[iwar] [fc:Bin-Laden-issued-warning-three-weeks-ago,-says-editor]

From: Fred Cohen (fc@all.net)
Date: 2001-09-12 19:27:18


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From: Fred Cohen <fc@all.net>
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Date: Wed, 12 Sep 2001 19:27:18 -0700 (PDT)
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Subject: [iwar] [fc:Bin-Laden-issued-warning-three-weeks-ago,-says-editor]
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Bin Laden issued warning three weeks ago, says editor
09/12/2001 South China Morning Post

. Saudi dissident Osama bin Laden warned three weeks ago that he and his
followers would carry out an unprecedented attack on the US for its support
of Israel, an Arab journalist with access to him said yesterday.

Editor of the London-based al-Quds al-Arabi newspaper, Abdel-Bari Atwan,
said Islamic fundamentalists led by bin Laden were "almost certainly" behind
the attack. "It is most likely the work of Islamic fundamentalists. Osama
bin Laden warned three weeks ago that he would attack American interests in
an unprecedented attack, a very big one," he said.

"We received information that he planned very, very big attacks against
American interests. We received several warnings like this. We did not take
it so seriously, preferring to see what would happen before reporting it."

Atwan has interviewed bin Laden, one of America's most wanted men, and
maintains close contacts with his followers. Bin Laden was certainly the
name on the lips of Americans from the shell-shocked streets of Manhattan to
the White House situation room as people grappled with one question - who
could be responsible for the most horrific terrorist attack in US history?

As the White House was evacuated, word leaked out that the Islamic
fundamentalist was the number one suspect.

Bin Laden has been under constant watch by America's giant intelligence
network - from CIA agents probing his latest hiding place to National
Security Agency computers scanning global communications for key words
related to his group.

"Destroying the World Trade Centre with hijacked aircraft and driving planes
into the Pentagon - that sound's like bin Laden's ultimate fantasy," one
official in the administration of President George W. Bush said.

"The sweep and the scale of what has been attempted rules out many fringe
groups. This man was bent on creating the bloodiest havoc possible and he
may have finally achieved it."

The State Department has issued periodic warnings for American's overseas as
rumours and intelligence point to unspecified attacks. The most recent came
last month, but initial reports suggested the US authorities had nothing
pointing to such an orchestrated and devastating attack. For many Americans,
simultaneous strikes on New York and downtown Washington amount to their
worst fears. 

From several mountain hideouts in southern Afghanistan, bin Laden runs
al-Qaeda, one of the world's most feared terrorist organisations. He is
wanted by a US court for masterminding the bombing in 1998 of two US
embassies in East Africa in which 224 people died.

In August 1996 he issued a "declaration of war" against the US, because of
what he saw as its position as a secular superpower and because of the
presence of US troops in Saudi Arabia.

Born in Jeddah in 1955, bin Laden is the son of a construction magnate. In
the 1980s he used his inherited wealth to run the "Services Office", which
provided fighters and money for Afghanistan's war against Soviet occupation.

Bin Laden is believed to be responsible for an attempted assassination
attack on Sunday against Ahmad Shah Masood, Afghanistan's most senior
opposition commander and the only force still resisting the Taleban.

Taleban leaders have refused to hand bin Laden over for trial but insist he
cannot command an international terrorist organisation from his hideouts.
Taleban Information Minister Maulvi Qudratullah Jamal has described him as a
"good man" who "doesn't want to harm anyone".

Few Western analysts agree. 

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