When U.S. President Barack Obama departs for Saudi Arabia this week, an incubator of the 9/11 attacks, he will leave behind a dispute about government secrecy. The suppression of 28 pages, first from a public congressional inquiry and then from the 2004 report by the national 9/11 Commission, has spared the Saudis embarrassment, which would be mild punishment for complicity in 2,977 murders.

When Obama returns, he should keep his promise to release the pages. Then he should further curtail senseless secrecy by countermanding the CIA's refusal to release its official history of the 1961 Bay of Pigs debacle.

The nature of the 28 pages pertaining to 9/11 can be inferred from this carefully worded sentence in the commission's report: "We have found no evidence that the Saudi government as an institution or senior Saudi officials individually funded (al-Qaida)" (emphases added). Together, those five italicized words constitute a loophole large enough to fly a hijacked airliner through.