That reminded me: Congress spent more time "investigating" Clinton's Christmas card list than it did the incidents at Abu Ghraib.
just like Clinton spent more time and money prosecuting Bill Gates than he did trying to get bin Laden.
Ya think?
WTC attack, 1993
Four followers of the Egyptian cleric Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman were captured, convicted of the World Trade Center bombing in March 1994, and sentenced to 240 years in prison each. The purported mastermind of the plot, Ramzi Ahmed Yousef, was captured in 1995, convicted of the bombing in November 1997, and also sentenced to 240 years in prison. One additional suspect fled the U.S. and is believed to be living in Tehran.*
Riyadh, 1995, Khobar Towers, 1997
On 13 November 1995, a bomb was set off in a van parked in front of an American-run military training center in the Saudi Arabian capital of Riyadh, killing five Americans and two Indians. Saudi Arabian authorities arrested four Saudi nationals whom they claim confessed to the bombings, but U.S. officials were denied permission to see or question the suspects before they were convicted and beheaded in May 1996.
On 25 June 1996, a booby-trapped truck loaded with 5,000 pounds of explosives was exploded outside the Khobar Towers apartment complex which housed United States military personnel in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, killing nineteen Americans and wounding about three hundred others. Once again, the U.S. investigation was hampered by the refusal of Saudi officials to allow the FBI to question suspects. On 21 June 2001, just before the American statute of limitations would have expired, a federal grand jury in Alexandria, Virginia, indicted thirteen Saudis and an unidentified Lebanese chemist for the Khobar Towers bombing. The suspects remain in Saudi custody, beyond the reach of the American justice system. (Saudi Arabia has no extradition treaty with the U.S.)
Sudan Arrest of Osama Bin Laden
Clinton targeted bin Laden even before he moved to Afghanistan in 1996. His administration brokered an agreement with the government of Sudan to arrest OBL and turn him over to Saudi Arabia (the U.S. did not have extradition rights with Sudan). For 10 weeks, Clinton tried to persuade the Saudis to accept the offer, but they refused. Bin Laden had been kicked out of Saudi Arabia, was considered an expatriot and therefore a threat to their country too. With no cooperation from the Saudis, the deal fell apart and bin Laden fled to Pakistan, then Afghanistan.
US Embassy, Kenya and Tanzania, 1998
On 7 August 1998, powerful car bombs exploded minutes apart outside the United States embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, killing 224 people and wounding about 5,000 others. Four participants with ties to Osama bin Laden were captured, convicted in U.S. federal court, and sentenced to life in prison without parole in October 2001. Fourteen other suspects indicted in the case remain at large, and three more are fighting extradition in London.
USS Cole, October 2000
The attack killing 17 occurred less than 60 days before the transition of power in Washington to the Bush administration. It took the Bush administration 4 years to track down and prosecute those responsible and the perpetrators currently in U.S. custody with varying sentences imposed.