Brennan has not yet gotten anything right. I wouldn't believe him here
either.

 

B

 

http://www2.nbc17.com/news/2011/may/02/counterterrorism-chief-declares-al-qa
ida-past-ar-998729/ 


Counterterrorism chief declares al-Qaida 'in the past' 


Death of bin Laden 'a good day for America,' Obama says 


Osama bin
Laden

Credit: AP

Osama bin Laden

By NBC News and msnbc.com 
Published: May 02, 2011 

The death of Osama bin Laden
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/>  is a
clear signal to the world that "al-Qaida
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/al-qaeda/>  is
something in the past," the U.S.
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/united-states/>  chief
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/position/tags/chief/>  of
counterterrorism said Monday.

John Brennan <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/john-brennan/>
, President <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/position/tags/president/>
Barack Obama's deputy national security adviser and chief counterterrorism
coordinator
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/position/tags/deputy-national-security-a
dviser-and-chief-counterterrorism-coordinator/> , said the message could be
boiled down this way: "Bin Laden
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/> , al-Qaida
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/al-qaeda/>  - old
news."

Bin Laden <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/>
, 54, the mastermind behind the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks that
killed thousands of Americans, died in a gunbattle Sunday with Navy SEALs
and CIA
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/central-intelligence-a
gency/>  paramilitary forces at his luxurious compound in Abbottabad
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/city/tags/abbottabad/> , Pakistan
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/pakistan/> . A senior U.S.
intelligence
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/us-intelligence/>
official <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/position/tags/official/>  told
NBC <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/company/tags/nbc/>  News that the
operation had been scheduled for Saturday but was delayed because of weather
conditions.

U.S. <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/united-states/>
forces were prepared to take bin Laden
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/>  alive if
he offered no resistance, but he fought back, "and therefore he was killed,"
Brennan <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/john-brennan/>  said
in a briefing for reporters. It was not yet clear whether bin Laden
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/>  was able
to get off any shots himself, Brennan
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/john-brennan/>  said.

Brennan's forceful remarks reinforced Obama's declaration earlier Monday
that the U.S.
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/united-states/>  had "kept
its commitment to justice" and that bin Laden's death was "a good day for
America <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/continent/tags/america/> ."

In brief remarks before he led a ceremony honoring two Korean War veterans
with the Medal of Honor - his first comments since he dramatically announced
Sunday night that bin Laden
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/>  had been
shot and killed - Obama
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/barack-obama/>  said the
world "is a safer place" today.

Lightning operation monitored in real time

Brennan's remarks provided confirmation of many details of the
lightning-quick operation Sunday morning that had dribbled out over the last
24 hours.

Special operations forces were on the ground for less than 40 minutes, he
said, and they were watched in real time by CIA
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/central-intelligence-a
gency/>  Director
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/position/tags/director/>  Leon Panetta
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/leon-panetta/>  and other
intelligence officials in a conference room at CIA headquarters
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/facility/tags/cia-headquarters/>  in
Langley <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/langley/> , Va.

U.S. <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/united-states/>
officials said one of bin Laden's sons and two of his most trusted couriers
also were killed, as was an unidentified woman who may have been used as a
human shield.

The commandos recovered a large amount of computer data from the scene,
which a task force was sifting through for possible intelligence, a senior
intelligence official
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/position/tags/senior-intelligence-offici
al/>  told NBC <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/company/tags/nbc/>  News.

Afterward, the team returned to Afghanistan
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/afghanistan/>  with bin
Laden's body, which was buried at sea. Brennan
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/john-brennan/>  said DNA
analysis had established with "99.9 percent certainty" that the body was bin
Laden's; one of bin Laden's wives, who survived the firefight in the
compound, also identified him
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/> , another
U.S. <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/united-states/>
official <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/position/tags/official/>  told
NBC <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/company/tags/nbc/>  News.

Brennan <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/john-brennan/>
would not describe bin Laden's burial except to say it was conducted
"according to Islamic requirements." A senior U.S.
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/united-states/>  official
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/position/tags/official/>  told NBC
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/company/tags/nbc/>  News that he was
slipped into the North Arabian Sea
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/naturalfeature/tags/arabian-sea/>  from
the deck of the aircraft carrier
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/industryterm/tags/aircraft-carrier/>
USS Carl Vinson
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/carl-vinson/>  after a
ritual washing and religious remarks.

Islamic tradition calls for a body to be buried within 24 hours, but finding
a country willing to accept bin Laden's remains would have been difficult, a
senior administration official
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/position/tags/senior-administration-offi
cial/>  said. Bin Laden's native Saudi Arabia
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/saudi-arabia/>  had long
renounced him
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/> .

Other U.S. <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/united-states/>
officials said the burial at sea deprived bin Laden's adherents of a
permanent memorial site
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/industryterm/tags/memorial-site/>  to
use as a rallying point.

Four helicopters swoop in

Brennan <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/john-brennan/>  said
U.S. intelligence
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/us-intelligence/>  was
not 100 percent certain that bin Laden
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/>  would be
at the site but that intelligence developed by "very, very good people who
have been following bin Laden
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/>  for many,
many years" gave them a high degree of confidence.

A senior U.S. intelligence
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/us-intelligence/>
official <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/position/tags/official/>  told
NBC <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/company/tags/nbc/>  News that
important information centered on the identities of couriers trusted by bin
Laden <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/> .
The information came from multiple sources, the official
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/position/tags/official/>  said, most
prominently Khalid Sheikh Mohammed
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/khalid-sheikh-mohammed/> ,
who planned the Sept. 11 attacks, and his successor as the No. 3 leader
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/position/tags/leader/>  of al-Qaida
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/al-qaeda/> , Abu Faraj
al-Libi <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/abu-faraj-al-libi/>
.

Mohammed
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/khalid-sheikh-mohammed/>
was captured by the CIA
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/central-intelligence-a
gency/>  on March 1, 2003, in Rawalpindi
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/city/tags/rawalpindi/> , Pakistan
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/pakistan/> . Al-Libi
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/abu-faraj-al-libi/>  was
captured by Pakistan's intelligence service on May 1, 2005, in Mardan. Both
were subjected to "enhanced interrogation techniques" by CIA
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/central-intelligence-a
gency/>  interrogators, and Mohammed
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/khalid-sheikh-mohammed/>
was one of three detainees who were waterboarded, in his case 183 times.

The lack of 100 percent certainty about the information led to a spirited
discussion in the Situation Room before Obama
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/barack-obama/>  made "one of
the gutsiest calls of any president
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/position/tags/president/>  in recent
memory," Brennan
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/john-brennan/>  said.

Bin Laden <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/>
was indeed holed up in a two-story house 100 yards from a Pakistani military
academy when four helicopters carrying U.S.
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/united-states/>  forces
swooped in . His guards opened fire on the commandos, and his final hiding
place was left in flames, witnesses said.

One of the helicopters was forced to land unexpectedly because the steep
walls of the compound left too little air beneath it to allow it to hover
over the scene as planned, a senior administration official
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/position/tags/senior-administration-offi
cial/>  told NBC <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/company/tags/nbc/>
News' Courtney Kube
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/courtney-kube/> .

The same condition made it impossible for the helicopter to take off
afterward, the official
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/position/tags/official/>  said, leading
U.S. <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/united-states/>
forces to destroy the craft on the ground to protect its technology and
intelligence.

U.S. <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/united-states/>
officials said no Americans were hurt in the operation.

Abbottabad <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/city/tags/abbottabad/>  is
home to three Pakistan army
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/pakistan-army/>
regiments and thousands of military personnel and is dotted with military
buildings. Pakistani officials described the army
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/army/>  site as the
country's equivalent of the U.S. Military Academy
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/us-military-academy/>
at West Point, N.Y.

The discovery that bin Laden
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/>  was
living in an army town in Pakistan
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/pakistan/>  raised pointed
questions about how he managed to evade capture and even whether Pakistan's
military
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/pakistans-military/>
and intelligence leadership knew of his whereabouts and sheltered him
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/> .
Islamabad <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/city/tags/islamabad/>  has
always denied using its security establishment to protect bin Laden
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/> .

Brennan <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/john-brennan/>  said
that bin Laden
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/>  was
obviously "hiding in plain sight" and that U.S.
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/united-states/>  officials
were in discussions with Pakistani officials to find out "how he was able to
hold out there for so long."

"People are raising these questions, and we're going to have to deal with
them," he said, while adding: "We believe that relationship is critically
important to breaking the back of al-Qaida
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/al-qaeda/> ."

Pakistan's first official statement about the operation Monday said that the
death of bin Laden
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/>  showed
the resolve of Pakistan
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/pakistan/>  and of the
world to battle terrorism and that it was "a major setback to terrorist
organizations around the world."

At the same time, Prime Minister
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/position/tags/prime-minister/>  Yousuf
Raza Gilani
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/yousuf-raza-gilani/>  warned
the U.S. <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/united-states/>
envoy for Afghanistan
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/afghanistan/>  and Pakistan
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/pakistan/> , Marc Grossman
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/marc-grossman/> , in a
meeting Monday that "sensitivities" over Pakistan's cooperation with
Washington <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/city/tags/washington/>  "must
be given due importance rather than giving it a spin," the Islamabad
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/city/tags/islamabad/>  newspaper Dawn
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/dawn/>  reported.

The news of bin Laden's death immediately raised concerns that reprisal
attacks from al-Qaida
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/al-qaeda/>  and other
Islamist extremist groups could follow soon.

"In the wake of this operation, there may be a heightened threat to the U.S.
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/united-states/>  homeland,"
a U.S. <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/united-states/>
official said. "The U.S.
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/united-states/>  is taking
every possible precaution. The State Department
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/department-of-state/>
has sent advisories to embassies worldwide and has issued a travel ban
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/industryterm/tags/travel-ban/>  for
Pakistan <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/pakistan/> ."

A vow of vengeance

The Karachi <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/city/tags/karachi/>
newspaper News International
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/company/tags/news-international/>
reported late Monday that a banned group
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/industryterm/tags/banned/>  that has
been blamed for the 2007 assassination of then-Prime Minister
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/position/tags/prime-minister/>  Benazir
Bhutto <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/benazir-bhutto/>
warned that it would "take its revenge" for bin Laden's death and that
"Pakistan <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/pakistan/>  will
be the prime target."

The organization, Tehreek-e-Taliban
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/taliban/>  Pakistan,
or TTP, released an audio message declaring, "Pakistani rulers are on our
hit list." Once it had avenged bin Laden
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/> , it said,
the U.S. <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/united-states/>
would be next.

Also late Monday, a crowd estimated at 800 to 1,200 people, many of them
carrying signs and shouting pro-bin Laden
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/>  slogans,
rallied in the streets of Quetta, capital of Pakistan's Baluchistan
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/provinceorstate/tags/baluchistan/>
province.

Maulvi Asmatullah
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/maulvi-asmatullah/> , an
independent member
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/position/tags/independent-member/>  of
the National Assembly
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/national-assembly/>
who led the rally, told Agence France Presse that bin Laden
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/>  had been
"martyred" by the U.S.
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/united-states/>  and
remained "the hero of the Muslim world."

Protesters burned a U.S.
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/united-states/>  flag at
the rally before dispersing peacefully, AFP reported.

In his nationally televised address Sunday night, Obama
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/barack-obama/>  stressed
that the effort to defeat terrorism continues. Al-Qaida
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/al-qaeda/>  remains in
existence as an organization, presumably under the leadership of Ayman
al-Zawahiri
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/ayman-al-zawahiri/> , 59, an
Egyptian physician
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/position/tags/physician/>  who is widely
believed to have been bin Laden's No. 2.

Al-Zawahiri's elevation is likely to lead to deep fractures within al-Qaida
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/al-qaeda/> , said
Brennan <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/john-brennan/> , who
described the organization's new leader as "not charismatic and not involved
in the earlier struggles in Afghanistan
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/afghanistan/> ."

"There will be lots of internal critics," Brennan
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/john-brennan/>  predicted.

Sources close to al-Zawahiri
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/ayman-al-zawahiri/>  told
NBC <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/company/tags/nbc/>  News that he was
expected to issue a video or audio statement in the next day or two. They
did not know whether he would acknowledge or deny bin Laden's death.

Secretary of State
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/position/tags/secretary-of-state/>
Hillary Rodham Clinton
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/hillary-rodham-clinton/>
also said Monday that the death of bin Laden
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/>  was not
the end of the war on terrorism and warned the network's members that the
U.S. <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/united-states/>  would
be relentless in its pursuit of them.

Turning to deliver a direct message to bin Laden's followers, she vowed:
"You cannot wait us out. You cannot defeat us, but you can make the choice
to abandon al-Qaida
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/al-qaeda/>  and
participate in a peaceful political process."

'Affluent suburb'

Officials had long believed that bin Laden
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/osama-bin-laden/>  was
hiding a mountainous region along the Pakistan-Afghanistan
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/afghanistan/>  border. In
August, U.S. intelligence
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/organization/tags/us-intelligence/>
officials got a tip on his whereabouts, which led to the operation that
culminated Sunday, Obama
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/barack-obama/>  said Sunday.

Bin Laden's compound was huge and "extraordinarily unique," about eight
times larger than other homes in the area, U.S.
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/country/tags/united-states/>  officials
said.

"It is also noteworthy that the property is valued at approximately $1
million <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/currency/tags/usd/>  but has no
telephone or Internet service
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/industryterm/tags/internet-service/>
connected to it," one of them said.

Few windows of the three-story home faced the outside of the compound, and
other intense security measures included 12- to 18-foot outer walls topped
with barbed wire and internal walls that sectioned off different parts of
the compound, officials said.

Access was restricted to two security gates. Residents burned their trash,
rather than leaving it for collection, as did their neighbors, officials
said.

The sound of at least two explosions rocked Abbottabad
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/city/tags/abbottabad/>  as the fighting
raged.

"After midnight, a large number of commandos encircled the compound. Three
helicopters were hovering overhead. All of a sudden, there was firing toward
the helicopters from the ground," said Nasir Khan
<http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/nasir-khan/> , a resident of
the town.

"There was intense firing, and then I saw one of the helicopters crash,"
said Khan <http://www2.nbc17.com/topics/types/person/tags/nasir-khan/> , who
had watched the dramatic scene unfold from his rooftop.

By Alex Johnson of msnbc.com with Bill Dedman of msnbc.com and Jim
Miklaszewski, Robert Windrem, Andrea Mitchell, Chuck Todd, Athena Jones,
Pete Williams, Savannah Guthrie, Courtney Kube and Thomas Capra of NBC News.

 
<http://www2.nbc17.com/news/2011/may/02/counterterrorism-chief-declares-al-q
aida-past-ar-998729/> 


 

 



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