U.S. Fears Disclosure of State Secrets, Intervenes in Saudi ‘Spymaster’ Case

0
646
secrets

Joe Biden and the Imperial Palace are so terrified that American state “secrets” could be revealed, that they took the “extremely rare” move “of intervening in a court case against a former top Saudi intelligence official.” The press likes to call him the “Spymaster.”

Spymaster’s Damaging Secrets

Even CNN is calling the latest move by the Palace Ministry of Justice “extremely rare.” Saad Aljabri is the former spymaster “targeted by Saudi Arabia’s powerful Crown Prince.” American spooks are nervous that their especially sneaky secrets could be revealed.

According to a motion filed by prosecutors, “If the court case is allowed to proceed, it could lead to the disclosure of information that could reasonably be expected to damage the national security of the United States.”

Aljabri used to be the top Saudi counterterrorism official. The CIA and all the other alphabet spy agencies loved him. As CNN describes, he is “widely respected by US intelligence and counterterrorism officials and credited by them with saving hundreds, maybe thousands, of American lives.” He also knows all their secrets.

In 2017, he fled to Canada and “became a nemesis of the Crown Prince, Mohammed bin Salman.” That’s what happens when there’s a power shift. For years, Aljabri was working closely with “the country’s head of counterterrorism, Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, who was a rival of Salman’s for the throne.”

As a pretext to drag Aljabri back to Saudi Arabia, a group of “Saudi companies owned by the Kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund, which the prince controls,” filed a few embezzlement cases against the spymaster. To cover their bases they filed some in Canada and some in the United States.

They’re hoping Uncle Sam will be intimidated enough to play along because of all our secrets locked in the spymaster’s head. Of course, Aljabri denies the accusations and accuses the prince of “sending an assassination squad to Canada to try to kill him and of holding two of his children hostage in Saudi Arabia.” He’s convinced it was the very same team they sent to kill “journalist Jamal Khashoggi just days earlier.”

Established for anti-terrorism

The big problem for America’s global spy industry is that the companies which filed the suits, the DOJ writes, were established “for the purpose of performing anti-terrorism activities.” The cases center around a holding company called Sakab, which “accuses Aljabri of defrauding them.”

To defend himself from the bogus charges, Aljabri intends to “describe and present evidence regarding alleged sensitive national security information.” American spies were so spooked they simply had to intervene. That’s highly unusual, experts say. So are the secrets in his head.

According to Marc Raimondi, who “recently left the Justice Department where he served as a spokesman for the National Security Division,” such a move is “definitely rare.”

They’re terrified “the classified information that could come to light includes serious secrets regarding intelligence relationships, operations, classified sources and methods. Another reason why they are hitting the panic button is because it’s the Barack Obama administration likely to get splattered when the fertilizer hits the fan.

As noted by sources inside the palace, “the revelations could also be embarrassing, particularly to Obama-era officials, given the often ‘unseemly’ nature of the intelligence world.” Aljabri is especially worried about his kidnapped kids.

“For four years now, Dr. Saad has upheld the oath he’s taken to protect state secrets despite the ruthless campaign against him, his children and family by MBS,” an advisor to Aljabri informs. “The US government becoming party to this case to protect its interests is a welcomed step but it’s high time for a facilitation of a full and amicable resolution that frees his children and protects him from further persecution.”

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here