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SaudiLeaks 28: Cables Show Riyadh's Strenuous Efforts to Sabotage Iran's Ties with Other States

Aramagedon

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TEHRAN (FNA)- The documents released by the Yemen Cyber Army after it hacked the Saudi Foreign Ministry in May show that Saudi Arabia has made extensive attempts to hatch plots to undermine Iran's clout or damage its relations with other world nations.

The Saudi Foreign Ministry was hacked by the Yemen Cyber Army in May, and a copy of its information was sent to FNA and another one to the whistleblower website WikiLeaks.

The documents released by the YCA show that the Saudis feel deeply worried by Iran's smallest moves from expansion of formal ties to humanitarian aid or good-will gestures, and then they attempt to trouble Iran's policies and actions in all the political, scientific, cultural and trade arenas in every part of the world, from Pakistan, Tatarstan, Yemen, Djibouti, Egypt and Burkina Faso to Mexico and Argentina, and to Malaysia, Myanmar and Thailand. The papers show that the Saudi embassies in the world countries report every single move Iran makes to Riyadh and present some proposals on how to trouble Iran's moves, attempts that mostly fail.

The documents show that many Saudi aids to other world nations are not meant to assist them, but to prevent their inclination towards Iran. They also show that the moves made by Riyadh are sometimes adopted through plots to start provocation and tension in third-party states.

The cultural and religious issues constitute a major part of Saudi Arabia's concerns wherever third-party nations welcome Iran's spiritual messages.

Some of these documents are covered in this report.

Argentina:

Based on this document, the Saudi embassy in Buenos Aires in a letter addressed to the then Saudi King Abdullah, and also sent to the crown prince, defense minister and intelligence chief, alarms Riyadh of improvement and development of relations between Iran and Argentina.

The letter says that the two countries' relations have strained since 1994 and the blast in the Jewish cultural center, and now there are signs which show that the two countries are settling their differences.

The letter refers to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's mediatory role in 2011 to settle the AMIA case and then establishment of trade tis between Iran and Argentina, demanding action to counter the growth in relations.



Scientific and art cooperation between Iran and Thailand

In this letter the Saudi officials have been informed of a scientific congress on Iran's politics, culture and science in Thailand and invitation to Iranian experts to take part in the gathering.

Cooperation of Thailand's art college with Tehran to display Iranian movies and inviting Iranian directors and producers a film festival, holding a roundtable on "Sheikh Ahmad Qomi" in the historical sciences section of a Thai linguistics college, annual programs on the occasion of the establishment of diplomatic relations between Iran and Thailand and efforts to publish books on Iran's history before and after Islam are the issues Riyadh has been cautioned of in the letter.

Invitations to Iranian university professors to hold cultural talks and scientific cooperation between Iran and Thailand have also been reminded to the Saudi officials.



Djibouti:

This document which is a letter by the Saudi embassy in Djibouti to the Riyadh officials, Iran's efforts to increase influence and invest in Djibouti are highlighted.

Based on the letter, the Djibouti government doesn’t plan to establish strategic relations with Iran but merely wants to use Iran's possibilities.

The letter proposes the Saudi officials to invest in Djibouti in economic, political and cultural fields as soon as possible to prevent Iran's further influence.



Pakistan:

In a letter by the Saudi embassy in Pakistan to the head of Saudi Arabia's royal court and King Abdullah's special secretary, the Shiites' activities in Pakistan have been described as a source of concern. The letter refers to setting up of the Palestine Institute (with Iran's support) in Islamabad and explains about its presidents and their plans to invite people to support the resistance front.



Malaysia:

Saudis want Malaysian pilgrims to stay away from Iranians in Hajj pilgrimage

The document shows that the Saudi embassy in Malaysia in a letter to the Saudi foreign ministry has voiced concern about Iran's growing clout in Malaysia and proposed that the officials in Riyadh take some measures in this regard.

The letter says that the Malaysian minister for Islamic affairs in a meeting with Saudi Arabia's Hajj officials has reported that his government has redirected its students exchange policy to send them to Egypt's al-Azhar university instead of Iran.

The minister also ensures the Saudi Hajj officials that his country's pilgrims have been cautioned to stay away from Iranians during the Muslim rituals.



Mexico:

This letter which has been sent by the Saudi embassy in Mexico City to the secretary general of Saudi Arabia's supreme council in Islamic affairs shows how the construction of a single mosque in Mexico has made Riyadh officials fearful.

The message voices concern about the Islamic Republic of Iran's cultural activities in Mexico.

The letter says that Iran is trying to expand relations with South American countries and it finally urges Saudi Arabia to set up an Islamic center and mosque in the Mexican capital as soon as possible, fearing that Iran could build the mosque and Islamic center there soon.



Myanmar:

Based on the letter, a number of Sunni clerics and Muftis in Myanmar visited the Saudi embassy and urged the ambassador to set up a center for teaching Arabic language and build a big mosque named 'Khadim al-Haramein Sharifein' given the increasing number of the Myanmarese people converting to Shiism.


 
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Burkina Faso:

During a visit by the then Iranian Foreign Minister, Ali Akbar Salehi, to Burkina Faso on 9 January 2013, the Saudi embassy in Ouagadougou wrote a letter to the foreign ministry, warning that Burkina Faso is enhancing ties with Iran, and Tehran plans to build a mosque and a training center in that country, implying that Riyadh should counter the country's growing relations with Tehran.



Riyadh and the Saudi King's pleasure with spreading Takfiri thoughts against Iran

After a Wahhabi Mufti in an interview with Egypt's al-Ahram magazine blasted Iran and called the Iranians as infidels, the Saudi embassy in Egypt has sent a report of the interview to Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal and a copy to King Abdullah.

In the interview, Dr. Abdullah al-Nafisi, a Kuwaiti Mufti, described Iran as more dangerous than Israel and called the Iranians as non-Muslims and Persian Safavids who intend to occupy Mecca and Medina. The interview has apparently pleased the officials in Riyadh.





Yemen

The document shows that the Saudi embassy in Sana'a in a letter to the Saudi foreign minister has emphasized the necessity for having relations with the Yemeni parties and organizations and supporting them to fight against Iran's influence.

It also describes as a priority opening new media outlets and strengthening those media allied with Riyadh.



The list of countries where Riyadh has sought to sabotage Iran's face or trouble its simplest measures goes on and on and we will cover more of such documents in more reports in future.

Late in May, the Yemen Cyber Army released a portion of the information and documents that it had gained in its recent cyber attack on Saudi Arabia's Foreign, Interior and Defense Ministries.

The Yemen Cyber Army announced that it has hacked the website, servers and archives of Saudi Arabia's Foreign, Interior and Defense ministries and would release thousands of these top secret documents.

The group claimed that it "has gained access to the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) network and have full control over more than 3000 computers and servers, and thousands of users. We also have access to the emails, personal and secret information of hundreds of thousands of their staff and diplomats in different missions around the world".

The hackers' statement, which said the cyber army has also attacked the Saudi Interior and Defense ministries and vowed to release their details later, was carried by several globally known hackers websites.

Following the hack in May, the Yemen Cyber Army sent a copy of its information to FNA and another one to the whistleblower website WikiLeaks.

"WikiLeaks released over 60,000 documents on Friday and vowed to release the rest in coming weeks, but we plan to release the documents in separate news items since many of them contain the names of foreign nationals who have demanded visit to Saudi Arabia, for example for Hajj pilgrimage, and their names have been mentioned among the Saudi agents. Thus releasing the list of names and documents might hurt innocent individuals who have done nothing, but applied for visa at a Saudi embassy for doing Hajj pilgrimage," FNA English Editor-in-Chief Seyed Mostafa Khoshcheshm said.

"The number of the documents is way beyond the 500,000 that has been announced by WikiLeaks, but they need to be checked first to make sure that they do not contain misleading information and are not harmful to innocent people," he added.

Farsnews



Saudileaks 13: Docs Reveal Riyadh Helped Thailand's Flood-Stricken People for Anti-Iran Propaganda

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TEHRAN (FNA)- Saudi Arabia helped the flood-stricken people of Thailand in April 2011 for the purpose of launching anti-Iran propaganda, according to one of the documents gained and released by the Yemen Cyber Army after its May hacking of the Saudi Foreign Ministry.
The document numbered 22196 and dated April 5, 2011 shows that the Saudi embassy in Thailand in an email had called for the Saudi government's direct assistance to the Thai Muslims to influence them and seize the opportunity to reduce Iran's influence on the Muslim population of Southern Thailand where Iran has a considerable presence.

The Saudi Foreign Ministry was hacked by the Yemen Cyber Army in Mayand a copy of its information was sent to FNA and another one to the whistleblower website WikiLeaks.

Late in May, the Yemen Cyber Army released a portion of the information and documents that it had gained in its cyber attack on Saudi Arabia's Foreign, Interior and Defense Ministries.

The Yemen Cyber Army announced that it has hacked the website, servers and archives of Saudi Arabia's Foreign, Interior and Defense ministries and would release thousands of these top secret documents.

The group claimed that it "has gained access to the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) network and have full control over more than 3000 computers and servers, and thousands of users. We also have access to the emails, personal and secret information of hundreds of thousands of their staff and diplomats in different missions around the world".

The hackers' statement, which said the cyber army has also attacked the Saudi Interior and Defense ministries and vowed to release their details later, was carried by several globally known hackers websites.

Following the hack in May, the Yemen Cyber Army sent a copy of its information to FNA and another one to the whistleblower website WikiLeaks.

"WikiLeaks released over 60,000 documents on Friday and vowed to release the rest in coming weeks, but we plan to release the documents in separate news items since many of them contain the names of foreign nationals who have demanded visit to Saudi Arabia, for example for Hajj pilgrimage, and their names have been mentioned among the Saudi agents. Thus releasing the list of names and documents might hurt innocent individuals who have done nothing, but applied for visa at a Saudi embassy for doing Hajj pilgrimage," FNA English Editor-in-Chief Seyed Mostafa Khoshcheshm said.

"The number of the documents is way beyond the 500,000 that has been announced by WikiLeaks, but they need to be checked first to make sure they do not contain misleading information and are not harmful to innocent people," he added.

Farsnews


Saudileaks 32: Saudi Intelligence Agency Offers Unsolicited Aide to US against Iran's IRGC

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TEHRAN (FNA)- The documents released by the Yemen Cyber Army after it hacked the Saudi Foreign Ministry in May show that Riyadh has persuaded the US to place more Iranian IRGC commanders under its sanctions list.

The Saudi Foreign Ministry was hacked by the Yemen Cyber Army in May, and a copy of its information was sent to FNA and another one to the whistleblower website WikiLeaks.

According to one of these documents, Mostafa bin Mohammad Habib Kowsar, the director-general of the Saudi foreign ministry for Asian States Affairs, in a letter to the deputy head of the ministry's department for bilateral relations has stated that he has received a telegraph from Khalid al-Tuwaijri, the Chief of the Royal Court of Saudi Arabia under King Abdullah, informing that Riyadh has come to realize changes in the IRGC's chain of command.


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According to Kowsar's letter, Tuwaijri has proposed in his cable that the names of new IRGC commanders be added to the list of those Iranians who had been sanctioned internationally or unilaterally by the US which would lead to their travel ban and freezing of their assets.

The cable has also warned that Saudi Arabia doesn’t want to play an overt role in this regard and the information should be presented to the US officials secretively.

Kowsar has reminded in his letter that the measure will hit an efficient and preemptive blow at Iran and the political future of these new IRGC commanders, and will send them a direct message to caution them that they are under international scrutiny.

Kowsar also says that Tuwaijri wants the Saudi foreign minister to be informed of what the intelligence agency has proposed.

Late in May, the Yemen Cyber Army released a portion of the information and documents that it had gained in its recent cyber attack on Saudi Arabia's Foreign, Interior and Defense Ministries.

The Yemen Cyber Army announced that it has hacked the website, servers and archives of Saudi Arabia's Foreign, Interior and Defense ministries and would release thousands of these top secret documents.

The group claimed that it "has gained access to the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) network and have full control over more than 3000 computers and servers, and thousands of users. We also have access to the emails, personal and secret information of hundreds of thousands of their staff and diplomats in different missions around the world".

The hackers' statement, which said the cyber army has also attacked the Saudi Interior and Defense ministries and vowed to release their details later, was carried by several globally known hackers websites.

Following the hack in May, the Yemen Cyber Army sent a copy of its information to FNA and another one to the whistleblower website WikiLeaks.

"WikiLeaks released over 60,000 documents on Friday and vowed to release the rest in coming weeks, but we plan to release the documents in separate news items since many of them contain the names of foreign nationals who have demanded visit to Saudi Arabia, for example for Hajj pilgrimage, and their names have been mentioned among the Saudi agents. Thus releasing the list of names and documents might hurt innocent individuals who have done nothing, but applied for visa at a Saudi embassy for doing Hajj pilgrimage," FNA English Editor-in-Chief Seyed Mostafa Khoshcheshm said.

Farsnews
 
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So what your embassies might be doing the same thing..its tit for tat..Iranians are equally responsible for this mayhem.
 
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Saudileaks 18: S. Arabia Deposited $575mln to Ex-Iraqi Speaker's Account after Mosul's Fall

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TEHRAN (FNA)- Former Iraqi Parliament Speaker Osama al-Nujaifi received over half a billion dollars from the Saudi government 13 days after the fall of Mosul city by the ISIL in 2014, according to one of the documents gained and released by the Yemen Cyber Army after its May hacking of the Saudi Foreign Ministry.

The Saudi Foreign Ministry was hacked by the Yemen Cyber Army in May, and a copy of its information was sent to FNA and another one to the whistleblower website WikiLeaks.
One of the documents released by the YCA showed a letter written by Director General of the Saudi Interior Ministry Bandar bin Abdulaziz Al Saud to Nujaifi saying that Riyadh had deposited $575mln to a Turkish bank 13 days after Mosul's fall on June 10, 2014.


Click to Enlarge Image

"We hope that you will not withdraw money from the account before announcing your preparedness to implement what has been agreed between us so that the percentages of money for any of certain figures specified in our agreement will be divided," the letter added.

At the time when Mosul fell in the hands of the ISIL, Nujaifi, who is the brother of Atheel al-Nujaifi, Nineveh's governor, claimed that Iraqi soldiers abandoned their posts in Mosul when the ISIL attacks began.

The former top legislator said that he was mobilizing popular committees to rid the city of ISIL and terror groups.

"We've introduced practical steps to try to bring back a new system in Nineveh, by mobilizing people in popular committees to try to win back Mosul," he added in a promise that was never materialized.

Late in May, the Yemen Cyber Army released a portion of the information and documents that it had gained in its recent cyber attack on Saudi Arabia's Foreign, Interior and Defense Ministries.

The Yemen Cyber Army announced that it has hacked the website, servers and archives of Saudi Arabia's Foreign, Interior and Defense ministries and would release thousands of these top secret documents.

The group claimed that it "has gained access to the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) network and have full control over more than 3000 computers and servers, and thousands of users. We also have access to the emails, personal and secret information of hundreds of thousands of their staff and diplomats in different missions around the world".

The hackers' statement, which said the cyber army has also attacked the Saudi Interior and Defense ministries and vowed to release their details later, was carried by several globally known hackers websites.

Following the hack in May, the Yemen Cyber Army sent a copy of its information to FNA and another one to the whistleblower website WikiLeaks.

"WikiLeaks released over 60,000 documents on Friday and vowed to release the rest in coming weeks, but we plan to release the documents in separate news items since many of them contain the names of foreign nationals who have demanded visit to Saudi Arabia, for example for Hajj pilgrimage, and their names have been mentioned among the Saudi agents. Thus releasing the list of names and documents might hurt innocent individuals who have done nothing, but applied for visa at a Saudi embassy for doing Hajj pilgrimage," FNA English Editor-in-Chief Seyed Mostafa Khoshcheshm said.

"The number of the documents is way beyond the 500,000 that has been announced by WikiLeaks, but they need to be checked first to make sure that they do not contain misleading information and are not harmful to innocent people," he added.

Farsnews


Saudileaks 9: Saudi Foreign Ministry Cable Reveals Qatar's Plots against Yemen

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TEHRAN (FNA)- Qatar had in 2012 allocated $250mln to create tension in Yemen, showed one of the foreign ministry cables that has been released by the Yemen Cyber Army after it hacked the Saudi Foreign Ministry in May.

The document which backs to 31 January 2012 was written by Saudi Ambassador to Yemen Ali bin Hamdan to former Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal.

"I inform you that we have received some information from different sources that Qatar has spent a large amount of money to create tumult and disturb the political equations in Yemen and has allocated $250mln to this end," it said.

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The cable added that the Qatari plots are supported by Sheikh Hamid al-Ahmar, a Yemeni businessman and one of the most prominent opponents of former Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who would persuade the Yemeni military and police forces to defy their responsibilities and relevant authorities.

Farsnews
 
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We can't blame the Saudis for their attitude. We just need to look at what happened in Argentina to understand the Saudi fears. Iranian-linked militant groups carry out terrorist attacks on Jews and are shielded by the Argentinian governent afterwards. With their history of attacking embassies and diplomats, the Saudis have a reason to be worried that Thailand or Mexico could be another launchpad for another Iranian attack.
 
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WikiLeaks: US, Israel, and Saudi Arabia Planned to Overthrow Syrian Govt. in 2006

Cables reveal that before the beginning of the Syrian revolt and civil war, the United States hoped to overthrow Assad and create strife between Shiite and Sunni Muslims.

Kit O’Connell
December 17, 2015


(MINTPRESS) Speaking from Ecuador’s embassy in London, Julian Assange revealed that the United States planned to overthrow the Syrian government as far back as 2006, several years before the start of the current crisis.

The founder of WikiLeaks took refuge in the Embassy of Ecuador in 2012. The premises remain under siege 24 hours a day by a large team of police to prevent Assange from ever stepping foot outside, at a cost to taxpayers that now exceeds £12 million.

The ongoing threat to his freedom hasn’t kept Assange from continuing his work revealing the dirty secrets of world governments. His latest revelations come in an interview with RT in support of his new book, “The WikiLeaks Files,” published late last month.

The United States and its allies in the Middle East, includingTurkey and Israel, have been frequently accused of contributing to the ongoing destabilization of Syria in the wake of the uprising and subsequent civil war which began in 2011. But according to cables from the WikiLeaks archive, discussed in the Syria chapter of Assange’s book, plans to deliberately destabilize the region go back at least five years further.

“In that chapter is a cable from US Ambassador William Roebuck, who was stationed in Damascus, which apparently discusses a plan for the overthrow of the Assad government in Syria,” RT reported.

In his appearance on the RT program “Going Underground,” Assange elaborated on the cable’s contents:

“… That plan was to use a number of different factors to create paranoia within the Syrian government; to push it to overreact, to make it fear there’s a coup …”

Assange continued, explaining that the U.S. government sought to make the Syrian government appear weak by causing Assad to overreact to the threat of Islamic extremists crossing into his country.

The cable also details plans to foster sectarian strife in the region and make Iran appear like a larger threat to Assad than it really was, Assange continued:

“In particular, to take rumors that are known to be false … or exaggerations and promote them – that Iran is trying to convert poor Sunnis, and to work with Saudi and Egypt to foster that perception in order to make it harder for Iran to have influence, and also harder for the government to have influence in the population.”

WikiLeaks cables reveal that these plans came from the Israeli government, and show that the U.S. government intended to work with Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Qatar and Egypt to encourage the breakdown of the Assad regime as a way of also weakening Iran and Hezbollah.

f Syria sufficiently destabilized, it might be in a position where it can keep the Golan Heights forever, or even advance that territory,” Assange said.

According to Assange, the cable illuminates how the current Syrian crisis reflects U.S. influence on the Middle East, particularly the ways it has used its allies to put pressure on the country. “Part of the problem in Syria is that you have a number of US allies surrounding it, principally Saudi and Qatar, that are funneling in weapons,”Assange noted, adding that it shows how the U.S. uses its over 100 army bases and network of embassies to further its imperialist interests.

The mainstream media often presents a simplistic view of the Syrian crisis, especially when the U.S. government is using it as support for war, ignoring the history of the region and the many conflicting alliances it holds.

MintPress News founder Mnar Muhawesh published her analysis of the current refugee crisis, which also blames Western allies like Turkey, Israel and Saudi Arabia for seeking to destabilize Syria in their quest to control the region’s energy resources.

“Today, the Middle East is being torn to shreds by manipulative plans to gain oil and gas access by pitting people against one another based on religion,”Muhawesh wrote. “And in this push for energy, it’s the people who suffer most.”

Watch “Assange on ‘US Empire’, Assad govt overthrow plans & new book ‘The WikiLeaks Files’ (EXCLUSIVE)” from RT’s “Going Underground”:


This article (WikiLeaks: US, Israel, and Saudi Arabia Planned to Overthrow Syrian Govt. in 2006) originally appeared on MintPressNews.com and was used with permission. Anti-Media Radio airs weeknights at 11pm Eastern/8pm Pacific. If you spot a typo, email edits@theantimedia.org.
WikiLeaks: US, Israel, and Saudi Arabia Planned to Overthrow Syrian Govt. in 2006



Saudileaks 30: Indonesian Police Official Blames Saudis for Financing Terrorists

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TEHRAN (FNA)- Indonesia's National Police Inspector-General Tito Karnavian has informed high-ranking officials in Jakarta that Saudi Arabia has been supporting the terrorist groups in the Southeast Asian country, one of the documents released by the Yemen Cyber Army after it hacked the Saudi foreign ministry in May disclosed.

The Saudi Foreign Ministry was hacked by the Yemen Cyber Army in May, and a copy of its information was sent to FNA and another one to the whistleblower website WikiLeaks.

One of the documents released by the YCA is a secret letter written by the Saudi embassy in Jakarta to the foreign ministry in Riyadh saying that the country's ambassador has had a meeting with the representative of Indonesia's minister for religious affairs, Nasreddin Omar, who was accompanied by a delegation of Indonesian National Counter-terrorism Agency (BNPT), including General Karnavian.

Based on the letter, the first goal of the meeting was presentation of some explanations about Karnavian's speech in which he had named Saudi Arabia as one of the financial resources of terrorists in Indonesia.

During the meeting at the venue of the Saudi embassy, Karnavian has explained that in his speech that he didn’t directly mean the Saudi government, but certain Saudis who have extended financial support for the terrorists in practice.



Farsnews

the Saudis have a reason to be worried that Thailand or Mexico could be another launchpad for another Iranian attack.
Dumbass what are you blabbering about you clown?


Saudileaks 5: Docs Reveal bin Laden's Death Certificate Non-Existent

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TEHRAN (FNA)- The US embassy in Saudi Arabia said no record of Osama bin Laden’s death certificate existed, secret communications released by the Yemen Cyber Army said.

"I am informed by the US Department of State's Office of the Legal Advisor that no certificate of death was issued for Usama [Osama] bin Laden," Glen Keiser wrote in the letter revealed by Yemen Cyber Army.

The Saudi Foreign Ministry was hacked by the Yemen Cyber Army in Mayand a copy of its information was sent to FNA and another one to the whistleblower website WikiLeaks.

"WikiLeaks released 60,000 documents on Friday and vowed to release the rest in coming weeks, but we plan to release the documents in separate news items since many of them contain the names of foreign nationals who have demanded visit to Saudi Arabia, for example for Hajj pilgrimage, and their names have been mentioned among the Saudi agents. Thus releasing the list of names and documents might hurt innocent individuals who have done nothing, but applied for visa at a Saudi embassy for doing Hajj pilgrimage," FNA English Editor-in-Chief Seyed Mostafa Khoshcheshm said.

"The number of the documents is way beyond the 500,000 that has been announced by WikiLeaks, but they need to be checked first to make sure that they do not contain misleading information and are not harmful to innocent people," he added.

Last month, award-winning investigative journalist and author Seymour Hersh disputed official accounts of bin Laden’s death and claimed the circumstances surrounding it had been different to the ones officially stated.

In the letter, Keiser explained that the lack of a death certificate is "consistent with regular practice for individuals killed in the course of military operations," and goes on to suggest an alternative way to officially confirm the former al-Qaeda leader's death.

Since the criminal case against bin Laden was effectively dropped due to his death, Keiser recommends a process for requesting the order of "nolle prosequie," or "unwilling of pursuit," from the court which he said effectively acts as proof of death.

"In requesting that the criminal case against Usama [Osama] bin Laden no longer be pursued in US federal court, the US Attorney provided a declaration of the US Department of Justice attesting to facts supporting the conclusion that Usama bin Laden was killed."

Late in May, Yemen Cyber Army released a portion of the information and documents that it had gained in its recent cyber attack on Saudi Arabia's Foreign, Interior and Defense Ministries.

The Yemen Cyber Army announced that it has hacked the website, servers and archives of Saudi Arabia's Foreign, Interior and Defense ministries and would release thousands of these top secret documents.

The group claimed that it "has gained access to the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) network and have full control over more than 3000 computers and servers, and thousands of users. We also have access to the emails, personal and secret information of hundreds of thousands of their staff and diplomats in different missions around the world".

The hackers' statement, which said the cyber army has also attacked the Saudi Interior and Defense ministries and vowed to release their details later, was carried by several globally known hackers websites.

Farsnews
 
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Pardon me, but all I see is Saudi documents mentioning Iranian activities. Where are the "strenuous efforts to sabotage Iran's ties" ?

And what's wrong with overthrowing? Isn't this how Khomeini came to power in the first place?
 
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Expected and now proven.Especially the items about mosoul the money transfers after isis attack in mosoul sheds light on the birth of daesh and its first international large scale attack. I hope more info would be uncovered about organization of daesh mosoul invasion and its international connections.daesh was portrayed as moderate rebels by many at that time.Also the 2013 sarin attack and ongoing war in Yemen. It is a shame to sell weapons to saudis for petrodollars after all these.
 
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Pardon me, but all I see is Saudi documents mentioning Iranian activities. Where are the "strenuous efforts to sabotage Iran's ties" ?

And what's wrong with overthrowing? Isn't this how Khomeini came to power in the first place?
Do you mean you don't understand the difference between overthrowing the government of another country vs a revolution? Do you consider them the same? One is meddling in another sovereign nation internal affairs and the other is totally an internal matter.

The fact that KSA was and is sabotaging Iran's national interest is not hard to recognize. What has been mentioned above are secret efforts. The obvious ones were KSA backing Saddam in his war against Iran and helping them with cash. The other one is the recent Nuclear Agreement. KSA did whatever it could (short of sending someone to speak for the US parliament) to sabotage the deal.
 
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Do you mean you don't understand the difference between overthrowing the government of another country vs a revolution? Do you consider them the same? One is meddling in another sovereign nation internal affairs and the other is totally an internal matter.

The fact that KSA was and is sabotaging Iran's national interest is not hard to recognize. What has been mentioned above are secret efforts. The obvious ones were KSA backing Saddam in his war against Iran and helping them with cash. The other one is the recent Nuclear Agreement. KSA did whatever it could (short of sending someone to speak for the US parliament) to sabotage the deal.
Surprisingly, almost all of the Syrians I've met despise Bashar and his cronies. What's wrong if the Syrians don't want him around? Don't the Syrian people have the right to decide the fate of their country without Iranian interference?
 
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TEHRAN (FNA)- The documents released by the Yemen Cyber Army after it hacked the Saudi Foreign Ministry in May show that Saudi Arabia has made extensive attempts to hatch plots to undermine Iran's clout or damage its relations with other world nations.

Source: SaudiLeaks 28: Cables Show Riyadh's Strenuous Efforts to Sabotage Iran's Ties with Other States

I am not aware of Yemen having even an iota of ICT infrastructure so this "Yemen Cyber Army" claim is very funny!

Saudileaks 5: Docs Reveal bin Laden's Death Certificate Non-Existent

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TEHRAN (FNA)- The US embassy in Saudi Arabia said no record of Osama bin Laden’s death certificate existed, secret communications released by the Yemen Cyber Army said.

"I am informed by the US Department of State's Office of the Legal Advisor that no certificate of death was issued for Usama [Osama] bin Laden," Glen Keiser wrote in the letter revealed by Yemen Cyber Army.

I dont understand if this army is for real or this is some kind of crude joke...Death certificate of Usama Binladen which is already informed that no such document was issued yet you need to give credit to "hack" and "leaks" to confirm this...very funny!

This post is full with some of the dumbest sh!t one can imagine in global intelligence community..and whats with the super faked Saudi letter..haha!
 
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Surprisingly, almost all of the Syrians I've met despise Bashar and his cronies. What's wrong if the Syrians don't want him around? Don't the Syrian people have the right to decide the fate of their country without Iranian interference?

Yes, because all of the Syrians you have met are those who have left the country mainly because they didn't like how their country was run. You will reach the same result if you talk to Iranians and even Chinese who have immigrated to another country. But your conclusion would be wrong because statistically, you are focusing on a very specific and minority group. If you like to see what majority of Iranian, Chinese and Syrian think about their government, you should go to their country and live among them and then make a conclusion.

Damascus is the most significant city in Syria. If the majority of the people in that city wanted Bashar gone, he couldn't have stayed.

And there is nothing wrong with Syrian being able to choose their government. And in the last formal poll, Bashar Asad was the dominant winner. Now I know that some would say he cheated or not everyone was allowed to run as a candidate and ..... They say the same things about Iran as well. But as an Iranian, I can assure you that current government has full support of the majority in Iran.

However, nobody answers the questions what happens if Bashar Asad just gives up the power today? Do you think there will be peace tomorrow? I think Syria will break into pieces and there will be civil war for years to come. There is no dominant opposition in Syria and all of them are fighting each other. There some of them like ISIS who shouldn't have any future in Syria. At best, it will turn into another Libya.

Iran is there because current government of Syria (even though allegedly not representing the majority) has asked for its help. Iran position is that after the order is restored, there should be election and Bashar Asad may not necessarily be the winner of that election.
 
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Yes, because all of the Syrians you have met are those who have left the country mainly because they didn't like how their country was run. You will reach the same result if you talk to Iranians and even Chinese who have immigrated to another country. But your conclusion would be wrong because statistically, you are focusing on a very specific and minority group. If you like to see what majority of Iranian, Chinese and Syrian think about their government, you should go to their country and live among them and then make a conclusion.

Damascus is the most significant city in Syria. If the majority of the people in that city wanted Bashar gone, he couldn't have stayed.

And there is nothing wrong with Syrian being able to choose their government. And in the last formal poll, Bashar Asad was the dominant winner. Now I know that some would say he cheated or not everyone was allowed to run as a candidate and ..... They say the same things about Iran as well. But as an Iranian, I can assure you that current government has full support of the majority in Iran.

However, nobody answers the questions what happens if Bashar Asad just gives up the power today? Do you think there will be peace tomorrow? I think Syria will break into pieces and there will be civil war for years to come. There is no dominant opposition in Syria and all of them are fighting each other. There some of them like ISIS who shouldn't have any future in Syria. At best, it will turn into another Libya.

Iran is there because current government of Syria (even though allegedly not representing the majority) has asked for its help. Iran position is that after the order is restored, there should be election and Bashar Asad may not necessarily be the winner of that election.
I'm not talking about the run-down Syrians who are fleeing from the war, I'm talking of those Syrian nationals who have businesses in Syria and other countries. These are not the usual Bashar-bashers that you might have been led to believe in.

No one appreciates the forced draft, no one appreciates Bashar's complete strangle-hold on the Syrian people and their lives. No one appreciates a thug with so much power.

My opinion of Bashar is based on my life long interaction with people from Aleppo, Damascus and other cities.

If he leaves, Syrian ight well breathe a sigh of relief.

Iran should be supporting the oppressed people of Syria, not that dictator.
 
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"WikiLeaks released over 60,000 documents on Friday and vowed to release the rest in coming weeks, but we plan to release the documents in separate news items since many of them contain the names of foreign nationals who have demanded visit to Saudi Arabia, for example for Hajj pilgrimage, and their names have been mentioned among the Saudi agents. Thus releasing the list of names and documents might hurt innocent individuals who have done nothing, but applied for visa at a Saudi embassy for doing Hajj pilgrimage," FNA English Editor-in-Chief Seyed Mostafa Khoshcheshm said.

Saudi agents spend time discussing names of hajj pilgrims..very funny..dumbest stuff ever read...i think YCA hit a honey pot deliberately filled with rubbish information...
 
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