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Gulf, Israel next targets, says Zawahri
CAIRO (Egypt)—Osama bin Laden's deputy warned that Persian Gulf
countries and Israel would be al-Qaida's next targets, according to a
new videotape aired by Arab broadcaster Al-Jazeera on Monday, the fifth
anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks.
Ayman al-Zawahri also accused the governments of Egypt, Jordan and Saudi
Arabia of supporting Israel's war against Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Addressing the West, the al-Qaida No. 2 said, "You should not waste your
time in reinforcing your troops in Iraq and Afghanistan because their
fate is doomed ... Instead, you have to reinforce your troops in two
regions. First is the Gulf, where you would be thrown out ... and second
is Israel."
He also condemned the U.N. peacekeeping force now deploying in Lebanon
under terms set out in a cease-fire resolution.
"What is so terrible in this resolution ... is that it approves the
existence of the Jewish state and isolates our mujahedeen in Palestine
from Muslims in Lebanon," he said in excerpts of the video aired on Al-Jazeera
television.
"This is consecrated by the presence of international troops who are
hostile to Islam," he said. "Anyone who accepts this resolution means
that he accepts all these catastrophes."
In other portions of the tape aired by CNN earlier Monday, al-Zawahri
urged Muslims to intensify their resistance against the United States
and warned in general terms of new terror strikes.
The video was not on any of the militant Web sites that usually carry
messages and videos from al-Zawahri and other al-Qaida figures. As-Sahab,
the terror network's media arm, had posted notices late Sunday that the
video would be available.
It was the latest in a flurry of al-Qaida videos released ahead of the
anniversary. But unlike the others, it appeared to be new with
references to Israel's bombardment of Lebanon this summer and the
capture of Israeli soldiers by Hezbollah and Palestinian militants in
Gaza.
"You gave us every legitimacy and every opportunity to continue fighting
you," said al-Zawahri, addressing the United States. "You should worry
about your presence in the (Persian) Gulf, and the second place you
should worry about is Israel."
The video shows the Egyptian-born al-Zawahri dressed in white and seated
in front of a wall of bookshelves.
"Your leaders are hiding from you the true extent of the disaster," he
said. "And the days are pregnant and giving birth to new events, with
Allah's permission and guidance."
Al-Zawahri criticized the West for supplying Israel with weapons, and he
called on the Islamic world "to rush with everything at its disposal to
the aid of its Muslim brothers in Lebanon and Gaza."
Late Sunday, another video posted on the Internet, purportedly by al-Qaida,
showed previously unseen footage of a smiling bin Laden and other
commanders in a mountain camp apparently planning the Sept. 11 attacks
on the United States.
That tape's documentary-like retrospective of the five years since the
attacks was unusually long — 91 minutes, split into two segments — and
sophisticated in its production quality, compared with previous al-Qaida
videos. The footage — with English subtitles — surfaced on the eve of
the fifth anniversary of the attacks, on a Web site that frequently airs
messages from bin Laden's terror network.
"Planning for Sept. 11 did not take place behind computer monitors or
radar screens, nor inside military command and control centers, but was
surrounded with divine protection in an atmosphere brimming with
brotherliness ... and love for sacrificing life," an unidentified
narrator said.
The video released Sunday, stamped with the emblem of As-Sahab, al-Qaida's
media branch, was titled "Knowledge is For Acting Upon" and subtitled
"The Manhattan Raid."
It showed the al-Qaida leader meeting with colleagues in a mountain camp
believed to be in Afghanistan, as well as video clips of Vice President
Dick Cheney defending his old job at the oil company Halliburton, and
President Bush at his inauguration. Other scenes show training at the
camp, with masked militants doing martial arts kicks and practicing
hiding and pulling out knives.
It included the last testament of two of the Sept. 11 hijackers, Wail
al-Shehri and Hamza al-Ghamdi, and showed bin Laden strolling in the
camp, greeting followers.
"Among the devout group which responded to the order of Allah and order
of his messenger were the heroes of Sept. 11, who wrote with the ink of
their blood the greatest pages of modern history," the narrator said,
referring to the hijackers who flew planes into the Pentagon and World
Trade Center.
Al-Shehri and al-Ghamdi were each shown speaking to the camera, their
image superimposed over background pictures of the crumbling World Trade
Center towers and the burning Pentagon, as well as a model of a
passenger jet.
They both spoke of how Muslims must stand up to fight back against the
West.
"If we are content with being humiliated and inclined to comfort, the
tooth of the enemy will stretch from Jerusalem to Mecca, and then
everyone will regret on a day when regret is of no use," al-Ghamdi said.
The two videotaped final statements had never been seen before.
Al-Shehri was on American Flight 11, which was the first to hit the
World Trade Center. Al-Ghamdi was on United Flight 175, which hit the
second tower.
In the footage, bi0n Laden wore a dark robe and white headdress, and was
shown sitting alongside his former lieutenant Mohammed Atef and Ramzi
Binalshibh, another suspected planner of the Sept. 11 attacks.
Atef, also known as Abu Hafs al-Masri, was killed by a U.S. airstrike on
Afghanistan in 2001. Binalshibh was captured four years ago in Pakistan
and is currently in U.S. custody, and last week Bush announced plans to
put him on military trial.
Bin Laden was shown expressing his appreciation for the Taliban, the
Islamic regime that ran Afghanistan and gave refuge to al-Qaida until
the U.S.-led invasion toppled them in late 2001.
The video showed events up to 10 years before the Sept. 11 attacks —
U.S. troops in Saudi Arabia during the 1991 Gulf War and bin Laden
preaching to followers after the 1998 attacks on U.S. embassies in Kenya
and Sudan. It also showed events afterward including a man in an orange
jumpsuit at the U.S. prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
It was unclear when the tape was made, or how soon before the Sept. 11
attacks the footage of bin Laden was recorded.—Agencies |