http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticle.asp?
xfile=data/theworld/2005/October/theworld_October162.xml&section=thew
orld

Bin Laden to surface after new attack on US soil: ex-CIA expert
(AFP)

6 October 2005 

WASHINGTON - Osama bin Laden is expected to remain in hiding until 
he stages another attack on the United States, an ex-CIA expert who 
had tracked the terror mastermind for two decades warned in an 
interview on Wednesday.

"As soon as he hits us in the United States again we'll see how 
important he is in the Islamic world," Michael Scheuer, the former 
head of the "bin Laden unit" at the CIA, told AFP in an interview.
Despite his low profile, bin Laden remains powerful, Scheuer said, 
shrugging off reports that the Al Qaeda chief was isolated and his 
communication network shattered due to a relentless hunt for him.
"We mistake quiet for defeat or irrelevance. And all quiet is 
disquiet," said Scheuer, a fierce critic of the Bush administration 
and its "War on Terror" policy since he left the CIA in November 
last year.
Scheuer said that bin Laden's right-hand-man Ayman Al Zawahiri, who 
last appeared on a video aired 10 days before the anniversary of the 
September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States, seemed to have 
temporarily taken over the Al Qaeda leadership apparently for the 
boss to prepare for another US strike.

Bin Laden last surfaced in a video footage aired on the eve of the 
US presidential elections in November last year. In the tape, 
declared authentic by the authorities, the Saudi-born radical 
directly admitted he ordered the September 11 attacks.
Asked why he thought the Al Qaeda leader had not resurfaced since 
then, Scheuer said: "I don't think we are going to hear from him 
until he attacks us again.

"His feature on the eve of the election was simply to say that: This 
is it, I have warned you four times. I punched my ticket in the 
Islamic world, I've given you all the warning that the religion 
requires me.
"I think that's why Zawahiri is taking the lead at the moment," said 
Scheuer, the author of the best-selling book "Imperial Hubris,"  
which was originally published anonymously as required by the CIA.
The United States has offered rewards of up to 25 million dollars 
each for bin Laden and Al Zawahiri.

Pakistan said last month that bin Laden was now isolated as his 
communication network had been shattered.
One key Al Qaeda suspect revealed under interrogation that bin Laden 
was using couriers travelling on foot or horseback instead of 
communicating by satellite telephone or the Internet to avoid being 
detected, according to Pakistan's chief military spokesman, Major 
General Shaukat Sultan.
But Scheuer, currently an adjunct professor of security studies at 
Georgetown University, said, "I'm one that believes that we have not 
destroyed their (Al Qaeda's) capability to attack us.
"I think bin Laden still commands the international media at a 
moment's notice if he decides to make a media appearance. He is very 
important. So, I think again there is lot of whistling past the 
graveyard at the moment."

Scheuer earlier Wednesday told a forum organized by the Center for 
American Progress, a liberal think tank, that Al Qaeda would survive 
even without bin Laden, "who is a unique combination of a 12th 
century theologian and a 21st century CEO."
Ersel Aydinli, a former counter-terrorism expert with the Turkish 
police, said bin Laden failed in his bid to drum up support from 
Muslims to join his jihadist struggle.
"But even if he is captured or killed, probably we still have to 
deal with the legacy beyond him," he said, adding that the Al Qaeda 
had broken up into various "splinter groups with potential for 
multiple attacks.
"The good news is that it looks like Osama bin laden and Al Qaeda 
have really failed in terms of getting enough attention for their 
call for jihad in a violent way," he said.
Aydinli, who teaches at George Washington University, said field 
research he conducted last summer among Muslim communities in the 
Middle East and Europe revealed that there was still continuing 
debate over bin Laden's role.
"There is a huge debate whether he served or he really hindered the 
Muslim world's interests," he said.






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