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Friday, May 4, 2012

Osama bin Laden, revealed 17 letters

The Counterterrorism Center of the Academy West Point, U.S. Army, today released 17 of the nearly 6,000 documents seized in May 2011, soldiers of special forces killed the leader of al Qaeda in their home in Abbottabad (Pakistan ). The documents, found in the residence to five computers, dozens of "hard disks" and more hundred archives show that bin Laden until his death continued to plan new terror attacks against U.S. large scale. Some reveal that Bin Laden understood that the actions of groups like Al Qaeda in Iraq discredited the organization led by network the killings of civilians and the televised beheading of captives. Bin Laden, 54 years old when he was killed soldiers of the unit of elite SEALS U.S. Navy, had fled from Afghanistan to Pakistan in December 2001, three months after the terrorist attacks of Al Qaeda in New York and Washington that left more than 3,000 people killed and injured. The leader of the terrorist organization Al-Qaeda were divided on the strategy, tactics, and the future of the movement. This conclusion suggests documents in the storming of the bin store have been found property. A total of 6,000 documents in Pakistani hideout of Al-Qaeda leaders on 2 Discovered in May 2011. 17 of them were on Thursday by the " Center for Combating Terrorism published "The Military Academy at West Point. The 175-page document (about 200 pages in English translation) also includes correspondence with other high-ranking Al Qaeda members, many of which bear the stamp of Bin Laden.
Attack on Obama and Petraeus
In an undated and unsigned letter is thought even by a change in the name of Al-Qaeda. The author proposes several names with a stronger Islamic terms in order to strengthen the identification of Muslims with the terrorist network. How U.S. media reported earlier, the records also show that the Al-Qaeda leader to assassinate U.S. President Obama was considering. Vice-President Joe Biden, said Bin Laden was on the presidency "completely unprepared" and the United States would automatically fall into a state of crisis.Even General David Petraeus, former commander of international forces in Afghanistan, was a potential target."The death of Petraeus would have serious effects on the course of the war," said bin Laden.
Arab spring a "colossal event"
The Arab Spring called the terror chief in a letter dated April 2011, a "colossal event" in the recent history of the Muslims.But he warned against "half measures", such as to engage in the new democratic system and to form political parties. A media campaign should call Muslims who have not gone against their rulers on the road to to revolt.In Afghanistan, I wanted to continue charging the fight against the Americans. He believed that the war in the Hindu Kush would weaken the United States so much that the West would no longer be able to prevent revolutions in other countries of the Islamic world and to support Arab dictators.
Dissatisfied with offshoots
According to the 64-page summary of the documents , there were heated discussions about the regional offshoot Al-Qaeda's Bin Laden and other members of the terrorist organization. The Al-Qaeda boss complained, inter alia, the incompetence of the local stores. Above all, the Iraqi offshoot him to have committed too many errors. The American al Qaeda member Adam Gadahn urged Bin Laden even to distance themselves from the Iraqi terrorists. The leader of the Yemeni arm of Al-Qaeda (AQAP) suggested bin Laden, not to pursue expansion plans and to establish an Islamic emirate in the south not the Arabian Peninsula. A piece of advice that the Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula ignored - the group now controls parts of southern Yemen.Critical saw the Al-Qaeda militant Somali Islamist leader and the al-Shabaab movement. Bin Laden saw little need for an alliance with the opinion of his ill-organized group. After the death of bin Laden, the transaction was however a reality. Al-Shabaab announced in early 2012 their alliance with al-Qaeda.
Concern over drone attacks
In the 17 published documents, bin Laden also shows concern over U.S. drone attacks on suspected Al-Qaeda positions in Pakistan (more on the interactive map ). For theCNN -terrorism expert Peter Bergen tended bin storeincreasingly to take care of every little thing - a sign of hisdesperate attempt to take control of the Al-Qaeda to retain and continue to "significantly" to be . He had fallen into a situation allies in North Africa, to plant trees so they could hide in case of drone and other attacks including. Overall, the analyst said, reflected the increasing isolation of the paper binLaden in the six years, against which he had been hiding in Pakistan. 

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