Remember when old gentle joe from scranton, said a person with the morals of a Tom cat shouldn't be in the WH

Hunter isn't running for anything, and is taking responsibility for his mistakes.
Hunter should not be even sniffing near the White House let alone sitting in meetings.
 
Were they acting as agents of the Saudi government?

Was Timothy McVeigh acting as a representative of the United States government?

Just quit already. You don't have a leg to stand on. The only argument you have is "Orange Man Bad", so go pound sand.

Guy, please stop pretending the Saudi government wasn't hip deep with Bin Laden and his boys.


In December 2002, a joint Senate-House intelligence committee published its findings on the horrendous 9/11 terrorist attacks, which included evidence of possible links between the government of Saudi Arabia and some of the 15 Saudis involved in the bombings of the Pentagon and Twin Towers that cost nearly 3,000 American lives. For national security reasons, the 28 pages detailing that information were never published. But they may be shortly and revive yet another intense examination of alleged Saudi support for anti-American terrorism.

The famous missing pages, if now declassified, will likely put the former Saudi ambassador to Washington, Prince Bandar bin Sultan, and his wife, Haifa, back in the limelight. Some of the allegations after the attacks focused on the royal couple’s financial aid to the Saudi spouse of a student who appeared to have had contacts with two of the hijackers living in California, Nawaf al-Hazmi and Khalid al-Mihdhar, prior to 9/11. Bandar was a flamboyant, free-wheeling diplomat with endless wit and charm, who served as ambassador to the United States for 22 years. He was in Washington at the time of the hijackings and had to deal with the barrage of accusation in the media and Congress regarding official Saudi complicity in the 9/11 plot.

For fifteen years now, the issue of possible Saudi connection to al-Qaeda, the terrorist group that masterminded 9/11, has been a festering sore in the side of the U.S.-Saudi relationship that never seems to heal. In addition to the controversy over the 28 missing pages, U.S. courts have helped to keep it festering by ruling alternatively for and against the unrelenting campaign of 9/11 families to allow these courts to hold the Saudi government and its charities responsible by lifting their sovereign immunity. Now there is a bill in Congress to do just that, and on May 17, the Senate passed it unanimously by voice vote. Its fate in the House of Representatives remains uncertain, but the White House has indicated President Obama will likely veto the measure fearing tit-for-tat reaction by other nations against the United States.
 

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