American maneuver on Saudi role in 9/11; Washington’s possible motives.
Although there is ample evidence of Saudi Arabia’s role in 9/11, American maneuvering on the issue in the current context may have other motives.
Joe Biden’s government, under pressure from the families of 9/11 victims, recently promised to declassify some of the classified documents related to the Saudi government’s alleged role in the incidents.
The families of the victims warned Biden a few days ago that it would be better not to attend the memorial service if the secret reports on Saudi Arabia’s role in the attacks were not allowed.
What happened on September 11?
At 8:46 a.m. on September 11, 2001, the World Trade Center in the southern Manhattan area of New York City witnessed events that dramatically changed the equations of international relations. The crash of US Airways Flight 11 on the north side of the Twin Towers of World Trade was just one of four astonishing events that opened a new chapter in US military operations across its borders.
United Airlines Flight 175 crashed into the North Tower of the World Trade Center at 9:03 a.m., a flying object (which the US government said was a passenger plane) hit the Pentagon at 9:37 a.m., and Flight 93 crashed. At 10:03 a.m. in United Sonsville, Pennsylvania, there were other incidents that occurred after the first incident.
The US government announced shortly after that US planes had hijacked 19 al-Qaeda-linked aircraft. Fifteen of the hijackers were Saudi nationals, two UAE nationals, one Egyptian national and one Lebanese national.
Although there is ample evidence of Saudi Arabia’s role in 9/11, American maneuvering on the issue in the current context may have other motives.
Tasnim International Group – Joe Biden’s government, under pressure from the families of 9/11 victims, recently promised to declassify some of the classified documents related to the Saudi government’s alleged role in the incidents.
The families of the victims warned Biden a few days ago that it would be better not to attend the memorial service if the secret reports on Saudi Arabia’s role in the attacks were not allowed.
What happened on September 11?
At 8:46 a.m. on September 11, 2001, the World Trade Center in the southern Manhattan area of New York City witnessed events that dramatically changed the equations of international relations. The crash of US Airways Flight 11 on the north side of the Twin Towers of World Trade was just one of four astonishing events that opened a new chapter in US military operations across its borders.
United Airlines Flight 175 crashed into the North Tower of the World Trade Center at 9:03 a.m., a flying object (which the US government said was a passenger plane) hit the Pentagon at 9:37 a.m., and Flight 93 crashed. At 10:03 a.m. in United Sonsville, Pennsylvania, there were other incidents that occurred after the first incident.
The US government announced shortly after that US planes had hijacked 19 al-Qaeda-linked aircraft. Fifteen of the hijackers were Saudi nationals, two UAE nationals, one Egyptian national and one Lebanese national.

Alleged documents of the role of Saudi Arabia
Although many of the hijackers were Saudi nationals, the government was immune from prosecution in the United States for a long time for possible role in the attacks, until a judge in New York lifted the immunity in March 2018.
For years, the US government preferred not to comment on Saudi Arabia’s possible role in 9/11, but in 2016 the US Senate finally declassified a report known as the “28-Page Report.”
Although many parts of the report have been omitted, the report is currently the only document that claims to reveal some aspects of the Saudis’ possible role in the 9/11 attacks. However, this report does not go as far as directly accusing the Saudis of playing a role in this incident.
What the 28-page report makes clear is that some 9/11 hijackers received funding from individuals linked to the Saudi government. Sources in the AFBI believe that at least two of the hijackers’ supporters were Saudi security and foreign intelligence agents.
Some 9/11 plaintiffs have filed complaints alleging that in November 1999 an attempt by two Saudi-affiliated individuals, Mohammed al-Qazayin and Hamdan al-Shalwi, to enter the cockpit of a West Airlines plane was a “test.” And it was preparing for the 9/11 attacks two years later.
The AFBI had previously confirmed that the Saudi embassy in Washington had paid for tickets to Al-Qazayin and Al-Shalawi to board a Westline flight. A 28-page report quoted an AFBI agent as saying, “The AFBI now believes that both men were trying to test Westline Airlines’ security practices in preparation for the Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda operations.”
“Some 9/11 hijackers have been in contact with and possibly receiving support from or support for individuals who may have links to the Saudi government while in the United States,” the document said.
Another part of the document states that Saudi officials in the United States may have other links to al-Qaeda and other terrorist groups, but the commission that drafted the document acknowledged that much of the information was speculative and needed to be verified. have.
Portions of the 28-page document also address the Saudi government’s failure to cooperate in terrorism investigations before and after the 9/11 attacks. The report states that despite the fact that copies of the passports of several Saudi nationals were provided by an AFBI agent, the Saudi government refused to provide information about its nationals.
The report also had some contradictions, such as the 28-page report, which did not mention important issues such as the former Saudi ambassador’s relationship with a Saudi national named Osama Basnan, who lived in the United States during 9/11.
Besnan had previously been questioned by US security services and asked if he had assisted two 9/11 hijackers. Confidential documents show that Bandar bin Sultan and his wife sent unspecified amounts of money to Osama Basnan’s family.
Osama Besnan, a former Saudi staff member at Washington, D.C. He lived from the 9/11 hijackers, Khalid al-Muhadzar and Nawaf al-Hazmi.
Al-Muhazar and Al-Hazemi were two Saudi nationals who allegedly shot down an American Airlines Flight 77 to the Pentagon.