Tag Archives: Al-Qaeda

Noam Chomsky: My Reaction to Osama bin Laden’s Death May 6, 2011

We might ask ourselves how we would be reacting if Iraqi commandos landed at George W. Bush’s compound, assassinated him, and dumped his body in the Atlantic.

By Noam Chomsky

It’s increasingly clear that the operation was a planned assassination, multiply violating elementary norms of international law. There appears to have been no attempt to apprehend the unarmed victim, as presumably could have been done by 80 commandos facing virtually no opposition—except, they claim, from his wife, who lunged towards them. In societies that profess some respect for law, suspects are apprehended and brought to fair trial. I stress “suspects.”

In April 2002, the head of the FBI, Robert Mueller, informed the press that after the most intensive investigation in history, the FBI could say no more than that it “believed” that the plot was hatched in Afghanistan, though implemented in the UAE and Germany.

What they only believed in April 2002, they obviously didn’t know 8 months earlier, when Washington dismissed tentative offers by the Taliban (how serious, we do not know, because they were instantly dismissed) to extradite bin Laden if they were presented with evidence—which, as we soon learned, Washington didn’t have. Thus Obama was simply lying when he said, in his White House statement, that “we quickly learned that the 9/11 attacks were carried out by al Qaeda.”

Nothing serious has been provided since. There is much talk of bin Laden’s “confession,” but that is rather like my confession that I won the Boston Marathon. He boasted of what he regarded as a great achievement. Continue reading

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Cockburn: Obama’s lies on Bin Laden, et al

CounterPunch Diary, Alexander Cockburn: “A Volcano of Lies” –  Barack Obama, who pledged to restore ethical honor to the White House after the Bush years, is now burying himself under an active volcano of lies, mostly but not exclusively concerning the assassination of Osama bin Laden.

There was scarcely a sentence in the President’s Sunday night address, or in the subsequent briefing by John Brennan, his chief counter-terrorism coordinator, that has not been subsequently retracted by CIA director Leon Panetta or the White House press spokesman, Jay Carney, or by various documentary records. Continue reading

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Ray McGovern: Is the killing of Bin Laden part of a new US policy of murder?

Consortium News: “What Has Bin Laden’s Killing Wrought?” – Pakistani police and locals gather outside the compound where Osama bin Laden was killed in Abbottabad, Pakistan, May 5, 2011. The head of Pakistan’s Army, Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, said that he would not tolerate a repeat of the American covert operation that killed Bin Laden. (Photo: Warrick Page / The New York Times)

As America’s morbid celebrations over the killing of Osama bin Laden begin to fade, we are left with a new landscape of risks – and opportunities – created by his slaying at the hands of a U.S. Special Forces team at a compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan.

The range of those future prospects could be found in Wednesday’s Washington Post. On the hopeful side, a front-page article reported that the Obama administration was following up bin Laden’s death with accelerated peace talks in Afghanistan. On a darker note, a Post editorial hailed bin Laden’s slaying as a model for “targeting” Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi and his sons.

So, while there is the possibility that the United States might finally begin to wind down a near-decade-long war in Afghanistan, there is the countervailing prospect of the United States consolidating an official policy of assassination and violence as the way to impose Washington’s will on the Muslim world. Continue reading

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Muslim scholars: Bin Laden’s burial at sea violated Islamic tradition, was a strategic mistake bound to stoke rage

Associated Press, HAMZA HENDAWI: “Islamic scholars criticize bin Laden’s sea burial” – Muslim clerics said Monday that Osama bin Laden’s burial at sea was a violation of Islamic tradition that may further provoke militant calls for revenge attacks against American targets.

Although there appears to be some room for debate over the burial — as with many issues within the faith — a wide range of senior Islamic scholars interpreted it as a humiliating disregard for the standard Muslim practice of placing the body in a grave with the head pointed toward the holy city of Mecca.

Sea burials can be allowed, they said, but only in special cases where the death occurred aboard a ship.

Bin Laden’s burial at sea “runs contrary to the principles of Islamic laws, religious values and humanitarian customs,” said Sheik Ahmed al-Tayeb, the grand Imam of Cairo’s al-Azhar mosque, Sunni Islam’s highest seat of learning. Continue reading

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Information and analysis on Bin Laden missing from mainstream media

(One of the best sources for valuable articles on this and other topics is CounterPunch.)

Gary Leupp
Why I Don’t Feel Much About Osama’s Death

Israel Shamir
US Knew Where Osama Was Since 2005 (posted below)

Shaukat Qadir
The Long Road to Abbotabad: Osama and Al Qaeda

Randall Amster
Obama Bags Osama: Now What?

David Swanson
Killing Osama, Resolving Nothing

Video from BBC documentary: Author says Al-Qaeda myth was manufactured from the BBC documentary, “The Power of Nightmares,” produced by Adam Curtis

Eileen Fleming
Back to bin Laden, Bob Dylan, U2 and THAT DAY we call 9/11

Juan Cole: Bin Laden, the Cold War, Arab Dictators, Palestine… (posted below)

John Whitbeck
Bin Laden assassination: Where is the photographic evidence? (posted below)

Phyllis Bennis
The killing of Bin Laden: Justice or Vengeance? (posted below)

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Juan Cole: Bin Laden, the Cold War, Arab Dictators, Palestine…

Informed Comment, Juan Cole: “Bin Laden and the end of Al-Qaeda – …..The US story that the Pakistanis were not given prior notice of the operation is contradicted by the Pakistani news channel Geo, which says that Pakistani troops and plainsclothesmen helped cordon off the compound in Abbotabad. CNN is pointing out that US helicopters could not have flown so far into Pakistan from Afghanistan without tripping Pakistani radar. My guess is that the US agreed to shield the government of Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and President Asaf Ali Zardari from al-Qaeda reprisals by putting out the story that the operation against Bin Laden was solely a US one. And it may be that suspect elements of the Pakistani elite, such as the Inter-Services Intelligence, were kept out the the loop because it was feared they might have ties to Bin Laden and might tip him off.

Usama Bin Laden was a violent product of the Cold War and the Age of Dictators in the Greater Middle East. Continue reading

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Bin Laden assassination: Where is the photographic evidence?

John Whitbeck – Further to my message of last night (below), I have just seen on BBC World News a video clip from remarks delivered last night by President Obama before a White House dinner for members of Congress in which he triggered a bipartisan standing ovation by referring to an “operation that resulted in the capture and death of Osama bin Laden”.

The president appeared, as usual, to be choosing his words with care as he confirmed, even more explicitly than in his speech the prior night, that Bin Laden was captured before being killed.

One must give the president credit for honesty, particularly since, if the “War on Terror” were a real war, summary executions of captured persons are indisputable war crimes.

Assuming (as I am inclined to do, particularly in light of the president’s apparent honesty on the delicate matter referred to above) that the president has been told that Osama bin Laden was among those killed in one of the bloodstained bedrooms in Abbottabad and that it is unlikely that the uniformed military would dare to lie to him in this regard, I remain astonished that no supporting evidence has yet been made public. It is inconceivable that no pictures of his body were taken before it was consigned to the seas. Failure to provide any evidence on this most fundamental aspect of that commando attack cannot logically be explained if Bin Laden was truly among the dead.

Of course, it is possible that only “conspiracy theorists” do not believe without question everything that the U.S. Government says and are troubled by issues like evidence or the lack thereof. After all, when the U.S. Government issued its remarkably rapid explanation of the 9/11 events, Secretary of State Colin Powell promised that the evidence on which this explanation was based would be released shortly. Perhaps because the explanation was almost universally accepted without question, the promised evidence was never released. Its release may simply have been deemed unnecessary in these circumstances. In any event, the “9/11 Commission” accepted the explanation as “given” in its terms of reference and dealt with other issues.

This is one of the reasons why many people (myself included) have been eager to see a real trial of one of the alleged “9/11 conspirators” (not simply a guilty plea by someone whose mind has been reduced to mush by water-boarding or other “enhanced interrogation techniques”) at which the “official conspiracy theory” was required to be laid out and proved by clear and convincing evidence. It would be a great comfort to the American people — and particularly to those whose attention to the evidence and analyses developed and published in recent years has left them doubtful and deeply troubled — to know that their government has been honest with them about the “day that changed the world” — or at least changed America’s relationship with the world.

Just possibly, this may also be why we have not yet seen such a trial and are unlikely to do so — and one of the reasons why Osama bin Laden was, by the president’s own admission, summarily executed after being captured.

TO: Distinguished Recipients
FM: John Whitbeck

In the article transmitted below, Phyllis Bennis is right to italicize “After” in President Obama’s statement “After a firefight, they killed Osama bin Laden”, but the conclusion which I immediately drew from the choice of that word is that Obama, as a highly intelligent lawyer who chooses his words carefully, could (and would) have said “during a firefight” if, indeed, the reported single bullet to the head had been inflicted during a firefight. By choosing the word “after”, Obama was admitting (at least prior to any subsequent reconsideration of the implications) that Bin Laden was captured (presumably well within the capabilities of 40 super-trained special operations forces, of whom he assured the American people none were harmed during the operation, attacking someone in his bedroom at night) and, subsequently, summarily executed. (In its most recent reporting, AL-JAZEERA ENGLISH has used the phrase “captured and killed”.)

Most Americans clearly no longer have any problem with their government’s extra-judicially assassinating or summarily executing “bad guys”, but the current official story, if true, does represent a further, probably inevitable distancing of the United States government from respect for the “rule of law” which it continues to preach to others. (In light of all the problems experienced with bringing lesser lights in Al-Qaeda to trial — or even to a military commission — it is inconceivable that the U.S. Government would have wished to capture Bin Laden, keep him alive and face the nightmare of custody and a potential trial.)

Perhaps the U.S. government will in the coming days present some actual evidence that Osama Bin Laden was killed last night in Abbottabad, but it is noteworthy that NO EVIDENCE WHATSOEVER has been produced so far and that the government seemed in an ungodly hurry to toss the best possible evidence (the alleged body) over the edge of one of its aircraft carriers and into the irretrievable deep.

When the Bolivian military killed Che Guevara, they invited journalists to view and photograph the body so as to leave doubt that Che was indeed dead. If the Americans actually had Bin Laden’s body in their custody, one would have thought that they would have had every conceivable incentive to do something similar before disposing of it.

In any event, I will try to be more optimistic than Phyllis regarding the potential impact of the announcement of Bin Laden’s death on America’s ongoing post-9/11 wars in the Muslim world. Last night’s dancing in the streets of American cities and celebratory chants of “USA! USA!” raise the hope that the belief that Bin Laden is dead and that “We got him!” may finally constitute a cathartic moment, satiating the lust for vengeance against Muslims generally among a clearly traumatized people and making them less willing to countenance spending further hundreds of billions of dollars killing yet more Muslims to no good purpose (indeed, counterproductively) with no end in sight.

Whatever happened (or did not happen) last night, that would be an excellent result for the world.

[Bennis article]

*
John V. Whitbeck is an American international lawyer now living in France. A graduate of Harvard College and its Law School. Since 1988 his articles on behalf of Middle East peace have been published more than 450 times in more than 70 Arab, Israeli, and international newspapers, magazines, journals and books. He is on the Board of Directors of the Council for the National Interest.

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The killing of Bin Laden: Justice or Vengeance?

IPS, Phyllis Bennis – In the midst of the Arab Spring, which directly rejects al-Qaeda-style small-group violence in favor of mass-based, society-wide mobilization and non-violent protest to challenge dictatorship and corruption, does the killing of Osama bin Laden represent ultimate justice, or even an end to the “unfinished business” of 9/11?

[See related story: Where is the photographic evidence?]

[Amman, Jordan] — U.S. agents killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan, apparently without cooperation from the government in Islamabad. The al-Qaeda leader was responsible for great suffering; I do not mourn his death. But every action has causes and consequences, and in the current moment all are dangerous. It’s unlikely that bin Laden’s killing will have much impact on the already weakened capacity of al-Qaeda, which is widely believed to be made up of only a couple hundred fighters between Afghanistan and Pakistan — though its effect on other terrorist forces is uncertain. Pakistan itself may pay a particularly high price.

As President Barack Obama described it, “After a firefight, they killed Osama bin Laden.” Assuming that was indeed the case, this raid reflects the brutal reality of the deadly wars in Afghanistan and Iraq that preceded it and that continue today, 10 years later — it wasn’t about bringing anyone to justice, it was about vengeance. Continue reading

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