REAL NEW
 BIN LADEN HID IN AFGHANISTAN AFTER ESCAPING TORA BORA,
LATER HELPED INTO PAKISTAN 

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(Common sense, politically incorrect newsletter to 14,792 subscribers) 
  
  BIN LADEN HID IN AFGHANISTAN
AFTER ESCAPING TORA BORA,
LATER HELPED INTO PAKISTAN. 


By Kathy Gannon, Associated Press correspondent     May 12, 2011
    ISLAMABAD - 

  
For a man on the run, Osama bin Laden seemed to do very 
little running.  Instead, he chose to spend long stretches -- possibly 
years -- in one place and often in the company of his family.

  
    As details emerge of bin Laden's era as America 's most-wanted man, it 
appears he was often going in one direction while the American-directed hunt 
was moving in another.

    Pakistani authorities are pulling together a close-up view of bin 
Laden's final years from sources such as his three widows, including one 
who says she never left the upper floors of the walled compound in 
Abbottabad where bin Laden was killed.  But a far more sweeping narrative has 
taken shape from reports of Guantanamo Bay interrogations posted by WikiLeaks 
in late April just before the American raid on bin Laden's compound.

  
    These documents -- in addition to interviews by The Associated 
Press -- indicate bin Laden relied on Afghan allies for years after the 
Sept. 11 attacks and possibly spent relatively limited time in Pakistan 's 
rugged tribal areas, which had been the much-discussed focus of U.S. 
intelligence and military resources in the manhunt. 

    It also suggests that bin Laden -- either by design or chance --  
could have taken advantage of shortcomings in America 's ability to gather 
timely leads on his movements or get credible sources within the 
patchwork of tribes and militia factions in Afghanistan and Pakistan. 

    In perhaps the most striking dead-end chase, U.S. officials and 
others strongly believed bin Laden slipped across the border in Pakistan 
after dodging capture from an assault on Tora Bora in eastern Afghanistan in 
November 2001.  But he was still in Afghanistan and galloping away on 
horseback in the opposite direction toward the northeastern Kunar 
province, according to bin Laden's aide Awar Gul, who was arrested in 
December 2001 and eventually sent to Guantanamo. 

    But according to the documents released by WikiLeaks, Gul gave the 
information to interrogators from 2002 to 2006 -- apparently too late to 
produce any active leads. 

    It also was assumed bin Laden traveled light, accompanied by a few 
guards who were most likely Arabs.  But it turns out he kept close to his 
family -- or at least part of it -- and his most-trusted courier was a 
Kuwaiti-born Pakistani who went by the nom de guerre Abu Ahmed 
al-Kuwaiti, according to U.S. documents and investigators. 

    The discrepancies between the Western assumptions and the apparent 
details on bin Laden's movements go back to the Sept. 11 attacks. 

    Bin Laden didn't go underground, as widely believed by intelligence 
agencies.  He stayed in Kandahar. , mingled with his Arab fighters and met 
Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar, according to an AP interview with a former 
Taliban intelligence chief. 

    The official, Mullah Mohammed Khaksar, said bin Laden left Kandahar 
for the capital Kabul after the start of U.S.-led attacks to oust the 
Taliban on Oct. 7, 2001.  Bin Laden stayed in Kabul until Nov. 13 when 
the Taliban fled and the U.S.-allied Northern Alliance swept into the 
city, Khaksar told the AP.

    The battle then moved to the Tora Bora outpost, where bin Laden was 
thought to have taken refuge. 

    The warren of caves that run through the Tora Bora mountains was 
familiar to bin Laden, who had used them as cover while taking part in 
the U.S.-backed fight against the Soviet occupation in the 1980s. 

    As the Americans blasted Tora Bora with bunker-busting bombs, bin 
Laden escaped with the help of lieutenants for a local warlord, Maulvi 
Yunus Khalis, who had fought with bin Laden against the Red Army, 
according to officials including Michael Scheuer, former CIA point man in 
the hunt for the al-Qaida chief. 

    In some ways, bin Laden's Tora Bora breakaway was an inside job, 
Scheuer told the AP.  The warlord's aides who helped bin Laden escape 
also were working for coalition forces at the time. 

    According to Gul's interrogation report, bin Laden rested at Gul's 
home in Jalalabad -- about 25 miles (40 kilometers) northeast of Tora 
Bora -- after evading U.S.-led forces on the mountain.  He was 
accompanied by his No. 2, Ayman al-Zawahri, the report says. 

    "According to an Afghan government official UBL (Osama bin Laden) and 
al-Zawahri stayed at the detainee's (Gul's) to rest while escaping from 
hostilities against the U.S. and coalition forces in Tora Bora," the 
interrogation documents said. 

    The interrogation summary also says then bin Laden set off on 
horseback -- not toward Pakistan , but northeast toward Kunar. The almost 
inaccessible area, close to the Pakistani border, was a stronghold of 
pro-Taliban forces and other militias. 

    Gul also accompanied bin Laden to Kunar, where they met Afghan 
warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar and his military chief Kashmir Khan, who 
"provided protection for the group before they continued to an unknown 
location at the request of Hekmatyar," the interrogation report said.

  
    Small units of U.S. special forces already had a few outposts in the 
Kunar region during the Tora Bora battle.  But slipping past the few 
American soldiers would have been easy.

    In years to come, the U.S. hunt for bin Laden expanded in the Kunar 
border zone.  In 2003, U.S. soldiers attacked the military chief Khan's 
hideouts, slightly wounding him.  In 2005, a U.S. special forces Chinook 
helicopter was shot down in Kunar, killing all 16 personnel on board.

  
    Bin Laden may have been long gone at the time.

    According to the Guantanamo documents, bin Laden passed through Kunar en 
route to Pakistan 's semiautonomous tribal belt.  But the destination was not 
the militant heartland of Waziristan.  The reports said bin Laden headed for a 
more tranquil place called Khwar, which is near Pakistan 's scenic resort area 
of Swat and barely 42 miles (70 kilometers) from Abbottabad. 

    It was about this time, in early 2003, that unconfirmed reports 
surfaced of bin Laden sightings in Pakistan 's far-northern Chitral area 
amid the highest range in the Hindu Kush mountains.  It would be familiar 
territory for bin Laden.  During the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan , 
Chitral was a jumping off point for American-backed guerrilla fighters 
that included bin Laden. 

    It's still unclear when bin Laden arrived in Abbottabad, a well-kept 
hill station that has Pakistan 's equivalent of West Point. 

    The compound where he was killed was built in 2005.  One of bin 
Laden's wives told Pakistani investigators that she moved to the home in 
2006 and never left the top floors of the three-story compound. 
 

------------------------------------------------------------ 
    --Kathy Gannon is special regional correspondent for Pakistan and 
Afghanistan . She can be reached at http://twitter.com/kathygannon. 
Associated Press writer Adam Goldman contributed from Washington .
------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
  



Contact Your Govt 
http://www.usa.gov/Contact.shtml 
  

Is the Constitution the Supreme Law of the Land or not?  
  
I GUESS THE SCOTUS HAS ANWERED THAT QUESTION 



   
Patriot Freedom
http://www.patriotfreedom.org/battlefield.php 
  
If a link above does not work, cut-and-paste to your browser. 



Please be aware that Barack Hussein Obama’s grandfather was a highly respected 
witch doctor with the Luo tribe. His white grandmother was VP at the Bank of 
Hawaii and she worked with and for Peter Geithner on other projects, Peter is 
the father of Timothy Geithner, Obama's choice of Treasurer of  the US . 

  
We the People
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JVAhr4hZDJE 
   



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