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A file photo for a meeting between Prince Saud and Bush
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WASHINGTON,
July 29 (IslamOline.net & News Agencies) – Saudi Foreign
Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal will meet Tuesday, July 29, with U.S.
President George W. Bush over a congressional report allegedly linking
Saudi government agents and some of the 9/11 hijackers.
Prince
Saud will tackle with Bush the controversial classified 28 pages of
the 900-page report, which dealt with the allegations about Saudi
Arabia, reported the Washington Post.
Although
the declassified section of the report refers only to "foreign
support," U.S. administration officials said those two words
refer to Saudi Arabia, the daily said.
"Saudi
Arabia has nothing to hide. We can deal with questions in public, but
we cannot respond to blank pages," fired backed long-serving
Saudi Ambassador Prince Bandar bin Sultan, who will also take part in
the hastily scheduled White House visit.
Quoting
U.S. officials, the American daily said the pages have been classified
for several reasons, including "the sensitivity of the foreign
government, the likelihood of revealing sources and methods used to
gather the information and the fact that there may be ongoing criminal
investigations that would be compromised were they to be made
public."
Another
U.S. official further said the pages might be declassified upon a
Saudi request.
The
delayed report claimed
that "Omar al-Bayoumi, a key associate of two of the September 11
hijackers, may have been a Saudi-government agent."
Al-Bayoumi,
an employee of the Saudi civil aviation authority, reportedly held a
meeting at the Saudi Consulate in Los Angeles In January 2000 and then
went directly to a restaurant where he met future hijackers Khalid
Almihdhar and Nawaf Alhazmi, whom he took back with him to San Diego,
the report claimed.
Prince
Bandr averred "reports that Omar al-Bayumi is an agent of the
Saudi government are baseless and not true.
"It
is unfortunate that reports keep circulating in the media describing
him as an agent of the Saudi government with attribution only to
anonymous officials," he added.
Saudi
officials have vehemently denied any connection between the kingdom
and suspected September 11 hijackers, with Prince Saud hoping
that "accusations in the United States about the responsibility
of Saudi Arabia in the 9/11 tragedy will cease."
No
Extradition
Meanwhile,
Saudi Interior Minister Prince Nayef bin Abdul Aziz ruled out Tuesday
the possible extradition of al-Bayumi.
"We
have never handed over a Saudi to a state or foreign party and we will
never do it," Agence France-Presse (AFP) quoted Prince Nayef as
telling Al-Hayat newspaper.
"We
cooperate with all Arab and non-Arab states because terrorism has no
nationality and the fight against terrorism necessitates the
cooperation of everyone."
In
another interview with Asharq al-Awsat newspaper also Tuesday, Prince
Nayef said that most of the terror suspects had received their
military training in al-Qaeda camps in Afghanistan.
"We
will eliminate (militants) without mercy from our country to protect
our citizens and defend the kingdom and its higher interests,"
the BBC News Online quoted him as telling the Saudi-owned daily.
In
the latest of mounting Saudi crackdown on people allegedly linked to
Al-Qaeda in the kingdom, Saudi security forces killed six alleged
“militants” in a shootout Monday, July 28.
Relations
between Saudi Arabia and the U.S have strained, as Washington ordered
diplomats of all U.S. embassy and consulate personnel to leave the
kingdom after the devastating triple
bombings in Riyadh in May 2003 – in which eight Americans were
killed.
The
congressional 9-11 report further
blamed the U.S. intelligence services, saying the
attacks might have been prevented, had the U.S. security services
shared and acted upon information they had at the time.