Fresh information allegedly connecting the government of Saudi Arabia and the 9/11 terror attacks has been released. Officials
have revealed that the flight certificate of Al-Qaeda bomb maker
Ghassan Al-Sharbi was discovered hidden in an envelope from the Saudi
embassy in Washington when they arrested him in 2002.
Al-Sharbi
is believed to have learned how to fly with the hijackers but did not
take part in the attacks. Shortly before his arrest, he buried a bundle
of documents, which is believed to have included the certificate.
The
cache was discovered by US authorities and details, written in a memo
known as Document 17 in 2003, were released without fanfare by
investigators last year. They were only brought to the public's
attention when an activist
discovered them and wrote about them on his
website earlier this week.
The
release has fuelled concerns the Saudi government may have been linked
to the coordinated attacks, which killed nearly 3,000 people.
Activist
Brian McGlinchey claimed the details would lead to people questioning
the extent government individuals were involved, according to The Times.
He
said: 'The envelope points to the fundamental question hanging over us
today: to what extent was the 9/11 plot facilitated by individuals at
the highest levels of the Saudi government?'
Mailonline
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