http://tinyurl.com/3wzmuk9

 


Bin Laden eyed small cities as targets


By KIMBERLY DOZIER, AP Intelligence Writer Kimberly Dozier, Ap Intelligence
Writer - Thu May 12, 7:45 am ET

WASHINGTON - Though hunted and in hiding, Osama bin Laden remained the
driving force behind every recent al-Qaida terror plot, U.S. officials say,
citing his private journal and other documents recovered in last week's
raid.

Until Navy SEALs killed him a week ago, bin Laden dispensed chilling advice
to the leaders of al-Qaida groups from Yemen to London: Hit Los Angeles, not
just New York, he wrote. Target trains as well as planes. If possible,
strike on significant dates, such as the Fourth of July and the upcoming
10th anniversary of the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

Above all, he urged, kill more Americans in a single attack, to drive them
from the Arab world.

Bin Laden's written words show that counterterrorist officials worldwide
underestimated how key he remained to running the organization, shattering
the conventional thinking that he had been reduced through isolation to
being an inspirational figurehead, U.S. officials said Wednesday.

His personal, handwritten journal and his massive collection of computer
files show he helped plan every recent major al-Qaida threat the U.S. is
aware of, including plots in Europe last year that had travelers and
embassies on high alert, two officials said. So far, no new plots have been
uncovered in bin Laden's writings, but intelligence officials say it will
take weeks, if not months, to go through them.

They described the intelligence to The Associated Press only on condition of
anonymity because they were not authorized to talk publicly about what was
found in bin Laden's hideout.

The records show bin Laden was communicating from his walled compound in
Pakistan with al-Qaida's offshoots, including the Yemen branch, which has
emerged as the leading threat to the United States. U.S. officials have not
shared any specific evidence yet that he was directly behind the attempted
Christmas Day 2009 bombing of a Detroit-bound airliner or the nearly
successful attack on cargo planes heading for Chicago and Philadelphia, but
it's now clear that they bear some of bin Laden's hallmarks.

He was well aware of U.S. counterterrorist defenses and schooled his
followers how to work around them, the messages to his followers show. Don't
limit attacks to New York City, he said in his writings. Consider other
areas such as Los Angeles or smaller cities. Spread out the targets.

In one particularly macabre bit of mathematics, bin Laden's writings show
him musing over just how many Americans he must kill to force the U.S. to
withdraw from the Arab world. He concludes that the smaller, scattered
attacks since the 9/11 attacks had not been enough. He tells his disciples
that only a body count of thousands, something on the scale of 9/11, would
shift U.S. policy.

He also schemed about ways to sow political dissent in Washington and play
political figures against one another, officials said.

The communications were in missives sent via plug-in computer storage
devices called flash drives. The devices were ferried to bin Laden's
compound by couriers, a process that is slow but exceptionally difficult to
track.

Intelligence officials have not identified any new planned targets or plots
in their initial analysis of the 100 or so flash drives and five computers
that Navy SEALs hauled away. Last week, the FBI and Homeland Security
Department warned law enforcement officials nationwide to be on alert for
possible attacks against trains, though officials said there was no specific
plot.

Officials have not yet seen any indication that bin Laden had the ability to
coordinate timing of attacks across the various al-Qaida affiliates in
Pakistan, Yemen, Algeria, Iraq and Somalia. It is also unclear from bin
Laden's documents how much the affiliate groups followed his guidance. The
Yemen group, for instance, has embraced the smaller-scale attacks that bin
Laden's writings indicate he regarded as unsuccessful. The Yemen branch had
already surpassed his central operation as al-Qaida's leading fundraising,
propaganda and operational arm.

Al-Qaida has not named bin Laden's successor, but all indications point to
his No. 2, Ayman al-Zawahri. The question is whether al-Zawahri, or anyone,
has the ability to keep so many disparate groups under the al-Qaida banner.
The groups in Somalia and Algeria, for instance, have very different goals
focused on local grievances. Without bin Laden to serve as their shepherd,
it's possible al-Qaida will further fragment.

British officials said the Americans had shared some information with them
about the bin Laden cache, but they said they had been shown nothing
concrete yet to indicate bin Laden's helped directly plan recent terror
attacks or plans in Britain - including a European plot last year involving
the threat of a Mumbai-style shooting spree in a capital. They spoke on
condition of anonymity to discuss matters of intelligence.

One British official said counterterror authorities had not been tracking
bin Laden like they had other terrorists deemed more directly involved in
operations.

While Obama has ordered that photos of bin Laden's body be kept from public
view, members of the House and Senate Intelligence and Armed Services
committees have been making appointments at CIA headquarters to view the
graphic images.

Sen. James Inhofe, R-Okla., a Senate Armed Services Committee member, said
he spent nearly an hour Wednesday looking over more than a dozen photos
taken at the Pakistan compound the night bin Laden was killed and on board
the U.S. Navy ship that buried his body at sea. 

One of the photos was of bin Laden's head and showed what appeared to be a
fatal wound, according to Inhofe. 

Some lawmakers had no interest in seeing the photos. Said Rep. John
Garamendi, D-Calif., a member of House Armed Services Committee, "I'm quite
satisfied Osama bin Laden is dead." 

 



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