Friday, May 6, 2011

Al Qaeda confirms death of Bin Laden "Curse for the U.S., the revenge"

Al Qaeda confirms this: Osama Bin Laden is dead. The admission comes in a statement dated May 3, entitled 'You have lived as a good man, you died as a martyr'. The message, signed by the 'Directorate-General of Al Qaeda' was released today by the forum and taken over by jihadists monitoring site U.S.

Site. For the Taliban, the disappearance of Sheikh is a "curse" that will fall on "Americans and their allies" with new terrorist attacks. "Do not ever live in safety until our people in Palestine will not have security - threaten -. The soldiers of Islam, groups and individuals, will continue to operate without fatigue or boredom, without despair or surrender, without weakness or stagnation.

" The Blood of Bin Laden "does not go to waste." Al Qaeda also urged Pakistan to spread revolt and announced that an audio message of Sheikh recorded seven days before his death. "He refused to leave this world before sharing with the Islamic nation the joy aroused by the riots in the face of injustice and the unjust," reads the text.

In his message, Bin Laden expresses his congratulations and give advice to those who are fighting the Arab world. The sound, they know the Taliban, closes with a poem read by Sheikh and dedicated to the revolts in the Middle East and North Africa. Send inneggerĂ  to the 'pride expressed by the rioters, addressing the tyrants with the truth "and yet we read:" It depends only on the personal will of a dead slave or free man.

" In the eleven paragraphs of the statement would request that the bodies of other victims of the blitz that led to the death of Sheikh be handed over to families. While the U.S. president, Barack Obama, said that the sheik was buried in a "respectful" as opposed to the victims of 11 September 2001.

But it seems that the organization was planning a new attack from time to celebrate, in his own way, the tenth anniversary of September 11. This time the terrorist group was planning to tamper with the train in some American locations have not yet been specified, making them derailed in spectacular fashion, even as they crossed a bridge or a viaduct.

And 'what emerges from the first Pakistani documents seized in the compound where he lived and was killed Bin Laden. According to the site of the ABC, however, a first analysis of this information does not reveal evidence of a specific and imminent danger of a conspiracy against U.S. security.

However, it is clear that the group was headed by Bin Laden kept his murderous aspirations. Above all, stay focused in the study of attacks in the transport sector, in what terrorism experts call the 'soft target'. In particular, it was found in February 2010 that al Qaeda was contemplating the possibility of carrying out an operation against trains on the occasion of the tenth anniversary of September 11, then a few months.

It was thought simply to tamper with the rails so as to cause a derailment tragically spectacular, perhaps along a viaduct or bridge, to amplify the effect of terrorizing the media for the American people and Western Europe. However, the spokesman for the DHS, the Department of Homeland Security, Matt Chandler said that it is a first report "yet for interim relief and may be subject to change." That "though there is a high level of vigilance, there are no means for an alarm." "We have nothing to think about an imminent terrorist threat to our railway network, however - added Chandler - we want to inform our partners of the alleged conspiracy." But what is certain is that the discovery of these documents confirms that the sheikh of terror was still the center of terrorist activities.

According to Richard Clarke, a consultant on ABC's anti-terrorism, these documents show that Bin Laden was still the leadership of al Qaeda and how he still had the role of scrutinizing and approving the bombings, just as it did on September 11, 2001. Today's news that the CIA had a base of operations in a building in Abbottabad, Pakistan, where for months have started the observer missions of the compound where the Al Qaeda leader was killed.

This was reported by the Washington Post, citing U.S. officials. The house was the basis for covert intelligence operations where the CIA received information from Pakistani sources and other sources to trace the profile of the occupants of the compound and normal activities that were held there daily.

The monitoring of the hideout of Bin Laden, after its discovery last August, intensified to the point - the Washington Post - that the CIA asked the U.S. Congress to allocate tens of millions of dollars for use in video footage from satellite and recordings of voices inside the compound.

The base of operations in Abbotabad was not used during the raid, during which Bin Laden was killed and has since remained closed. Yesterday, the UN has called for full disclosure of the news blitz on American (read news) and do not stop the controversy between the U.S. and Pakistan. The Pakistani army moves to the facts: "The U.S.

military presence in the territory will be reduced to a minimum," it said in a statement released by the Press Office of General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani.

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