Osama bin Laden New Tape: Attacks underway in U.S.

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5"><center>Purported bin Laden tape:</font size>
<font size="6">'It's only a question of time'</font size>
</font size>
<font size="4">Voice warns Americans of impending attacks</font size></center>

CNN
Thursday, January 19, 2006
Posted: 10:30 a.m. EST (15:30 GMT)

(CNN) -- A new audiotaped message purported to be from al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden warned Americans that plans for attacks in the United States were already under way.

"We have seen explosions in many European countries. As for similar operations taking place in America, it's only a question of time. They are under way, and you will hear about them soon," said the message, which was aired on Arabic-language network Al-Jazeera Thursday.

CNN could not immediately confirm that the voice in the poor-quality audiotape was that of bin Laden.

http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/01/19/binladen.tape/index.html
 
<font size="6"><center>Bin Laden Warns of Attacks, Offers Truce</font size></center>

Jan 19, 10:56 AM (ET)
Associated Press
By LEE KEATH

CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - Al-Jazeera on Thursday broadcast portions of an audiotape purportedly from Osama bin Laden, saying al-Qaida is making preparations for attacks in the United States but offering a possible truce to rebuild Iraq and Afghanistan.

The voice on the tape said heightened security in the United States is not the reason there have been no attacks there since the Sept. 11, 2001, suicide hijackings.

Instead, the reason is "because there are operations that need preparations," he said.

"The delay in similar operations happening in America has not been because of failure to break through your security measures. But the operations are happening in Baghdad and you will see them here at home the minute they are through (with preparations), with God's permission," he said.

"We do not mind offering you a long-term truce with fair conditions that we adhere to," he said. "We are a nation that God has forbidden to lie and cheat. So both sides can enjoy security and stability under this truce so we can build Iraq and Afghanistan, which have been destroyed in this war. There is no shame in this solution, which prevents the wasting of billions of dollars that have gone to those with influence and merchants of war in America."​

The speaker did not give conditions for a truce in the excerpts aired by Al-Jazeera.

There was no immediate confirmation of the tape's authenticity, although the voice resembled that of bin Laden's in previous messages.

It has been more than a year since the last confirmed message from bin Laden - the longest period without a video or audiotape from the al-Qaida leader. The last audiotape purported to be from bin Laden was broadcast in December 2004 by Al-Jazeera. In that recording, he endorsed Abu-Musab al-Zarqawi as his deputy in Iraq and called for a boycott of Iraqi elections.

Al-Jazeera's editor-in-chief Ahmed al-Sheik would not comment on when or where the tape was received. He said the full tape was 10 minutes long. The station aired four excerpts with what it "considered newsworthy," he said, but would not say what was on the remainder.

Al-Sheik said the tape seemed to have been made "recently" but would not saw what led him to that conclusion.

http://apnews1.iwon.com//article/20060119/D8F7RDH00.html?PG=home&SEC=news
 
i guess dead terrorist do tell tales and make videos..after proofs over proofs of this muthafkr's death, it is to some folks advantage to keep this fukr alive..lawd have mercy. 'big game' :lol:
 
<font size="4">
STRATFOR
Geopolitical Diary: Friday, Jan. 20, 2006

The Bin Laden Tape</font size>

Al Jazeera aired a new audiotape attributed to Osama bin Laden on Thursday. The speaker in the tape appears to address the American people, saying it is not post-9/11 security measures that have prevented follow-on attacks in the United States and threatening that more will be carried out. He also notes, however, that polls show the Americans do not support the war in Iraq and suggests the possibility of a long-term truce, provided the Americans withdraw their forces and allow the Muslim world to rebuild Iraq and Afghanistan.

Intelligence agencies around the world are scrutinizing the tape carefully to determine whether it is authentic, when it was created and any hints as to where it might have been produced. Already, it is revealing a few clues. The first and most obvious is that bin Laden is quite alive -- at least as of the time the tape was made, which some of the comments made suggest might have been November or December 2005.

Second, there is the fact that bin Laden apparently thought it important enough to issue a tape, following a long public silence. For more than a year, there has been no word from bin Laden himself; rather, there have been a series of tapes from his deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri -- leading to some speculation that bin Laden might have been dead. The danger of issuing tapes, however (as may have been seen in the recent airstrike in Pakistan), is that they all leave a trail, and that trail can lead back to al Qaeda's hiding places. In other words, releasing a tape is a dangerous proposition, not to be undertaken lightly.

There are several reasons why bin Laden's tape, which apparently is authentic, might have been issued.
First, it could be an attempt to regain control over the jihadist movement. The conspicuous absence of bin Laden seems to have shifted funding and support toward Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who leads the jihadist movement in Iraq. Al-Zarqawi is seen as actively engaging the aggressor forces on a daily basis, while bin Laden waits secured somewhere in South or Central Asia, far from the fray. Stepping back into the spotlight, and claiming both responsibility for attacks in Europe and the potential to attack in the United States, returns bin Laden back to a higher status -- a leader whose power is not confined to the Muslim world but extends into the "heartland" of the enemy.

Bin Laden's truce offer, too, is a way to reinforce his legitimacy and control over the jihadist forces. There probably is no expectation on his part that the United States would actually agree to a truce. But no one can offer a truce unless they can control their own forces and keep to their side of the bargain. This is the impression bin Laden could be attempting to create: that he retains control, that he is the man in charge.

Another interesting aspect of the tape is its timing, coming so soon after the strike in Pakistan that reportedly killed three mid-ranking al Qaeda operatives. The U.S. strike is believed to have been an attempt to hit al-Zawahiri himself. The release of an audiotape featuring bin Laden's voice, then, could be intended as reassurance to supporters that al Qaeda's top leadership remains intact and that the United States is not capable of taking out the leaders.

This is not to say the tape was actually produced in response to the strike -- al Qaeda has not shown the ability to make and release a tape that quickly, and the risk of recording and delivering a new tape would be too great after the apparent near-miss for al-Zawahiri. Rather, the recording was made prior to the airstrike but broadcast afterward. This, then, raises another question: When did the tape begin its trip to Al Jazeera's offices?

And this may be the real mystery. What is the route that such tapes take? How long does it take to deliver them? How are they produced? What risks are entailed in delivery -- both for those who carry the tapes and for those who make them? And what is the real shape of the relationship between the tape makers and Al Jazeera? Knowing this could yield significant insights into the mindset of bin Laden and the al Qaeda organization. If the tape's journey was only a matter of a few days -- beginning its trek to Al Jazeera after the Pakistan bombings -- it would mean something different than if the tape was already en route before the Pakistan attack.​

There is one more significant element to the tape: the threat of attacks in the United States. It would make little sense to publicly warn of an imminent attack, however, if an attack is truly imminent -- doing so only raises the readiness and defense levels of the potential target. Thus, the only concrete conclusion that can be drawn from Thursday's revelations is that someone has decided it is important to demonstrate that bin Laden is alive.
 
The fact is politicians tell you that the American people don't believe this is anything more than George Bush making this shit up to get support for his war. I guess in time, we'll see who is right.

-VG
 
<font size="5"><center>The Bin Laden Tape:
Inconsistencies and Revelations</font size></center>


STRATFOR
Intelligence Brief
January 20, 2006

The audiotape attributed to al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden that aired on Arab satellite channel Al Jazeera on Jan. 19 came amid several developments in the U.S. war against the jihadist network. The tape itself has several interesting points which, taken in the context of recent events, casts doubt on the reclusive al Qaeda chief's status.

The Jan. 19 bin Laden tape likely was released as a stopgap measure in an effort to keep up appearances in the aftermath of the Jan. 14 airstrike. It seems to have been edited together from different tapes rather than a single recording from one session. Generally, the latest tape is very shoddy work compared to al Qaeda's other releases and is inconsistent with what one might expect from a statement announcing bin Laden's resurfacing after such a long silence. No matter what his living conditions, bin Laden could be reasonably expected to produce a decent tape on a microcassette recorder. He also could be reasonably expected to use his first statement of any kind since the end of 2004 to make a point of ending the speculation that he is dead, in poor health, fading from the scene or running scared from Predator drones and their Hellfire missiles.

That the tape seems to have been spliced together leaves open the possibility that, for whatever reason, bin Laden is unable to read a script for 10 minutes without taking breaks. Indeed, that this is an audiotape and not a videotape -- which bin Laden's deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri seems to have favored over the past year -- suggests that the jihadist chief is ill and thus cannot be presented on camera. Of course, it also could be that al Qaeda had significant operational concerns about producing a videotape.

It takes al Qaeda approximately two weeks to produce tapes and take them down from the mountains to Al Jazeera's office in Islamabad. Unless it was spliced together in Al Jazeera's studios, the tape would have to have been made before the Jan. 13 airstrike -- probably Jan. 7-9 at the earliest.

In the tape, bin Laden simultaneously calls for a truce with the West while claiming that more attacks in the United States are imminent. Furthermore, when bin Laden offers a "truce" to the West, he does so with the knowledge that the Taliban controls the tempo of violence in Afghanistan, while the maverick al Qaeda leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi is in charge in Iraq; bin Laden is not likely in a position to make such offers. Besides, it is the Sunni nationalist insurgents, not the jihadists (who make up a minority of the fighters in Iraq), who say when the fighting starts and stops in Iraq.

The tape, which contains about 10 minutes of material, includes other inconsistencies that lead to questions about bin Laden's status. Although no mention was made of several important events in recent months, such as elections in Iraq in December and in Afghanistan in October, bin Laden does refer to a report that came out in November which claimed that U.S. President George W. Bush told British Prime Minister Tony Blair that he would like to bomb Al Jazeera's headquarters. This means bin Laden was alive in November.

However, there is no way to confirm whether bin Laden is actually alive -- or in control of anything more than a microcassette recorder. In any case, the offer of the truce -- along with the usual threats of an impending attack against the United States -- indicate a reactive and defensive posture on the part of the militant Islamist group.

.
 
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Web Exclusive | World

<font size="6"><center>Bin Laden Reclaims Top Billing</font size>
<font size="4">A new audiotape may be designed to tell the West
it has more to fear than Zarqawi and Ahmadinejad</font size></center>

By TONY KARON
Posted Thursday, Jan. 19, 2006

Osama bin Laden's latest message is most notable for the long silence that preceded it—the audiotape broadcast Thursday on al-Jazeera is the Qaeda leader's first direct communication with his public in a little over a year. The voice on the tape, which the CIA has confirmed is Bin Laden's, addresses himself to the United States, warning that new attacks on U.S. soil are "in the planning stages," but offers a truce predicated on U.S. withdrawal from Iraq and Afghanistan. "It is obvious now that Bush has been misleading the people," says the voice on the tape. "It is better for you not to fight the Muslims on their territory and we offer a long-term truce."

The message—relatively "moderate" by jihadist standards, in that it appeared to stake out a hypothetical negotiating position and the prospect of coexistence with the U.S. at the same time as warning of new violence—was notable less for its content than for the fact that it was released at all. Despite directly addressing Americans, its primary purpose may nonetheless be to remind Arab and Muslim audiences of his existence, and to reiterate his claim to primacy among the jihadists. Bin Laden last message was released in December 2004, although the movement's No. 2, Ayman al-Zawahiri, has continued to release occasional videotaped missives from his hideout in the wilds of western Pakistan. (Zawahiri's decision to pass up a dinner invitation last Friday appears to have spared him from a missile strike on a remote mountain village, where Pakistani intelligence officials say four other Qaeda operatives were killed.) But in the year of Bin Laden's silence, he has begun to be supplanted as the media face of global jihad by Musab al-Zarqawi, whose grisly exploits in Iraq grab headlines week after week. Not only that, Zarqawi may even be running operations abroad—his Iraq-based Qaeda affiliate is suspected of mounting last November's terror attacks on hotels in Jordan, as well as sending operatives on recruiting and fundraising missions in Europe—and his theater of operations has, as Bin Laden acknowledged in his message, become the global magnet for jihadists seeking battlefield experience (in the way that Afghanistan was in the 1980s).

Although Zarqawi two years ago swore an oath of loyalty to Bin Laden, he is believed previously to have had something of a competitive relationship with the al-Qaeda leadership. And the public statements attributed to Zarqawi and those of Ayman al-Zawahiri have been noticeably at odds over questions of beheading kidnap victims and of wanton violence against Shiite Muslims. Zarqawi may have embraced the Qaeda brand with Bin Laden as its figurehead, but his essentially autonomous field operation in Iraq has become the movement's center of gravity.

The other radical Islamist competitor for the mantle of U.S. Public Enemy No. 1 has lately been Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who has garnered attention for his bristling hostility to the U.S. and his threat to wipe out Israel, all in the context of his defiance of the West over Iran's nuclear program. The attention paid to Zarqawi and Ahmadinejad has moved Bin Laden to the margins of Western news coverage, but his strategy for building al-Qaeda, as the single umbrella organization of global jihad, with himself as its "Sheikh," has been premised on his being recognized among the radically inclined Muslim youth as America's most feared enemy. So, whether or not it is followed up by any of the actions it threatens, Thursday's taped message has at least succeeded in, however briefly, restoring Bin Laden to what he imagines is his rightful place in the headlines.

http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1150581,00.html
 
'Spying? Torture? Illegal airstrikes? SHUT UP and hate Bin Laden.

The NeoCon use of Osama Bin Laden as a tool of fear and control is a tried and tested method whenever the going gets tough. It's predictable and it's tiresome, but the masses buy it every time and that's why he has reappeared once again.'
-culled from Steve Watson's piece on prisonplanet..

n this works EVERY TIME..damn. :smh:
 
carlitos said:
'Spying? Torture? Illegal airstrikes? SHUT UP and hate Bin Laden.

The NeoCon use of Osama Bin Laden as a tool of fear and control is a tried and tested method whenever the going gets tough. It's predictable and it's tiresome, but the masses buy it every time and that's why he has reappeared once again.'
-culled from Steve Watson's piece on prisonplanet..

n this works EVERY TIME..damn. :smh:
And, its always good to bundle events and forge them into a common theme, irrespective of their actual relationship. It makes it easy to arrive at misconclusions and much of the masses buy it every time.

QueEx
 
QueEx said:
And, its always good to bundle events and forge them into a common theme, irrespective of their actual relationship. It makes it easy to arrive at misconclusions and much of the masses buy it every time.

QueEx

true, sounds like something bill o'rielly said, to confuse the masses even more..
 
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