.
2/6/15, "Scandal Rocks Fox News Over Saudi Terror Link," Counter Jihad Report, Cliff Kincaid
"Fox News Correspondent James Rosen reported
[video] on Wednesday night that a “major investor in the parent company” of Fox
News has been implicated in financing the terrorist group al-Qaeda.
Rosen made the embarrassing disclosure in a story on the channel’s
“Special Report” show hosted by Bret Baier.
The alleged al-Qaeda financier, Saudi billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin
Talal, is a very close friend of Rupert Murdoch and his family, who
control major media companies like News Corp and 21st Century Fox. The latter is now the parent company of the Fox News Channel.
The second largest shareholder in the Fox News parent company after
the Murdoch family, Alwaleed has been addressed as “Your Highness”
during his appearances on the network. His recent appearances have made
him sound moderate, while denouncing Islamic extremism and the ISIS
terrorist group.
Fox News is to be congratulated for reporting on a developing scandal
that puts its chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Rupert Murdoch, in a
very bad light.
A video
posted by Alwaleed’s company, Kingdom Holdings, shows Alwaleed and
Murdoch warmly embracing at one of several intimate meetings they have
held over the years. Alwaleed has also met regularly with Murdoch’s
liberal son, James Murdoch, the co-chief operating officer of 21st Century Fox.
Shortly after the September 11, 2001 terror attacks, Alwaleed offered
a $10 million contribution to a 9/11 fund for families and victims.
Then-New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani rejected the money because
Alwaleed had blamed the terror attacks on U.S. Middle East policy.
Rosen, a hard-charging investigative reporter, really had no
alternative but to cover the damaging disclosures. The allegations were
made by Zacarias Moussaoui, the so-called 20th hijacker of 9/11, and
provided in the form of a sworn statement to attorneys for families of
9/11 victims for their lawsuit against Saudi Arabia. He is serving a
life sentence at a supermax prison in Florence, Colorado.
Fifteen of the 19 terrorist hijackers involved in the 9/11 attacks
came from Saudi Arabia, and the role of the Saudi government and its top
officials and citizens in the massacre of nearly 3.000 Americans on
that day has been a matter of controversy ever since.
Rosen said Moussaoui’s sworn statement named Saudi Prince Alwaleed
bin Talal,“a leading Saudi businessman and major investor in the parent
company of this network,” as one of the financiers of al-Qaeda.
But Alwaleed is much more than just an investor in Murdoch’s
companies. He is also a personal friend of Murdoch’s who boasted in 2005
that a phone call to Murdoch resulted in the Fox News Channel altering
its coverage of Muslim riots in France, in order to eliminate references
to the religious affiliation of the Muslim extremists.
“I picked up the phone and called Murdoch and said that I was
speaking not as a shareholder, but as a viewer of Fox. I said that these
are not Muslim riots, they are riots,” Alwaleed reportedly said. “He
[Murdoch] investigated the matter and called Fox and within half an hour
it was changed from ‘Muslim riots’ to ‘civil riots.’”
I asked Murdoch about this at the 2006 annual meeting of News Corporation. He confirmed
that a call from Alwaleed had resulted in the change. Murdoch said the
change was made after it was determined that there was also a Catholic
role in the riots. I had never heard or seen it reported anywhere that
there was a Catholic role in the riots.
In 2002, it was revealed that Alwaleed had contributed $500,000 to
the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), a Muslim Brotherhood
front that has boasted of influence over Fox entertainment programs. The bio for Nihad Awad,
CAIR’s Executive Director and co-founder, describes how he “has
successfully led negotiations with Fortune 500 companies and Hollywood
film corporations on issues of concern to American Muslims. These issues
include religious discrimination in the workplace, racial and religious
profiling, negative stereotypes about Muslims in major Hollywood films,
and products that are offensive to Muslims.”
In recent years, however, Alwaleed has postured as an opponent of the
Muslim Brotherhood and terrorist groups. In 2013, for example, he
announced the sacking of Tarek Al-Suwaidan as director of one of his TV
channels because of his Muslim Brotherhood ties. Alwaleed said at the
time that he was opposed to “the Brotherhood terrorist movement.”
The channel is a part of Alwaleed’s Rotana Group, an Arab media
conglomerate based in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, that is partly owned by News
Corp.
On the October 26, 2014, “Sunday Morning Futures” Fox News Channel program hosted
by Maria Bartiromo, Alwaleed declared that Saudi Arabia was opposed to
the terrorist group ISIS, regarded by many experts as a spin-off from
al-Qaeda.
The following exchange took place:
Bartiromo: Prince Alwaleed, what do you say to those
out there who say that Saudi Arabia has had a history of supporting and
funding some extremists, particularly in Syria, for example? Do you
believe Saudi Arabia should take some responsibility for ISIS even being
formed?
Alwaleed: Well, the whole world has to take
responsibility, not only—I mean, there is no doubt there are some
Saudis, like there are some people in the United States, like in Europe,
in some other Arab countries, who really are (INAUDIBLE) and support
these terrorist groups.
Alwaleed didn’t explain who these Saudis or other people were. He
went on to tell “Maria” that she should “rest assured” because Saudi
Arabia “right now has enacted laws” against supporting terrorist groups.
During another appearance with Bartiromo, Alwaleed called ISIS a “disease” that has to be eradicated.
While Alwaleed is now putting the best face on what the Saudis and
other “moderate” Muslims are supposedly doing around the world to
counter terrorism, his behind-the-scenes influence on the Murdoch empire
continues to generate controversy. Speculation emerged recently that
Alwaleed’s influence was a factor in the Fox News Channel’s apology for
covering Muslim-dominated “no-go zones” in Europe where non-Muslims and
police fear to enter.
The unwarranted apology dismayed conservatives who were counting on
Fox News to cover the growing problem of the Islamization of Europe.
It is curious that as the Moussaoui allegations against Alwaleed and
other Saudi officials and citizens were making news, it was suddenly
disclosed that Alwaleed was reducing his stake in News Corp while maintaining his investment in 21st Century Fox.
Alwaleed’s organization, Kingdom Holding, discussed the change in stock ownership in an announcement
featuring a photo of Alwaleed and Murdoch walking through what appears
to be a newsroom. It said Alwaleed remains “fully supportive of Rupert
Murdoch and his family.”
The disclosures of a Saudi role in financing al-Qaeda is a subject
that deserves more follow-up from Fox News and other media
organizations.
To its credit, the Fox News website is now running a follow-up story
noting that the new charges are prompting calls for the
declassification and release of 28 classified pages of the full report
on 9/11. The role of Saudi Arabia in the attacks is said to be a major
topic covered in the 28 pages."
First image of Murdoch with Saudi Prince in 2010 from Counter Jihad Report
Second image 2/4/15, "Kingdom Holding Co. Decreases Stake in Newscorp, Maintains Investment in 21st Century Fox," kingdom.com
------------------------------------------
No mention of terror connection by Forbes:
2/4/15, "Why Is A Saudi Prince Selling Out Of News Corp?" Forbes, Chris Wright
"Few individual investors have quite as much capital to deploy as Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal of Saudi Arabia. Through his Kingdom Holding , he holds significant stakes in companies including Citigroup C +1.24%, Twitter TWTR +16.36% – and, until recently, News Corporation.
The Prince hasn’t sold out completely – he still owns about 1% of the
company, as well as a separate 6.6% shareholding in 21st Century Fox Inc which in itself is worth about $1.7 billion – but he previously also held 6.6% of News Corp NWSA +3.37%, or a total of 13.184 million class B shares. He’s shed all but two million of them.
The sale, which Kingdom Holding disclosed in a statement today,
actually took place during a portfolio review last year and was largely
completed in the first half of 2014, but has only just been made
public. The sale generated US$188 million which the Price and Kingdom
Holding will now deploy elsewhere.
In today’s statement, the Prince himself is directly quoted saying
positive things about News Corp’s management, led by CEO Robert Thomson,
saying Alwaleed is “fully supportive of Rupert Murdoch and his family.”
He also says he will continue to hold his investment in 21st Century
Fox. The prince (and his CFO, Mohammed Fahmy), present it as very much a
portfolio allocation decision. Kingdom also has a substantial
shareholding in Time Warner, among other things, so it remains
represented in media. But a portfolio allocation decision is still a
vote on where the money is best deployed, and clearly Prince Alwaleed
and his team of advisors no longer think News Corp is the best place for
it."...
.
Saturday, February 7, 2015
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment