http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-17941778

BBC News US & Canada
3 May 2012 Last updated at 16:50 GMT
Osama Bin Laden documents released

Newly released papers from Osama Bin Laden's hideout reveal a frustrated 
al-Qaeda leader struggling to control an unruly network, the US military says.

The documents seized during the raid on the Abbottabad compound were posted 
online by the research wing of the US military academy, West Point.

The papers show he was unhappy with affiliates' attacks on fellow Muslims, 
urging them to target the US instead.

Seventeen documents were released from a cache of more than 6,000.

The 175-page cache was posted online by the US Military Academy's Combating 
Terrorism Center - in the week marking a year since Bin Laden's death.
'Vile mistakes'

The papers date from September 2006 to April 2011 and include letters from 
other al-Qaeda leaders.

Some documents suggest that the group had a strained relationship with Iran.

Letters reveal al-Qaeda's exasperation with the way Tehran handled the release 
of detainees, including members of Bin Laden's family, expressing annoyance 
that the Iranians "do not wish to appear to be negotiating with us or 
responding to our pressures".

Meanwhile, there is no explicit reference to any institutional support from 
Pakistan, where the al-Qaeda leader lived for nine years.

The papers make mention of "trusted Pakistani brothers", but one reference 
suggests Bin Laden was wary of Pakistani intelligence.

He gave instructions to family members travelling to Pakistan to make sure they 
were not followed - in case the local intelligence chief trailed them to his 
location.

The documents also shed light on Bin Laden's concerns that Muslims were being 
alienated by the ideology of jihad.

In a letter from 2010, Bin Laden wrote of "starting a new phase to correct [the 
mistakes] we made".

"In doing so, we shall reclaim, God willing, the trust of a large segment of 
those who lost their trust in the jihadis," he wrote.

In its executive summary on the documents, the US military says they reveal Bin 
Laden's frustration with affiliated organisations and his powerlessness to 
control their actions, including:

    The al-Qaeda leader was advised by his California-born media adviser Adam 
Gadahn to distance his network from al-Qaeda in Iraq because of the latter's 
perceived failures
    His lieutenants threatened to take measures against the leadership of the 
Pakistani Taliban for their "vile mistakes", including indiscriminate attacks 
on Muslims
    Bin Laden wrote a strongly worded letter to al-Qaeda in the Arabian 
Peninsula urging them to focus on attacking the US, instead of the Yemeni 
government or security forces
    Bin Laden saw little to gain from a pledge of allegiance to al-Qaeda from 
the Somali radical insurgent group al-Shabab, which he viewed as poorly 
organised

The letters reveal that Bin Laden was also sceptical of so-called lone wolf 
missions by homegrown jihadists.

He urged his associates "not to send a single brother on a suicide operation; 
they should send at least two".

He added that in cases when only one militant undertook an operation the 
"percentage of success was low due to psychological factors that affect the 
[designated] brother in such a situation".

Other papers suggest Bin Laden ordered his militants to look out for 
opportunities to assassinate President Obama or David Petraeus during any of 
their visits to Pakistan and Afghanistan. Mr Petraeus, now CIA director, 
formerly commanded international forces in Afghanistan.

But Bin Laden warned them not to bother targeting Vice-President Joe Biden 
because "Biden is totally unprepared for that post [of president], which will 
lead the US into a crisis."

In a letter from April 2011, the al-Qaeda leader discusses the Arab Spring, 
calling it a "formidable event" in the history of Muslims and expressing hope 
they can influence events through media outreach and "guidance".

The correspondence suggests that Bin Laden's inner circle closely monitored US 
news media.

Al-Qaeda media adviser Adam Gadahn described ABC News as "all right, actually 
it could be one of the best channels as far as we are concerned", but he said 
Fox News "falls into the abyss" and "lacks neutrality".

He also felt al-Qaeda had not been given credit for America's economic 
downturn, according to documents from 2010.

"All the political talk in America is about the economy, forgetting or ignoring 
the war and its role in weakening the economy," wrote Mr Gadahn.

Earlier this week, White House counter-terrorism chief John Brennan said Bin 
Laden's papers reinforced the view that the US was safer without him.
BBC

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