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War, War, War See other War, War, War Articles Title: The Arab 'Che Guevera' Is Dead But His Ideas Live On Two years ago this week, US special forces shot and killed Osama bin Laden, the worlds most wanted man. American TV is filled with chest-thumping and flag-waving about how bin Laden was hunted down and executed. For most Americans, bin Laden was the acme of evil and author of the 9/11 attacks that killed 3,000 people. Good riddance. Hunting "bad guys" is a venerable American tradition from the days of the Wild West and the Roaring 20s: Billy the Kid, Pancho Villa, Bonnie and Clyde, John Dillinger. The TV program "Americas Most Wanted" remains one of the nations most popular programs. Osama bin Laden was the ultimate most wanted. However, this simplistic "good guys v. bad guys" tale remains troubled by the facts. Why, for example, was a clearly retired bin Laden living without bodyguards in a villa in Abbottabad, Pakistan? Was he really found by the CIAs patient detective work, or betrayed for the $25 million put on his head by Washington? Did Pakistan really not know Osama was in Abbotabad, and hours drive from its capital, Islamabad? Why was bin Laden executed gangland style and not brought to stand proper trial in New York City? A trial could have finally determined if he was in truth the author of 9/11, as alleged by the US government and media. If not, who was? Circumstantial evidence regarding 9/11 points to bin Laden. But he always denied responsibility for the attacks, though he applauded them after the fact. The Afghan Communists produced fakes tapes supposedly showing bin Laden demonstrating how the attacks were made. These fakes tapes ran widely on US TV. The 9/11 attacks were planned in Hamburg, Germany and, apparently, Madrid, Spain, not by al-Qaida in Afghanistan, as the US claimed. The planners and executors of the attacks were mostly Saudis, not Afghans. After the attack, US Secretary of State Colin Powell demanded Afghanistans Taliban government hand over bin Laden. Taliban refused to do so without a proper extradition request detailing bin Ladens involvement in 9/11. Powell promised to issue a White Paper about bin Ladens guilt, but never did so. Why? Probably because the US could not assemble a convincing case. US forces invaded Afghanistan and began their hunt for the elusive bin Laden. The Bush administration, caught sleeping on guard duty, needed a target for Americas fury over 9/11: Afghanistan, Taliban (which had nothing to do with 9/11), bin Laden and his al-Qaida organization were blamed. Al-Qaida was wildly exaggerated by western governments and media into a nefarious worldwide network of fanatical Islamic conspirators worthy of Dr. Fu Manchu. I was in Afghanistan and Pakistan at the birth of al-Qaida and spent many hours with its founder, Sheik Abdullah Azzam, bin Ladens mentor. Al-Qaida was a rest house for jihadists going to fight in Afghanistan; it never had more than a few hundred members. Al-Qaida was not run by CIA, but the US planned to use bin Ladens men against Muslim regions of western China in the event of a US-China war. Al-Qaidas so-called "terrorist training camps" in Afghanistan were in fact mostly run by Pakistani intelligence to train guerillas for use in Indian-ruled Kashmir. Al-Qaida was dedicated to battling Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, the Afghan Communists, and KGB agents of influence, warlords Ahmad Massoud and Rashid Dostam. In 2010, then CIA chief Leon Panetta admitted there may only be 25-50 al-Qaida members in Afghanistan. But the convenient myth of al-Qaida continues. While America glories in killing bin Laden, many in the Muslim world still see him as an Arab Che Guevara, one man against the mighty US imperial order. Most Muslims disapproved of the 9/11 attacks, yet many felt a sneaking admiration for the Saudi firebrand whose goal was to drive western influence from the Muslim world. Osama bin Laden is dead, and discarded at sea in true pirate "dead men tell no tales" tradition. But the anti-western movement he began is alive and growing: al-Qaida was not an organic organization but a trans-national movement. Anti-western groups have sprung about across the Mideast, Africa, Central and South Asia. Many have adopted the al-Qaida brand name. That was bin Ladens plan. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Ada (#0)
Something is wrong with lewrockwell. I have seen The documentary "where in the world is osama bin laden." I know first hand the afganis hate the fuck outta osama . The blame him for bringing the wrath of the great satan upon them. So I am gonna have trouble believen Tim Osmans philosphies live on in the taliban. ______________________________________ Suspect all media / resist propaganda/Learn NLP
Perhaps because there was no outstanding arrest warrant for him? (And he died from renal failure years before)
The planners and executors of the attacks were mostly There. Much more better.
No mention whatsoever of Mossad. Typical Lew Rockwell and/or JBS.
Yes, I didn't read the SEAL report that detailed the presence of a dialysis machine in his compound when they allegedly whacked him. #6. To: X-15 (#5) A glaring omission. Of course it would have involved an inventory and photos of the supporting meds, filters, tools, etc., and their source labels and lot numbers, all of which could be used to prove that good old Uncle Yitzhak speaketh with a forked tongue. No, the story was for the non skeptical state worshipers. Nothing else could convince me or you and could have only undermined their phony account.
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