“Yes, sir, but I strongly recommend we let them on their way.”
“I’ve made my decision, Sergeant. Now, carry out my orders!”
“Yes, sir.” Naples lowered his carbine, and everyone slowly stood down.
A minute later, Crosswhite and Tuckerman were put into the back of an armored Humvee, and the doors were slammed shut.
“Well, I gotta hand it to you,” Tuckerman said. “You almost pulled off the most brilliant piece of bullshitting I’ve ever seen — almost.”
Crosswhite sighed, pulling off his gloves and jacking his boot up against the back of the passenger seat. “Well, we’re not in handcuffs yet, so be ready to move when the opportunity presents itself. We may have to knock a few heads together to get away.”
Tuckerman let out a snicker. “ ‘Captain Crosswhite’… ‘Special Forces!’ Dumb-ass.”
Crosswhite chuckled. “What’d you want me to say, dickhead? I don’t think ‘washed-up, has-been Green Beret’ would’ve had quite the same effect.”
18
At thirty-eight, Muhammad Faisal was something of a Vegas playboy, preferring skinny blonde American women who were fake breasted and dim witted. Being from Saudi Arabia, where women were treated as far less than equal, he had little use for a woman of intellect. He wanted her pretty, subservient, and on her back as much as possible. He treated them well enough, in that he spent plenty of money on them and wasn’t physically abusive, but he was bossy and showed them little respect, feeling free to slap their behinds in public and ordering them to fetch him food or drink no matter who was present.
He owned a three-million-dollar home just outside of Las Vegas, but he kept a suite at the Luxor hotel, spending many nights a week at the poker tables. Though gambling and drinking were against the fundamentals of Islam, Faisal was no less hypocritical within his faith than many other religious persons around the world, cherry-picking which parts of the Koran to abide by and which to ignore. He held a low status within the House of Saud, even though his maternal grandfather had been first cousin to King Faisal, who had ruled Saudi Arabia from 1964 to 1975. It was because all of his ties were on his mother’s side that he had never enjoyed the same status as many of his cousins.
Having lost all interest in “family” business by his early twenties, he had elected to drop out of Oxford University and pursue the British nightlife on a full-time basis. During a trip to the United States a year after the September 11 attacks, he got his first taste of Las Vegas and was permanently hooked, immediately setting course for American citizenship.
In the ensuing months and years, Faisal enjoyed his first real advantages of being a member of the House of Saud, appealing to the family to intervene on his behalf with the US Citizenship and Immigration Services agency to request that they negate the necessity for him to leave the country every six months to renew his tourist visa. Two years later, the family intervened a second time to help procure his green card granting him permanent residency within the United States — all of this without ever having set foot inside an INS building. By the end of his fifth year, he was granted US citizenship without ever having sat for a single USCIS interview.
During Faisal’s unhindered journey to citizenship, he became a consummate poker player, thriving on high-stakes tournaments and private games alike, drinking and womanizing with the best of them as the Islamic rules of his youth were quickly forgotten. It was in December 2010, however, that he received a grim reminder of his Islamic ties.
He was approached by a pair of AQAP operatives, a former Saudi marine named Akram al-Rashid and his brother Haroun, both of whom had immigrated to Canada as a way of bringing the jihad to the Western world. Word of Faisal’s gambling exploits had been reported by Al Qaeda spies lurking around Vegas, and it so happened that money won in the American casinos was the hardest to trace.
“Are you Wahhabi or not, Muhammad?” Akram al-Rashid had asked him point-blank early in their first meeting. “It’s a simple yes or no question.”
“I am Salafi,” Faisal replied. “Do not call me Wahhabi.”
“Call yourself what you will, brother, but do not think there will not be a price to pay for the decadent life you lead here. Do you believe that Allah has turned a blind eye to it? He hasn’t, I promise you. Now is the time for you to make your decadent life of use to him, or you risk the forfeit of your soul.”
By the end of the meeting, Faisal had agreed to give money to the jihad, not because he was worried about the afterlife, but because it had been easier than arguing. He held no affection for the United States, even though he’d sought to make his home there. What he loved was the freedom to gamble, party, and enjoy sex with many different women. If handing over a few million dollars a year to the AQAP movement kept the fanatic jihadists off his back, then it was worth it, because money was not a problem, and if these donations happened to keep him in good stead with Allah, as al-Rashid had promised, then so much the better. All he wanted was to be left alone.
Then a few years later the Chechens got into the game, and the al-Rashid brothers asked for another meeting, dramatically altering Faisal’s involvement with AQAP.
“We need you now more than ever, brother,” al-Rashid whispered to him, his eyes glazed over with holy zeal. “Allah has miraculously granted our Chechen friends in the RSMB an opportunity to purchase an atomic weapon. With your help, we can at last strike the United States a decisive blow.”
Faisal had been shocked and horrified. This was a long, long way from blowing up buses in the streets of Tel Aviv or tossing a satchel bomb into a crowded Alexandrian night club. Those types of attacks would have continued to take place with or without his money. “I’m not helping you buy an atomic weapon! Are you insane? I live here.”
“The weapon will not be used against Las Vegas, brother. Do not worry.”
“Las Vegas is not my concern!” Faisal retorted, already realizing there would be no dissuading AQAP from its course to help the RSMB, but he’d had no intention of being the man to fund the purchase of such a hellish weapon. “Nuclear weapons leave the world unlivable.”
“It is not this world you should be concerned with, brother.”
“Regardless,” Faisal said, shaking his head. “Find someone else.”
“We will find someone else,” al-Rashid replied, his eyes narrowing. “Never fear. But tell me this, brother… in which direction do you think the Americans will be guided when they begin their search for suspects after the attack is eventually successful? As it will be successful! In the direction of those who helped us… or in the direction of those who refused us?”
“I have helped you!” Faisal insisted. “I’ve given you millions. I refuse one time, and you threaten to feed me to the wolves?”
“You must help us achieve this victory,” al-Rashid persisted. “There is no other victory that matters now, no other path for you to follow. Otherwise the FBI will find their way to your door within days of the attack. The House of Saud will be forced to turn its back on you forever, and you will rot inside of an infidel prison… but not until after you are tortured by the CIA for information that you will be unable to provide.”
Al-Rashid sat back, watching Faisal twisting on the hook. Then, after he felt the man had twisted long enough, he pulled him into the boat. “Enough arguing now, Muhammad. You know it can serve no purpose. In the coming weeks you will go to Germany to meet with our Chechen brothers in the Riyad us-Saliheyn Martyrs’ Brigade. It has all been arranged.”