.jpeg%3Ftrim%3D0%2C0%2C0%2C0%26width%3D1200%26height%3D800%26crop%3D1200%3A800&w=3840&q=100)
‘What ever happened to Never Forget?': 9/11 families blast Trump for warm embrace of Saudi officials
Fifteen of the 19 Al Qaeda operatives who carried out the attacks were Saudis, and although the Saudi Arabian government has long denied any direct role in 9/11, some evidence suggests that Saudi Arabia was not only the primary source of funding for the attackers, but that the Saudi regime knew about the plot that killed more than 3,000 people and did nothing to stop it.
After Biden arrived, he greeted Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud – or, 'MBS,' for short – who is said to have approved Khashoggi's execution, with a friendly smile and a fist bump, drawing outrage. When Donald Trump, the current occupant of the Oval Office, jetted off to Saudi Arabia earlier this week, he went far beyond Biden's comparatively muted pleasantries. If MBS still craves validation, the 47th president delivered – despite once having blamed the kingdom entirely for 9/11.
'What a great place, but more importantly, what great people,' Trump marveled in Riyadh. 'I want to thank his royal highness, the crown prince, for that incredible introduction. He's an incredible man. I've known him a long time now. There's nobody like him.'
The compliments and extravagant amiability didn't sit well with some. One 9/11 widow told The Independent that it was painful to watch Trump's glad-handing with the leader of the nation she blames for her husband's death, asking, 'Haven't we been through enough?'
Or, as a retired firefighter who was at the World Trade Center on September 11 said, 'What ever happened to 'Never Forget?''
The apparently awed president was treated to an over-the-top reception during his Middle East visit featuring, among other things, a squadron of jet fighters that escorted Air Force One in for a landing, an honor guard brandishing golden sword and a coterie of Arabian horses to accompany his motorcade.
'He's your greatest representative, greatest representative,' Trump said of MBS. 'And if I didn't like him, I'd get out of here so fast. You know that, don't you? He knows me well. I do – I like him a lot. I like him too much. That's why we give so much, you know? Too much. I like you too much.'
Trump, who announced a $600 billion investment package with the kingdom, continued to lavish praise onto his young host, spotlighting MBS's economic record while addressing him like a lifelong pal: 'Mohammed… [c]ritics doubted that it was possible, what you've done, but over the past eight years, Saudi Arabia has proved the critics totally wrong.'
Unlike Trump, many family members of those who died on 9/11, along with first-responders who tried to save them, are less enamored of MBS.
Terry Strada, whose husband Tom was on the 104th floor of the WTC's North Tower when the first plane hit, is the national chair of 9/11 Families United. Among other things, she continues to slam Trump for taking 'blood money' from LIV Golf, a professional league backed by the Saudi government's sovereign wealth fund, by hosting tournaments at his Bedminster, New Jersey country club.
On Wednesday, Strada described Trump's behavior in Riyadh as 'appalling.'
'I've heard from a lot of [9/11] family members, and it really saddens me to hear how painful it was to watch all of this,' Strada told The Independent. '... We cannot overlook [everything] just because we're going to begin a new chapter of commerce. The truth needs to still be told.'
Strada worries that Trump will now abandon his past promises to declassify the remaining intelligence materials that she and others see as the key to proving, once and for all, Saudi complicity in 9/11.
'It is a national security risk to bury the truth,' she said. 'He's hurting a whole population of people who have been through hell. Haven't we been through enough?'
The White House did not provide a comment about the families concerns in time for this report.
New York City firefighter Adam Lake was at Ground Zero on September 11, searching for survivors, then searching 'The Pile' for bodies. He was later forced to retire after being diagnosed with a 9/11-related cancer that he continues to battle.
Lake, whose SoHo firehouse lost 11 men in the World Trade Center attack, told The Independent, 'Really, this guy's not for anybody but himself… What ever happened to 'Never Forget?' F*** you, you know?'
Saudi Arabia 'masterminded and funded the worst attack on American soil, ever,' Lake emphasized, saying, 'If you worked that day, you remember what you went through… well, [how do you feel] when the president is in bed with the people that attacked us?'
There are multiple Trump supporters among Lake's ex-colleagues, and Lake wonders how they will reconcile the president's stance.
'I'm just a guy who lost a ton of people [on 9/11] and was [medically] retired from a job I wanted to keep doing,' he said.
As Robert Kobus talked about his 36 year-old sister Deborah, who on 9/11 died on 'the impact floor' of Two World Trade Center, his voice caught frequently and he paused several times to compose himself.
'It was just terrible, that day,' Kobus told The Independent.
However, Kobus, a former FBI civilian employee who was forced out of the bureau after 35 years for blowing the whistle on alleged time-card fraud, said his anger at Saudi officialdom of a quarter-century ago outweighs whatever he may feel about Trump or the prince.
'At that time, there were some very bad people in the Saudi government,' Kobus said. 'Should we despise the current leaders of Saudi Arabia for what happened 20-something years ago? No. If they made business deals, whatever. I'm not going to disparage the president, I'm going to talk about Saudi Arabia and their complicity 25 years ago.'
To that end, Kobus thinks the U.S. government's still-secret evidence will reveal Saudi responsibility.
'You can't hide the truth,' he asserted. 'The truth will never be hidden, no matter how much they try.'
Kristen Breitweiser is a World Trade Center widow-turned-activist who successfully pushed for the formation of the 9/11 Commission but later found its final report to be 'utterly hollow.' She said she considers herself 'pragmatic' about resolving the issue once and for all, and distanced herself from Strada's organization.
Breitweiser's focus at this stage is fixed on the alleged shortcomings of the U.S. intelligence community vis-a-vis 9/11, as opposed to Saudi Arabian culpability. She said that 9/11 widows and children have not received appropriate compensation from the government, nor have they 'been provided any modicum of justice.'
'I don't think President Trump is inclined to hold the kingdom accountable, I don't know if we have the evidence to hold the kingdom accountable, I don't know if we have the will as a country to hold the kingdom accountable,' Breitweiser told The Independent.
Breitweiser said she 'did not look to the kingdom to protect my husband that day,' but rather, to the FBI, CIA and other domestic agencies charged with protecting the nation. She would like to know 'why this country is not demanding accountability and justice from our own government before we start looking overseas.'
'We have more evidence to support holding the U.S. intelligence apparatus accountable than we do the kingdom,' Breitweiser asserted. 'I'm not saying the kingdom didn't have anything to do with 9/11, but our intelligence community does not have clean hands with regard to their failure to prevent the attacks.'
The U.S. government has an obligation to compensate those who lost loved ones on 9/11 with payments 'in alignment with what other victims have received in the past,' according to Breitweiser. 'Let's start the accountability there.'
'I recognize that what I'm saying is the proverbial 3rd rail,' Breitweiser concluded. 'But I don't care. I just want justice for my murdered husband.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
10 minutes ago
- Reuters
Outline emerges of Putin's offer to end his war in Ukraine
LONDON, Aug 16 (Reuters) - Russia would relinquish tiny pockets of occupied Ukraine and Kyiv would cede swathes of its eastern land which Moscow has been unable to capture, under peace proposals discussed by Russia's Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump at their Alaska summit, sources briefed on Moscow's thinking said. The account emerged the day after Trump and Putin met at an airforce base in Alaska, the first encounter between a U.S. president and the Kremlin chief since before the start of the Ukraine conflict. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy is due to travel to Washington on Monday to discuss with Trump a possible settlement of the full-scale war, which Putin launched in February 2022. Although the summit failed to secure the ceasefire he said he had wanted, Trump said in an interview with Fox News' Sean Hannity that he and Putin had discussed land transfers and security guarantees for Ukraine, and had "largely agreed". "I think we're pretty close to a deal," he said, adding: "Ukraine has to agree to it. Maybe they'll say 'no'." The two sources, who requested anonymity to discuss sensitive matters, said their knowledge of Putin's proposals was mostly based on discussions between leaders in Europe, the U.S. and Ukraine, and noted it was not complete. Trump briefed Zelenskiy and European leaders on his summit discussions early on Saturday. It was not immediately clear if the proposals by Putin were an opening gambit to serve as a starting point for negotiations or more like a final offer that was not subject to discussion. At face value, at least some of the demands would present huge challenges for Ukraine's leadership to accept. Putin's offer ruled out a ceasefire until a comprehensive deal is reached, blocking a key demand of Zelenskiy, whose country is hit daily by Russian drones and ballistic missiles. Under the proposed Russian deal, Kyiv would fully withdraw from the eastern Donetsk and Luhansk regions in return for a Russian pledge to freeze the front lines in the southern regions of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia, the sources said. Ukraine has already rejected any retreat from Ukrainian land such as the Donetsk region, where its troops are dug in and which Kyiv says serves as a crucial defensive structure to prevent Russian attacks deeper into its territory. Russia would be prepared to return comparatively small tracts of Ukrainian land it has occupied in the northern Sumy and northeastern Kharkiv regions, the sources said. Russia holds pockets of the Sumy and Kharkiv regions that total around 440 square km, according to Ukraine's Deep State battlefield mapping project. Ukraine controls around 6,600 square km of Donbas, which comprises the Donetsk and Luhansk regions and is claimed by Russia. Although the Americans have not spelled this out, the sources said they knew Russia's leader was also seeking - at the very least - formal recognition of Russian sovereignty over Crimea, which Moscow seized from Ukraine in 2014. It was not clear if that meant recognition by the U.S. government or, for instance, all Western powers and Ukraine. Kyiv and its European allies reject formal recognition of Moscow's rule in the peninsula. They said Putin would also expect the lifting of at least some of the array of sanctions on Russia. However, they could not say if this applied to U.S. as well as European sanctions. Trump said on Friday he did not immediately need to consider retaliatory tariffs on countries such as China for buying Russian oil - which is subject to a range of Western sanctions - but might have to "in two or three weeks." Ukraine would also be barred from joining the NATO military alliance, though Putin seemed to be open to Ukraine receiving some kind of security guarantees, the sources said. However, they added that it was unclear what this meant in practice. European leaders said Trump had discussed security guarantees for Ukraine during their conversation on Saturday and also broached an idea for an "Article 5"-style guarantee outside the NATO military alliance. NATO regards any attack launched on one of its 32 members as an attack on all under its Article 5 clause. Joining the Atlantic alliance is a strategic objective for Kyiv that is enshrined in the country's constitution. Russia would also demand official status for the Russian language inside parts of, or across, Ukraine, as well as the right of the Russian Orthodox Church to operate freely, the sources said. Ukraine's security agency accuses the Moscow-linked church of abetting Russia's war on Ukraine by spreading pro-Russian propaganda and housing spies, something denied by the church which says it has cut canonical ties with Moscow. Ukraine has passed a law banning Russia-linked religious organisations, of which it considers the church to be one. However, it has not yet started enforcing the ban.


Telegraph
10 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Once again Vladimir Putin has left Donald Trump looking weak
SIR – The sight of Donald Trump applauding Vladimir Putin, the butcher of Ukraine, when the two met in Alaska was the most powerful symbol yet of Mr Trump's weakness ('Putin got exactly what he wanted from Trump', Analysis, August 16). He even purred at Putin's words: 'Next time in Moscow.' No deal, no ceasefire and no mention of sanctions: the Kremlin achieved a rout. Europe must now redouble its support for Volodymyr Zelensky. Adrian Charles Enfield, Middlesex SIR – For all Mr Trump's boasts, his summit with Putin produced no deal and no movement from a war-mongering Moscow. Russia left with a clear diplomatic win, embarrassing America. Mr Trump's idea of '10/10', as he described the meeting, is a curious one. Sebastian Monblat London SE14 SIR – No one can blame Donald Trump for trying, but he needs to face reality. Vladimir Putin is not interested in finishing a war he thinks he is winning. He regards Volodymyr Zelensky as the illegitimate leader of a country he doesn't recognise. He will only accept peace if it involves the capitulation of Ukraine as an independent country. David Kenny Tredunnock, Monmouthshire SIR – I am appalled that on VJ Day, while we honoured those who both died and survived, Mr Trump was insensitive enough to meet the aggressor Putin in his pursuit of a Nobel Peace Prize. Nick Kester Wattisfield, Suffolk SIR – If Nato had deployed into Ukraine before Vladimir Putin's invasion, it would not be in the position it finds itself in now. The alliance has been shown up as weak, and seems to have forgotten that deterrence is a proven way to contain military aggression. Lt Col Jeremy Prescott (retd) Southsea, Hampshire


Telegraph
40 minutes ago
- Telegraph
US halts visas for Gazans after Loomer highlights their arrival at airports
The US has halted all visitor visas for people from Gaza after Laura Loomer, the far-Right activist, shared videos allegedly showing evacuees from the wartorn enclave arriving at US airports. 'All visitor visas for individuals from Gaza are being stopped while we conduct a full and thorough review of the process and procedures used to issue a small number of temporary medical-humanitarian visas in recent days,' the US state department wrote in a statement posted on X. On Friday, Ms Loomer, a Maga loyalist, posted several times about Heal Palestine, a humanitarian aid group, allegedly facilitating the evacuation of Gazans injured by Israeli forces to the US for medical treatment. According to its website, the NGO has helped evacuate 148 people from Gaza, including 63 injured children. It claims to have carried out the largest single medical evacuation of injured children from Gaza to the US in July. This included 11 critically injured children, with their caregivers and siblings. Among those evacuated were Seba, 12, who lost both legs in a school bombing and Anas, eight, who is the sole survivor of a bombing that killed his entire family. Ms Loomer took credit for the state department's halt on medical humanitarian visas for Gazans on Saturday, saying it had been in response to the 'release of my reports yesterday exposing flights of Gazans arriving at airports all across the US'. Writing on X, Ms Loomer said: 'The Trump administration needs to shut this abomination down ASAP before a family member of one of these Gazans goes rogue and kills Americans for Hamas.' She also called for those responsible for approving humanitarian visas to the children and their families to be fired. Her posts were picked up by some pro-Israel Republicans. 'Deeply concerned about the incoming flights – including to Texas – allegedly filled with folks from Gaza as reported by @LauraLoomer. Inquiring,' Congressman Chip Roy wrote on Friday. Florida Republican Randy Fine said: 'Massive credit needs to be given to @LauraLoomer for uncovering this and making me and other officials aware.' The US government halting visas for children injured in Gaza comes amid continued outrage over the conditions faced by those in Gaza. A baby girl and her parents were reportedly killed by an Israeli airstrike on Saturday, according to Nasser hospital officials and witnesses. Motasem al-Batta, his wife and the girl were killed in their tent in the crowded Muwasi area. Israel's military says it is dismantling Hamas' military capabilities and takes precautions not to harm civilians. Muwasi is one of the heavily populated areas in Gaza where Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, said his forces plan to widen the coming military offensive. The mobilisation of forces is expected to take weeks, and Israel may be using the threat to pressure Hamas into releasing more hostages. It comes as the United Nations was warned that levels of starvation and malnutrition in Gaza were at their highest since the war began. Palestinians are reportedly drinking contaminated water as diseases spread, while some Israeli leaders continue to talk openly about the mass relocation of people from Gaza. Another 11 malnutrition-related deaths occurred in Gaza over the past 24 hours, the territory's Hamas-run health ministry said on Saturday, bringing the malnutrition-related deaths during the war to 251. The UN and partners say getting aid into the territory of more than two million people, and then on to distribution points, remains highly challenging with Israeli restrictions and pressure from crowds of hungry Palestinians. The UN human rights office claims at least 1,760 people were killed while seeking aid between May 27 and last Wednesday.