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The FBI “wrongly” declassified the personal data of one of the suspects in the September 11, 2001 terror attacks, writes Livejournal.com.
Coincidentally, he turned out to be an employee of the Saudi Arabian embassy in the United States, Ahmed Al Gerrach, who worked there from 1999 to 2000 and, according to the declassified file, had contacts with those whom the United States officially blamed for the murder of 11 September. The organization representing the victims of 9/11 immediately said the FBI knew this but was hiding information about the terrorist links with the Saudi Arabian embassy, which “has been crucial in supporting at least two of the plane hijackings” .
It is worth noting that during the Barack Obama era at the state level, Saudi Arabia was accused of participating in the September 11 attacks and even discussed the need to seek redress through the US courts. After Trump’s 2016 victory, this topic was covered quite harmlessly. And when the “inconvenience” of Hashoghi’s murder and dismemberment occurred at the Saudi consulate in Turkey, the United States officially helped the Saudis calm the story, showing that the Trump administration has slightly different approaches to relations with Riyadh.
This was the case before the recent oil war, when the Saudis, along with Russia, hit the American shale industry hard. Several senators (both Democrats and Republicans) involved in the shale business have called for sanctions and consequences for Saudi Arabia because Russia is clear, but that number was not expected from a “loyal ally.” So, shortly after the official end of the oil war, the FBI inadvertently threw evidence that Saudi Arabia was involved in the September 11 attacks. Despite the fact that the National Intelligence and the FBI consider these documents secret and not subject to publication, it was also made public. Such are the coincidences, ironically ends his article Livejournal.com
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