Did UAE Save Bin Laden?

Charles Johnsonfollow me on twitter
Fri Feb 24, 2006 at 4:58 pm PST • Views: 335

After reading and listening to huge amounts of debate on the UAE port deal, I’ve decided that although I am definitely not a supporter of the deal, I’m cautiously OK with it provided there is strict security supervision of the operations of DP World.

(And I’m singularly unimpressed with those who call the people questioning this deal, “Islamophobic and un-American.”)

The most persuasive argument in favor (for me, anyway) is that if a terrorist group wanted to attack through the ports, there are many less risky ways to do it than by infiltrating the company that schedules port operations. The best argument against is that it makes no sense to increase the risk factor, even incrementally, and the potential exists that an Islamist employee could share information with bad guys.

But those who say the UAE is an unmitigated ally of the United States are being naïve; you don’t have to go very far from the glittering high-tech business centers to find the same kind of radical Islam in the United Arab Emirates that breeds in Saudi Arabia. Human Events Online has a piece by Terence P. Jeffrey that shows just one example: Did UAE Save Bin Laden?

UPDATE at 2/24/06 5:32:05 pm:

Another reason why I’m still uneasy about this deal; on March 26, 2004, our Outrage of the Day was about the appointment of former PLO spokesman Rashid Khalidi to the Columbia University Edward Said Chair—a chair that is funded principally by the United Arab Emirates.

UPDATE at 2/24/06 5:42:44 pm:

Charles Krauthammer’s op-ed today expresses many of the same misgivings: A Dubai Finesse.

Democrats loudly denounce any thought of racial profiling. But when that same Arab, attired in business suit and MBA, and with a good record of running ports in 15 countries, buys P&O, Democrats howl at the very idea of allowing Arabs to run our ports. (Republicans are howling, too, but they don’t grandstand on the issue of racial profiling.)

On this, the Democrats are rank hypocrites. But even hypocrites can be right. There is a problem. And the problem is not just the obvious one that an Arab-run company, heavily staffed with Arab employees, is more likely to be infiltrated by terrorists who might want to smuggle an awful weapon into our ports. But that would probably require some cooperation from the operating company. And neither the company nor the government of the UAE, which has been pro-American and a reasonably good ally in the war on terrorism, has any such record.

The greater and more immediate danger is that as soon as the Dubai company takes over operations, it will necessarily become privy to information about security provisions at crucial U.S. ports. That would mean a transfer of information about our security operations — and perhaps even worse, about the holes in our security operations — to a company in an Arab state in which there might be employees who, for reasons of corruption or ideology, would pass this invaluable knowledge on to al-Qaeda types.

That is the danger, and it is a risk, probably an unnecessary one. It’s not quite the end of the world that Democratic and Republican critics have portrayed it to be. After all, the UAE, which is run by a friendly regime, manages ports in other countries without any such incidents. Employees in other countries could leak or betray us just as easily. The issue, however, is that they are statistically more likely to be found in the UAE than, for example, in Britain.

Advertisement

146 comments

^ back to top ^

Name:

Pass:

Register Forgot Your Password? Re-send Confirmation (To log in, cookies must be enabled in your browser!)

Turn off ads by subscribing!
For about 33 cents a day, our subscription option turns off all advertisements at LGF!
Read more...


► LGF Headlines

  • Loading...

► Tweeted Articles

  • Loading...

► Tweeted Pages

  • Loading...

► Top 10 Comments

  • Loading...

► Bottom Comments

  • Loading...

► Recent Comments

  • Loading...

► Tools/Info

► Tag Cloud

► Contact

You must have Javascript enabled to use the contact form.
Your email:

Subject:

Message:


Messages may be published in our weblog, unless you request otherwise.
Tech Note:
Using the Contact Form

More Partners

Compare Electricity Prices in your area. Texas Electricity is deregulated; you have the right to choose Texas Electric Rates from among many Texas Electric Companies.

Ban fascist headwinds.

TwitterFacebook
LGF Pages
Recent Pages

Curt
A Navy SEAL's wise advice to graduates of Tufts University
2 hours, 26 minutes ago
Views: 45 • Comments: 1
Tweets: 0 • Rating: 1

researchok
Muslim Brotherhood Candidate to Face Former Prime Minister in Egyptian Runoff
3 hours, 47 minutes ago
Views: 55 • Comments: 0
Tweets: 0 • Rating: 1

MikeySDCA
5 Scientific Explanations for Your Sexual Perversions
12 hours, 17 minutes ago
Views: 173 • Comments: 0
Tweets: 0 • Rating: 0

Mickey_being_mickey
Obama Administration begins to form plan to arm Syrian rebels
12 hours, 17 minutes ago
Views: 99 • Comments: 1
Tweets: 0 • Rating: 1

Eclectic Infidel
Israeli saves Turk on Mount Everest
12 hours, 50 minutes ago
Views: 137 • Comments: 3
Tweets: 0 • Rating: 2

Flame Fin Tomini Tang
Research Report: How Secular Humanists (and Everyone Else) Subsidize Religion in the United States
14 hours, 16 minutes ago
Views: 157 • Comments: 1
Tweets: 0 • Rating: 3

MichaelJ
Results of an Attempt to Re-create the Siri-Samuel Jackson Ad
15 hours, 56 minutes ago
Views: 159 • Comments: 3
Tweets: 1 • Rating: 2

Aigle
Advocacy Journalism Means Never Having to Report What You Don't Want to Report
16 hours, 37 minutes ago
Views: 143 • Comments: 0
Tweets: 0 • Rating: -1

Learned Mother of Zion
Happy Shavuot From Scary Jew Shadow
18 hours, 24 minutes ago
Views: 168 • Comments: 1
Tweets: 0 • Rating: 2

Daniel Ballard
Iranian Sailors Chase Off Pirates Attacking U.S. Ship
19 hours, 12 minutes ago
Views: 203 • Comments: 1
Tweets: 1 • Rating: 5

 Frank says:

ARE YOU HUNG UP?