lunes, 24 de octubre de 2016

Enthüllung der 9/11-Verschwörung - Interview mit US-Senator Bob Graham - TEIL 2

Enthüllung der 9/11-Verschwörung - Interview mit US-Senator Bob Graham - TEIL 2

 

Revealing the 9/11 Conspiracy with former US Senator Bob Graham – PART 2

 

Rewind: Former US-Senator Bob Graham on The Real News Network


"This culture of protection of the Saudis ran up and down the ranks of
the federal government. A very significant event occurred at the Orlando
airport in 2001, early in the year, when a man arrived from Saudi
Arabia and was seen by one of the agents at the airport, one of the
customs agents, as being suspicious. And so they interviewed him to find
out why would a person have flown all the way from Saudi Arabia to
Orlando for what appeared to be just a few days, maybe even hours,
before he turned around and flew back. There had been some instances in
which professional hitmen were brought into the United States to carry
out a murder and then quickly leave, and the customs agent was
suspicious that that might be such a person. So he refused the man the
right to enter the United States.He was severely chastised by other
customs agents, who said, your career is now over, because don’t you
remember we were told that we’re supposed to treat Saudis differently
than we treat other people. But he persisted. And, in fact, the man was
returned without ever gaining legal access to the United States. That
may have been–probably was the 20th hijacker who would have filled out
the ranks of the five people on each of the four planes.But even at the
level of a customs agent at an airport in the United States, the idea
that Saudis were going to be treated with greater deference was an
accepted part of the operation. You can imagine what it was like as you
moved up into the higher ranks of the federal government."

Bob Graham about the prior knowledge of terrorists and the reaction of the US government after the attacks:


" Well, they quickly found out who the people were because they had
their names on the manifest of the four airplanes which they had
entered. And some of these people, once their names popped up, were well
known to the intelligence agencies. Two of them had participated in
what was referred to as “the summit of terrorists” that took place in
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, in January 2000. Others were not as well known.
But it didn’t take long to determine something as basic as what were the
nationalities of these 19 people. So that doesn’t surprise me.What does
surprise me is the reaction of the United States (and I think this was
at the highest level–the president of the United States), how they
reacted to this request. Here you have a mass murder, mainly U.S.
citizens killed. Here you’ve got people who might have information about
this mass murder that law enforcement would like to fully interrogate
before they were out of our jurisdiction. And yet the president of the
United States agreed, at the request of the Saudi ambassador, to allow a
chartered plane to fly from Lexington, Kentucky, back to the Middle
East with 144 persons who had not been prescreened, interviewed, or in
any meaningful manner debriefed in terms of what they knew about this
situation. After the flight, the FBI said, had we known who these people
were, we would in fact have interviewed a number of them. They were
people of interest."

 Bob Graham 

Revealing the 9/11 Conspiracy Would Undo the Entire US-Saudi Alliance