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9/11 See other 9/11 Articles Title: Trump: “Secret Papers” May Link 9/11 to Saudi Arabia February 19, 2016 editor28pages 28 pages, 9/11, Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton, Iraq, Jeb Bush, Jill Stein, Rand Paul, Saudi Arabia, secret papers 911 WTC aerial2Defending his attention-grabbing assertions that the U.S. invasion of Iraq was an enormous mistake facilitated by the George W. Bush administrations misleading of the American people, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump this week indirectly referred to 28 classified pages said to link the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to the 9/11 attacks. It wasnt the Iraqis that knocked down the World Trade Center. We went after Iraq, we decimated the country, Irans taking over
but it wasnt the Iraqis, you will find out who really knocked down the World Trade Center, because they have papers in there that are very secret, you may find its the Saudis, okay? But you will find out, Trump said at a Wednesday campaign event in Bluffton, South Carolina. Trumps implied promise to declassify the 28 pages sets him apart from the remaining Republican and Democratic presidential aspirants, filling a gap created when Rand Paul suspended his campaign. Last summer, Paul introduced Senate Bill 1471, which, if passed, would direct the president to release the 28 pages, and he pledged to release them himself if elected to the White House. Green Party candidate Jill Stein has also called for their release. (Then-Senator Hillary Clinton co-signed a 2003 letter to President Bush demanding the release of the 28 pages, but has been silent on the topic since.) Jeb on the 28 Pages: From Shrugs to Sarcasm When asked about the 28 pages last summer, Jeb Bush said hed never heard of them. This month, asked if he would like to see the 28 pages his brother classified, Bush sarcastically replied, Yeah, Id like to see em. You got em? Among the many who would like to see em: 9/11 family members and survivors whose lawsuit against the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has been imperiled by what former Senator Bob Graham calls a pervasive pattern of covering up the role of Saudi Arabia in 9/11, by all of the agencies of the federal government, which have access to information that might illuminate Saudi Arabias role in 9/11. Vague Reference Dampens Impact Trumps comments brought renewed attention to the classified, 28-page chapter in the 2002 report of a joint congressional intelligence inquiry into 9/11. However, the impact would have certainly been greater had he specifically referred to 28 pages rather than cryptically referencing secret paperswhich he did time and again on the campaign trail, in an interview with Fox News and during CNNs Thursday night town hall. Given the dearth of mainstream media coverage of Trumps Saudi Arabia reference, its clear his vague allusion to secret papers left journalists baffled. For example, though Mediaites Tommy Christopher was among the first to report it, his brief piece struck a snarky tone, made no reference to the 28 pages, and concluded with a dismissive statement that no evidence has ever been presented that the government of Saudi Arabia was behind the attacks of 9/11. Following his lead, most of those sharing the Mediaite story on social media ridiculed the notion that there are secret papers implicating the Saudis. However, former Senator Graham, who co-chaired the intelligence inquiry that produced the 28 pages, said they point a very strong finger at Saudi Arabia as being the principal financier of 9/11. Two of the 9/11 hijackers received financial, lodging and other assistance from a Saudi citizen who lived in San Diego and who is widely thought to have been an operative for the kingdom. There are also serious questionsand a FOIA lawsuitswirling around a wealthy Saudi family that had ties to Mohammed Atta and which fled Sarasota two weeks before 9/11. REDACTED w911Ask your representative to cosponsor House Resolution 14 Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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