Story highlights The pages focus on the role of foreign governments in the plot

"They point a strong finger at Saudi Arabia," says Bob Graham

Washington (CNN) It's been more than a decade since the 9/11 report was released, and the leader behind the effort is pushing President Barack Obama to hand over the final 28 pages to the American public.

Those redacted pages from the congressional investigation into the attacks specifically focus on the role of foreign governments in the al Qaeda plot.

"They primarily deal with who financed 9/11, and they point a strong finger at Saudi Arabia," former Democratic Sen. Bob Graham of Florida told CNN's Michael Smercornish over the weekend. He co-chaired the panel that released the report in 2002.

Graham, along with Rep. Walter Jones (R-North Carolina) and Stephen Lynch (D-Massachusetts) will hold a news conference Wednesday asking Obama to declassify those remaining pages of the 832-page 9/11 report.

In the months after 9/11, the House and the Senate convened joint hearings and produced the massive report. But the 28 pages were classified by then-President George W. Bush.

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