arabia´s Minister for Islamic Affairs, Sheikh
Saleh Al al-Sheikh, has condoned them: "The suicide bombings are
permitted...the victims are considered to have died a martyr´s death."
The Hamas-Saudi connection should not come as a surprise. Hamas
emerged in 1987 from the Gaza branch of Muslim Brotherhood which, as
noted earlier, had become a key Saudi ally in previous decades. When
Hamas spiritual leader Sheikh Ahmed Yasin was let out of an Israeli
prison in 1998, he went to Saudi Arabia for medical treatment and
Crown Prince Abdullah made a high-profile visit to his hospital
bedside. As late as early 2002, Abdullah was hosting Sheikh Yusuf al-
Qaradhawi, the spiritual leader of the Muslim Brotherhood.7 Bin Laden
had made the fate of Sheikh Yasin an issue for his al-Qaeda followers
as well. In his 1996 "Declaration of War," he listed Sheikh Yasin´s
release from prison as one of his demands or grievances.
Saudi support for suicide bombings has wider repercussions. Other
militant Islamic movements cite Saudi Wahhabi clerics to justify
their activities - from the Chechen groups battling the Russians to
Iraqi mujahidin fighting the U.S. in western Iraq.8 Coincidentally,
the ubiquitous IIRO was lauded by the Saudi press for its support
activities in the Sunni districts of post-Saddam Iraq, as well.9 Its
presence was usually indicative in other regions of Saudi
identification with local militant causes. In order to evaluate the
significance of these religious rulings, it is necessary to focus on
the stature of these various Saudi clerical figures that jihadi
movements worldwide were citing.
For example, just after the September 11 attacks, it is true that
many Saudi government officials condemned them. But there were other
voices as well. Shortly thereafter a Saudi book appeared on the
Internet justifying the murder of thousands of Americans, entitled
The Foundations of the Legality of the Destruction That Befell
America. The Introduction to the book was written by a prominent
Saudi religious leader, Sheikh Hamud bin Uqla al-Shuaibi. He wrote on
November 16, 2001, that he hoped Allah would bring further
destruction upon the United States. Al-Shuaibi´s name appears in a
book entitled the Great Book of Fatwas, found in a Taliban office in
Kabul. Sheikh al-Shuaibi appears on the Hamas website, noted earlier,
as a religious source for suicide attacks. Attacks on U.S. soldiers
in western Iraq by a Wahhabi group called al-Jama´a al-Salafiya were
dedicated to his name and to the names of other Saudi clerics. Al-
Shuaibi´s ideas, in short, had global reach.
The question that must be asked is whether a religious leader of this
sort is a peripheral figure on the fringes of society or whether he
reflects more mainstream thinking. In fact, al-Shuaibi had very
strong credentials. Born in 1925 in the Wahhabi stronghold of
Buraida, he was a student of King Faisal´s Grand Mufti, Sheikh
Muhammad ibn Ibrahim Al al-Sheikh. Al-Shuaibi´s roster of students
read like a "Who´s Who" of Saudi Arabia, including the current Grand
Mufti and the former Minister of Islamic Affairs and Muslim World
League secretary-general, Abdullah al-Turki. When al-Shuaibi died in
2002, many central Saudi figures attended his funeral. In short, he
was mainstream. His militant ideas about justifying the September 11
attacks were echoed by Sheikh Abdullah bin Abdul Rahman Jibrin, who
actually was a member of the Directorate of Religious Research,
Islamic Legal Rulings, and Islamic Propagation and Guidance - an
official branch of the Saudi government.
In 2003, the religious opinions of Saudi militant clerics were
turning up in Hamas educational institutions in the West Bank and
Gaza Strip. For example, the Hamas-oriented "Koran and Sunna Society-
Palestine," that had been established in 1996 in Kalkilya, had
branches in Bethlehem, Salfit, Abu Dis, Jenin, and the Tulkarm
area.10 It distributed Saudi texts praising suicide attacks
against "the infidels" and condemning those who dodge their
obligations to join "the jihad." The pro-Hamas "Dar al-Arqam Model
School" in Gaza, that was established with Saudi aid, used texts that
cited Sheikh Sulaiman bin Nasser al-Ulwan, a pro-al-Qaeda Saudi
cleric, whose name is mentioned in a bin Laden video clip from
December 2001. Both the "Koran and Sunna Society-Palestine" and
the "Dar al-Arqam Model School" were supported by the Saudi-based
World Assembly of Muslim Youth (WAMY) (see below), and were part of
the "civilian" infrastructure of Hamas. Militant Saudi texts
extolling martyrdom were infiltrated into schools throughout the West
Bank and Gaza Strip, creating a whole generation of students that
absorbed their extremist messages. The export of this jihadi ideology
to the Palestinians was reminiscent of the Saudi support for
madrasses in western Pakistan during the 1980s, that gave birth to
the Taliban and other pro-bin Laden groups.
Financial Support for the New Global Terrorism
As already demonstrated, Saudi Arabia erected a number of large
global charities in the 1960s and 1970s whose original purpose may
have been to spread Wahhabi Islam, but which became penetrated by
prominent individuals from al-Qaeda´s global jihadi network. The
three most prominent of these charities were the International
Islamic Relief Organization (IIRO; an offshoot of the Muslim World
League), the World Assembly of Muslim Youth, and the Charitable
Foundations of al-Haramain. All three are suspected by various global
intelligence organizations of terrorist funding. From the CIA´s
interrogation of an al-Qaeda operative, it was learned that al-
Haramain, for example, was used as a conduit for funding al-Qaeda in
Southeast Asia. Furthermore, Russia´s Federal Security Service
charged that al-Haramain was wiring funds to Chechen militants in
1999.11
It would be incorrect to view these charities as purely non-
governmental organizations (NGOs) or private charities, as they are
mistakenly called. At the apex of each organization´s board is a top
Saudi official. The Saudi Grand Mufti, who is also a Saudi cabinet
member, chairs the Constituent Council of the Muslim World League.
The Saudi Minister of Islamic Affairs chairs the secretariat of WAMY
and the administrative council of al-Haramain. All three
organizations have received large charitable contributions from the
Saudi royal family that have been detailed in Saudi periodicals.
Indeed, according to legal documents submitted on behalf of the
Saudis by their legal team in the firm Baker Botts, in the 9/11
lawsuit, Prince Sultan provided $266,000 a year to the IIRO for
sixteen years.12 He also provided a much smaller sum to WAMY. In
short, these Saudi charities were full-fledged GOs - governmental
organizations.
The earliest documented links between one of these charities and
terrorists was found in Bosnia. It is a handwritten account on IIRO
stationery from the late 1980s of a meeting attended by the secretary-
general of the Muslim World League and bin Laden representatives,
indicating the IIRO´s readiness to have its offices used in support
of militant actions.13 As already noted, IIRO has been suspected of
terrorist funding in the Philippines, Russia, East Africa, Bosnia,
and India. Al-Qaeda operatives became accustomed to Saudi Arabia
being their source of support, in general. In an intercepted
telephone conversation, a senior al-Qaeda operative told a
subordinate: "Don´t ever worry about money, because Saudi Arabia´s
money is your money."14 As recently as mid-August 2003, U.S. Deputy
Secretary of State Richard Armitage admitted in Australia that "some
money from Saudi private charities had gone toward funding militants
in Iraq."15
But the strongest documented cases that demonstrate the ties between
Saudi Arabia´s global charities and international terrorism are
related to Hamas. These ties were allegedly already in place in the
mid-1990s when a Hamas funding group received instructions to write
letters of thanks to executives of IIRO and WAMY for funds it had
received. In 1994, President Clinton made a brief stop-over in Saudi
Arabia during which he complained about Saudi funding of Hamas. These
charges about Saudi Arabia bankrolling Hamas have become even more
vociferous in recent years.
The Saudis´ Denials Don´t Hold Water
The Saudis have been equally vociferous in their denials. Crown
Prince Abdullah´s foreign policy advisor, Adel al-Jubeir, asserted on
CNN´s "Crossfire" on August 16, 2002: "We do not allow funding to go
from Saudi Arabia to Hamas." More recently, Foreign Minister Prince
Saud al-Faisal told the Saudi daily Arab News on June 23, 2003, that
since the establishment of the PLO as the sole legitimate
representative of the Palestinian people, the Saudi Kingdom only
sends funding through the PLO. He denied that the Saudis finance
Hamas.
Yet during Israel´s Operation Defensive Shield last year, a whole
array of documents was uncovered which show these repeated Saudi
denials to be completely baseless. One of the strongest pieces of
evidence came from a handwritten letter written in Arabic by the
former Palestinian prime minister, Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen), on
December 30, 2000, to Prince Salman, governor of Riyadh and a full
brother of King Fahd. Abbas complained that Saudi donations in the
Gaza Strip are going to an organization called al-Jamiya al-Islamiya
(the Islamic Society) which, Abbas explained, "belongs to Hamas." He
wanted the funds for Fatah.
Al-Jamiya al-Islamiya was not just a Hamas front, supporting positive
social programs and secretly diverting funds to military activity.
Even its showcase "humanitarian" activities were reprehensible. For
example, at a kindergarten graduation involving some of its 1,600
Palestinian pre-schoolers, children wore uniforms and carried mock
rifles. Others re-enacted the lynching of Israelis or other terrorist
attacks. A five-year-old girl dipped her hands in what was supposed
to be Israeli blood and then lifted them for the cameras. Al-Jamiya
al-Islamiya posted the photographs on its website. Thus, the Saudis
were not only funding the current generation of terrorism but also
the next generation as well.
There were other documents linking Saudi institutions to terrorist
financing. An actual IIRO document was found that detailed how
$280,000 was to be allocated to 14 Hamas front groups. Former CIA
operative Robert Baer has contended that the very same Prince Salman,
who received Mahmoud Abbas´s letter of complaint, controlled IIRO
distributions "with an iron hand."16 There was further evidence tying
the Saudis to Hamas. Checks made out to well-known Hamas fronts from
the corporate account of al-Rajhi Banking and Investment at Chase
Manhattan Bank were also uncovered. Al-Rajhi Banking and Investment
was one of the largest Saudi banking networks which serviced the
Saudi charities. Its head, Sulaiman al-Rajhi, headed the family that
established the SAAR (the acronym for his name) foundation in
Herndon, Virginia, which was raided last year by U.S. federal agents
because of suspected terrorist links.
The Saudis were clearly uncomfortable with the Israeli discoveries.
Adel al-Jubeir tried to question the authenticity of the documents.
Alternatively, he attempted to misrepresent their content. Thus, on
the BBC interview program "Hardtalk" with Tim Sebastian on August 15,
2003, al-Jubeir argued that Mahmoud Abbas´s letter to Prince Salman,
noted above, contained no reference to Hamas, but only to undefined
Islamic groups.17 Yet, in fact, Abbas made explicit reference to
Hamas as a recipient of Saudi aid, in his own handwriting.
There were other conduits for terrorist funding that were disclosed.
Spreadsheets from the Saudi Committee for Aid to the al-Quds Intifada
were found that detailed the movement of moneys to the families of
suicide bombers. Saudi spokesmen tried to distance themselves from
this activity by arguing that they helped these families
through "international aid organizations." Yet it became clear from
the spreadsheets that these contributions were given through a
specifically Saudi organization, headed by the Saudi Minister of the
Interior, Prince Naif. Indeed, at the top right-hand corner of the
spreadsheets found in the West Bank, the name "Kingdom of Saudi
Arabia" stands out. In the words of Secretary of State Colin Powell,
this kind of support "incentivized" the suicide terrorist attacks.
The Hamas case demonstrated the mode of operation of Saudi charities
in support of terrorism. It was significant, as well, for those
investigating other cases of global terrorism, including al-Qaeda,
since very often these groups shared the same funding mechanisms.
IIRO and BMI, a New Jersey-based Islamic investment bank, were
involved in Hamas funding and are suspected to have financed the 1998
bombing of the U.S. embassies in East Africa.18 As a case-study,
Hamas´s funding is particularly useful to examine, since it is the
best-documented case of how the Saudis used their charities to back
militant activities.
Defying President Bush
Most of the documents discovered in the West Bank and Gaza Strip were
dated from the year 2000. Saudi diplomats argued that after September
11, 2001, they had turned over a new leaf. For example, in December
2002, the Royal Embassy of Saudi Arabia in Washington released a nine-
page report detailing the steps they had taken to keep better track
of what the charities were doing. The Saudi report stated that since
September 11, 2001, "charitable groups have been closely monitored
and additional audits have been performed to assure that there are no
links to suspected groups." Were this indeed the new Saudi policy, it
made sense, since President Bush had clearly stated that in the war
on terrorism, states were "either with us or with the terrorists."
Yet just weeks before the newest Saudi assurances were provided on
terrorist financing at a news conference in Washington, one of the
top leaders of Hamas, Khaled Mashal, had been invited to Riyadh for a
WAMY conference. So while in Washington the press corps was told that
there were no longer any ties between the Saudi charities
and "suspected groups," in Riyadh, one of the three main Saudi
charities was hosting the leader of one of the "suspected groups,"
Hamas, that had been labeled by the U.S. government as an
international terrorist organization. According to a captured Hamas
document that detailed Khaled Mashal´s visit to Saudi Arabia, he
actually had been invited by Crown Prince Abdullah himself. While
Hamas had refused at the time to stop its suicide attacks,
nonetheless, Saudi officials reassured Mashal of continuing support.
These discrepancies between Saudi declarations and realities on the
ground have been found elsewhere. In a June 12, 2003, news conference
in Washington, Adel al-Jubeir announced that al-Haramain "would be
shutting down all of its foreign offices."19 Yet on July 5, 2003,
Jane Perlez reported in the New York Times from Jakarta, Indonesia,
that al-Haramain put its large headquarters in a Jakarta suburb up
for rent and simply "moved to a smaller house down the block."20 In
another case, the al-Haramain office in Ashland, Oregon, was still up
and running in September 2003, though its lawyer argued it did not
receive funds from its main office in Riyadh.21
A new context for the issue of Saudi funding of terrorist groups was
created when President Bush issued the "Roadmap to a Permanent Two-
State Solution to the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict" on April 30,
2003. Besides requiring difficult measures by Israelis and
Palestinians alike, the first phase of the new Bush administration
plan specifically called on Arab states to "cut off public and
private funding and all other forms of support for groups supporting
and engaging in violence and terror." In short, Saudi Arabia had to
come under the roadmap, as well. Meeting the leaders of Saudi Arabia,
Jordan, Egypt, and Bahrain at Sharm el-Sheikh on June 3, 2003,
President Bush announced that they had committed themselves to use
all means to cut off assistance to any terror group.
It might have been expected that Saudi Arabia would adhere to this
firm U.S. policy and not defy President Bush. After all, Crown Prince
Abdullah had made a commitment to President Bush at Sharm el-Sheikh.
Moreover, on May 12, 2003, Saudi Arabia itself was struck by a triple
suicide bombing that led to 35 fatalities, including 9 Americans.
Having denied that there was an al-Qaeda presence in the Saudi
kingdom, the Saudi government began uncovering al-Qaeda cells and
munitions in Riyadh, Mecca, Medina, Jiddah, and in the northern al-
Jawf area. After providing the ideological and financial basis for
the growth of al-Qaeda and its sister organizations, including Hamas,
the Saudis found that the fire they had ignited was coming back to
burn them as well.
Unfortunately, while the Saudis appear to be taking their own
domestic threat seriously, there is no indication that they have
scaled back terrorism financing abroad. For example, on June 26,
2003, David Aufhauser, the General Counsel to the Treasury
Department, appeared before the Senate Judiciary Committee and still
described Saudi Arabia as "the epicenter" of terrorist financing.
That was more than a month after the Riyadh bombings. More than two
months after the bombing, on July 31, 2003, John Pistole, the Acting
FBI Director for Counterterrorism, was asked about Saudi efforts to
stop terrorist financing. Pistole, who praised the level of Saudi
cooperation with the FBI on investigating the Riyadh bombings
as "unprecedented," could only say with respect to Saudi moves
against terrorist financing, "the jury´s still out."
This has been borne out by the Israeli experience with Hamas. The
Israeli national assessment is that Saudi Arabia today funds more
than 50 percent of the needs of Hamas, and the Saudi percentage in
the total foreign aid to Hamas is actually growing. U.S. law
enforcement officials agree.22 Some Israeli estimates of the Saudi
portion of the Hamas budget have been put at 60-70 percent.23 Saudi
Arabia continues to aid the families of suicide bombers. It helps
dual-use charities and charities that funnel funds directly to
military activities against Israel. Indeed, in August 2003, the Hamas
spiritual leader, Sheikh Ahmed Yasin, thanked IIRO and WAMY for their
assistance during a public address in the Gaza Strip.
On June 29, 2003, Hamas agreed to a temporary truce with Israel
called a hudna, but at the same time vigorously sought to rebuild its
operational infrastructure, including an effort to increase the
quantity and quality of Qassam rockets launched against Israelis
towns. Muslim writers have argued in the past that a hudna is to be
maintained until the balance of power improves for the Muslim side.
Funding Hamas clearly jeopardized efforts to reach a full-scale cease-
fire between Israel and the Palestinians and increased the likelihood
that Hamas would escalate its militant actions. By August 28, 2003,
Hamas was able to launch one of its new extended-range Qassam
rockets, developed during the hudna, a distance of nearly six miles,
striking the outskirts of Ashkelon. The hudna had already collapsed.
There was one exception to these disturbing trends. On August 18,
2003, the Saudi government adopted its first money-laundering law,
which, in theory, could be used to block terrorist financing. The law
contained steep fines and long jail terms for violators. But it was
too early to determine whether the law would be enforced or would
just remain on the books. In the past, Saudi counter-terrorist
initiatives proved to be mostly empty rhetoric. U.S. Treasury
Secretary John W. Snow praise the Saudi decision to clamp down on
terrorist financing during a visit to Jiddah on September 17, 2003,
yet there was little evidence to indicate that this was any more than
an attempt to acknowledge Saudi intentions in the absence of any
tangible results.
Very simply, past Saudi commitments to take effective measures
against terrorist financing or incitement to violence have been half-
hearted, at best. At a June 12, 2003, news conference, Adel al-Jubeir
announced with great fanfare that Saudi Arabia had fired several
hundred clerics and suspended more than a thousand for preaching
intolerance.24 Yet within weeks, the Saudi deputy minister for
Islamic affairs flatly denied that the move against the clerics had
anything to do with curbing extremism. Whatever the reason why the
clerics were disciplined, the Saudi governmental message to the
mosques has not been sufficiently clear: U.S. Ambassador to Saudi
Arabia Robert Jordan noted: "We have noticed lately in influential
mosques the imam has condemned terrorism and preached in favor of
tolerance, then closed the sermon with ´O God, please destroy the
Jews, the infidels, and all who support them.´"25 In short, all
dimensions of the supposed Saudi war on terrorism look incomplete.
The Saudis have faced domestic terrorism before. It is instructive to
recall that in 1995, Saudi Arabia´s National Guard headquarters was
struck by pro-bin Laden forces. Yet, domestic threats in the mid-
1990s did not cause the Saudis to halt their assistance to jihadi
groups abroad, like Hamas or the Taliban. Riyadh appears able to draw
a distinction between acts of domestic subversion and international
terrorist activities, which are seen as part of the global jihad.
Saudi spokesmen frequently ask how they could support an organization
that intended to harm them. Yet that it is the essence of
the "Faustian bargain" (to borrow an expression from former CIA
director James Woolsey) that they apparently struck in the 1990s: al-
Qaeda could strike globally and the Saudis would pay them to leave
the royal family alone.
Need Zero Tolerance for Terrorist Funding
This analysis was intended to disclose the critical role of Saudi
Arabia in providing ideological and financial support for the new
terrorism. While most of the evidence presented here comes from the
specific case of Hamas, the modus operandi adopted in the Hamas case
is probably applicable to other parts of the global terrorist network
as well. This is especially true of the critical role of Saudi
Arabia´s global charities in sustaining many similar militant
organizations from Indonesia to central Russia. While Saudi spokesmen
have provided repeated assurances that they have cleaned up these
activities, their denials with respect to terrorist funding do not
stand up against the documented evidence that has accumulated in the
last two years.
The Saudi government faces hard dilemmas. It has recently taken
disciplinary action against some of its most extreme religious
leaders. But traditionally, the Saudis need the backing of their
clerics to legitimize their regime; that is the heart of the Saudi-
Wahhabi covenant that dates back to the eighteenth century. Yet the
Saudis also need the ultimate protective shield provided by the
United States. In order to sustain this, they have spent huge sums of
money for public relations firms and influence-brokers. But the time
has come to tell the Saudis that they have to make a choice. After
September 11, there has to be zero tolerance for terrorist funding
and other forms of terrorist support.
The stakes involved are not just a question of public relations or
Arab-Israel point-scoring in Washington. The West needs to come to an
understanding with the Islamic world based on mutual respect and
tolerance. The radicalization of the Middle East being promoted by
the Saudis undermines that goal and threatens to substitute instead a
vision of perpetual militancy and conflict. For that reason, what is
at stake is nothing less than the security of the United States and
its allies, as well as the question of whether the Middle East moves
in the direction of hope and peace or relapses into a state of
continuing strife.
U<>Saudi National Charities and the Financing of International
Terrorism
1. IIRO - International Islamic Relief Organization
Headed by Sheikh Abdul Aziz bin Abdullah Al al-Sheikh (Grand Mufti,
Saudi Cabinet Member)
Chairman of Constituent Council of World Muslim League
Receives Donations from Saudi Royal Family
GLOBAL LINKS TO TERRORISM
Documented link to Osama bin Laden in 1989, when al-Qaeda
founded, on IIRO stationery
Bin Laden´s brother-in-law, Muhammad Jamal Khalifa, runs
Philippines offices - conduit to Abu Sayyaf
Muhammad al-Zawahiri, brother of Ayman al-Zawahiri (#2 in al-
Qaeda), employed in Albanian office
Kenya blacklists IIRO
IIRO employee implicated in planned terrorist attack in India
IIRO in Pankisi Gorge (Georgia) conduit to al-Ansar in
Chechnya
Documented IIRO funding of Hamas, on IIRO stationery
2. WAMY -World Assembly of Muslim Youth
Headed by Sheikh Saleh bin Abdul Aziz Al al-Sheikh
(Minister of Islamic Affairs, Saudi Cabinet Member) Chairman of WAMY
Secretariat
Receives Donations from Saudi Royal Family
GLOBAL LINKS TO TERRORISM
U.S. WAMY office in Northern Virginia under investigation (past
director, Abdullah bin Laden)
WAMY-Hamas connection noted in 1996
WAMY funds I´tilaf al-Khir of Sheikh Qaradhawi which directs
money to Hamas
WAMY hosts Hamas, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, November 2002
3. Charitable Foundations of al-Haramain
Headed by Sheikh Saleh bin Abdul Aziz Al al-Sheikh (Minister of
Islamic Affairs, Saudi Cabinet Member)Chairman of al-Haramain
Administrative Council
Receives Donations from Saudi Royal Family
GLOBAL LINKS TO TERRORISM
Finances al-Qaeda operations in Southeast Asia
al-Haramain closed down by Bosnian government for "financing the
activities of terrorist organizations"
Azerbaijan closes down al-Haramain for Chechen terrorist
activities
al-Haramain employees arrested in Albania
al-Haramain closed down in Somalia
Notes
1. Middle East Media Research Institute, Special Dispatch Series -
No. 446 - Saudi Arabia, December 3, 2002.
2. Middle East Media Research Institute, Special Dispatch Series -
No. 526 - Saudi Arabia, June 20, 2003.
3. Robert Baer, Sleeping with the Devil: How Washington Sold Our Soul
for Saudi Crude (New York: Crown Books, 2003), p. 141.
4. Steven Emerson with Jonathan Levin, "Terrorism Financing:
Origination, Organization, and Prevention: Saudi Arabia, Terrorist
Financing and the War on Terror," testimony before the U.S. Senate
Committee on Governmental Affairs, July 31, 2003.
5. Baer, Sleeping with the Devil, p. 141.
6. http://www.palestine-info.info/arabic/fatawa/index.htm.
7. Ain al-Yaqeen, February 1, 2002.
8. Lt. Col. Jonathan D. Halevi, "Who is Taking Credit for Attacks on
the U.S. Army in Western Iraq? Al-Jama´a al-Salafiya al-Mujahida,"
Jerusalem Issue Brief 3-3, August 5, 2003;
http://www.jcpa.org/brief/brief3-3.htm.
9. Stephen Schwartz, "Saudi Mischief in Fallujah," Weekly Standard,
June 23, 2003.
10. http://www.intelligence.org.il/eng/var/h_sch/hs_fl.htm.
11. Sharon LaFraniere, "How Jihad Made Its Way to Chechnya,"
Washington Post, April 26, 2003.
12. Michael Isikoff and Mark Hosenball, "A Legal Counterattack,"
Newsweek, April 16, 2003; http://stacks.msnbc.com/news/901320.asp.
13. Glenn Simpson, "List of Early al-Qaeda Donors Points to Saudi
Elite," Wall Street Journal, March 18, 2003.
14. Sebastian Rotella, "A Road to Ansar Began in Italy," Los Angeles
Times, April 28, 2003, as cited by Matthew A. Levitt, testimony
before the Subcommittee on Terrorism, Senate Judiciary Committee,
September 10, 2003.
15. The Australian, August 14, 2003.
16. Baer, Sleeping with the Devil, p. 167.
17. "Have the Saudis Learned Their Lessons?" BBC News, August 15,
2003; http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/hardtalk/3153801.stm.
18. Matthew Epstein and Ben Schmidt, "Operation Support-System
Shutdown," National Review, September 4, 2003.
19. http://www.saudiembassy.net/press_release/statements/03-ST-Adel-
embassy-0612-transcript.htm. June 12, 2003.
20. Jane Perlez, "Saudis Quietly Promote Strict Islam in Indonesia,"
New York Times, July 5, 2003.
21. Steve Miller, "Oregon Group Thrives Despite al-Qaeda Tie,"
Washington Times, September 15, 2003.
22. Don Van Natta, Jr. with Timothy L. O´Brien, "Flow of Saudis´ Cash
to Hamas is Scrutinized," New York Times, September 17, 2003.
23. Arieh O´Sullivan, "Israeli Intelligence Officials Dismiss Abbas´s
Denial of Saudi Aid to Terrorists," Jerusalem Post, August 11,
2003.
A "senior security official" was reported to have stated
that the amount was 70 percent. Ha´aretz, July 29, 2003.
24. James Dao, "Saudis Fire Clerics Who Preached Intolerance," New
York Times, June 13, 2003.
25. Lisa Beyer, "Inside the Kingdom," Time, September 15, 2003.
Dore Gold is President of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs.
Previously, he served as Israel´s Ambassador to the United Nations
(1997-1999). He is the author of Hatred´s Kingdom: How Saudi Arabia
Supports the New Global Terrorism (Regnery, 2003). This Jerusalem
Viewpoints is an updated version of his testimony before the U.S.
Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs of July 31, 2003, and is
based on his presentation at the Institute for Contemporary Affairs
in Jerusalem on September 18, 2003.
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