- 1
- 2
Gag Order
As a sign of how the Saudis frequently forge alliances with Western leaders who help them, Ahmed pointed out that just two weeks ago Blair was among the most prominent guests to show up at a worldwide conference of religions hosted by Saudi King Abdullah in Madrid. At the conference, Blair—who recently set up his own private foundation—lavished praise upon Abdullah. "The king has made a lot of reforms," said Blair. NEWSWEEK was unable to obtain comment from the Saudi Embassy on the new ruling.
The British investigation into the BAE payments to Bandar was triggered in part by "suspicious activity reports" filed with the U.S. government by the now-defunct Riggs Bank. The reports, first reported by NEWSWEEK, showed that a Saudi Embassy account in D.C. had received $17.4 million in unexplained payments during a four-month period in late 2003 from an overseas source. When Riggs officials inquired about the payments, they were told they were being used to coordinate "home improvement/construction projects for Prince Bandar in Saudi Arabia." The British media later reported that the payments had come from BAE as part of a secret agreement connected to an $80 billion military aircraft deal between London and Riyadh.
Lawyers for the Saudis and spokesmen on their behalf have repeatedly argued that the payments were entirely legitimate and were made to a Saudi Defense Ministry account over which Bandar, whose father is the Saudi defense minister, had control. But evidence of the payments prompted Britain's Serious Fraud Office to launch an inquiry into whether BAE had violated British laws in paying bribes to Saudi officials. In 2006, Saudi officials—and reportedly Bandar himself—stepped up the pressure on Blair's government to close the investigation, suggesting that pursuit of the probe could lead them to cut off cooperation with the British on counterterrorism matters.
The court ruling today, written by Lord Thomas Bingham, described how Blair himself and Sir Sherard Cowper-Coles, Britain's ambassador to Saudi Arabia, used Saudi threats of new terror attacks in Britain to get the SFO to shut down the bribes investigation. According to the ruling, Blair personally sent a "personal minute" about the matter to the U.K. Attorney General, who oversees SFO operations. Blair warned of "a real and immediate risk of a collapse in UK/Saudi security, intelligence and diplomatic cooperation," and included attachments based on information from Britain's secret intelligence agencies, M.I.5 and M.I.6.
In three meetings with the head of the Serious Fraud Office, Ambassador Cowper-Coles conveyed increasingly dire warnings about possible new terror attacks on British soil, the ruling states. "At the first meeting the ambassador had described the threats to national and international security as very grave indeed and had said that British lives on British streets would be at risk," according to Lord Bingham's ruling, summarizing the evidence presented to the court. "At the second meeting, he had again said that lives would be at risk. At the third he had spoken of a real threat to British lives."
One assistant SFO director concluded following these warnings that if the Saudis carried out their threats to withdraw counterterrorism cooperation, it could lead to "another 7/7."
Though the U.K. government declined to explicitly confirm the incident to the courts, last year London's Sunday Times reported that in a meeting with one of Blair's top advisers, Bandar personally threatened that the Saudis' "intelligence and diplomatic relations" with Britain would be curtailed unless the SFO's investigations related to Bandar were shut down.
In the judgment of the House of Lords, all this made the final decision by the Serious Fraud Office to shut down the bribery investigation into BAE entirely justified. Wrote Lord Bingham: "What determined the decision [to shut down the investigation] was the [SFO] Director's judgment that the public interest in saving British lives outweighed the public interest in pursuing BAE to conviction."
© 2008
- 1
- 2


Loading Menu
Member Comments
Posted By: Outsidebox @ 09/06/2008 8:34:37 AM
Comment: By all means, we need to become energy independent as soon as possible. Idealy, we should this tomorrow. Unfortunately, to change our hydrocarbon economy to a alternative energy economy will take time. Mr. Pickens has a good idea to use natural gas as bridge for the conversion. We must also realize that our economy will always need some oil. That said there is no excuse not to become energy independent as soon as that goal can be accomplished. We need to build Nuclear power plants to generate our electricity, this would keep us from freezing to death in the dark. We need to drill every where we can to produce our own sources of oil, I would like to point out that ethanol is not a viable alternative to hydrocarbons, because as we have see, when you divert grain that we eat and feed our livestock, to ethanol to burn in our cars, food prices go up, this is stupid. We need to develop solar, wind, geothermal and whatever other technology we can come up with to make us energy independent, urgent, like yesterday. It is also stupid for our Congressional leadership to put Caribu breeding grounds as a priority over our energy security. We need that oil as soon as we can get it.
Posted By: revolutionary @ 09/03/2008 8:54:33 PM
Comment: This is part of the attempted rehabilitation of Blair the proven liar and war criminal.
Posted By: revolutionary @ 09/03/2008 8:53:13 PM
Comment: This is part of the attemted rehabilitation of Blair the proven liar and war criminal.