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Entries in Dead (43)

Saturday
May212011

Suicide Blast Kills Six in Kabul

ABC News(KABUL, Afghanistan) -- At least half a dozen people were killed in Kabul Saturday, during a suicide bombing attack at a hospital.

Officials say the attack occurred inside the Charsad Bestar Hospital, a military hospital located about 1500 feet from where the U.S. embassy is situated.

A suicide bomber reportedly walked into a tent where medical students were having lunch, and detonated an explosive device, killing six and injuring 23 others, officials say. Following the attack, some described the atmosphere around the Afghan capital city as being somewhat tense.

Outside the hospital authorities were on high alert as it was believed that a second suicide bomber might have been inside or nearby, however, no other attackers were found.

The Taliban has since claimed responsibility for the attack.

Copyright 2011 ABC News Radio

Sunday
May152011

Nakba Day Marked by Violent Clashes

Antenna Audio, Inc./Getty Images(TEL AVIV) -- On Sunday Palestinians marked “Nakba,” the “catastrophe” of the creation of Israel 63 years ago.

It is an annual day of mourning but tensions have been heightened because of loud calls online for a third intifada, the shooting death of a Palestinian teen in East Jerusalem on Friday allegedly by settlers or their security, general upheaval in the region and the recent unity deal between Fatah and Hamas.

At dawn prayers in Gaza, Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeah said Nakba is marked "with great hope of bringing to an end the Zionist project in Palestine."

Sunday saw clashes in Issawiya, Hebron, and outside Ramallah, with demonstrations also taking place in Gaza and the West Bank. 

One person was killed and at least 15 others were injured when a truck plowed and pedestrians in Tel Aviv. The driver of the truck, who has denied that it was an intentional act, was later arrested by police.

Near the Kalandia checkpoint in the West Bank, there were scenes of tires burning and Palestinians throwing rocks at Israeli soldiers. The atmosphere was completed by the smell smoke and tear gas in the air and the sounds of hundreds of protesters and sirens from ambulances driving through the crowd.

Several people were reportedly killed after Israeli forces opened fire on protestors at border crossing points in Gaza, the West Bank, Golan Heights and the frontier with Lebanon, the BBC reports.

Copyright 2011 ABC New Radio

Friday
May062011

Pakistan Arrests Possible Osama Bin Laden Associates In Abbottabad

George Doyle/Thinkstock(ABBOTTABAD, Pakistan) -- Since the U.S. raid that killed Osama bin Laden, Pakistani authorities have arrested dozens of people in Abbottabad on suspicion of having ties to al Qaeda, said Pakistani officials.

Local police participated in the sweep, with federal forces, including agents of the Inter-Services Intelligence service, or ISI. Those arrested were thought to have connections to the compound where Osama bin Laden was killed in a U.S. raid, or to bin Laden's al Qaeda courier Abu Ahmed al Kuwaiti, who was killed with him.

A report by the U.S. government's Open Source Center put the number of arrests at 40 and said the sweep began Thursday. Pakistani officials, however, told ABC News the arrests began soon after the Sunday night raid and netted as many as 200 people. They added that many of those detained have already been released.

Among those taken into custody was the man believed to have designed the secure complex and acted as the project's contractor when it was built in 2005. One Pakistani official named the man as Tahir Javed, though his identity could not be verified. Pakistani officials and local residents say the contractor has since been released.

Another person of interest to authorities was a major local landowner named Shamroz who owned several plots next to the bin Laden compound. Neighbors described Shamroz and his sons as the people who knew the al Qaeda courier and his family best. Shamroz and his two sons have reportedly been arrested.

Pakistani authorities have called the sweep the "second phase" of the operation that killed bin Laden, though Pakistani officials have been accused of knowing about bin Laden's presence in the Abbottabad compound, where's he thought to have lived for five years.

The high security compound is 1,000 yards from Pakistan's chief military academy, close to other military installations and in a neighborhood popular with military officials. Abottabad itself is less than 100 miles by road from the Pakistani capital of Islamabad.

On Thursday, defense undersecretary for policy Michele Flournoy said the U.S. could not prove the Pakistani government knew about bin Laden's presence in Abbottabad.

"We are still talking with the Pakistanis and trying to understand what they did know, what they didn't know," she said. "We do not have any definitive evidence at this point that they did know that Osama bin Laden was at this compound."

But Sen. Carl Levin, D.-Michigan, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, told ABC News Thursday he believed senior Pakistani officials knew bin Laden's location and said he had "no doubt" they also know where other top terrorists are, including Taliban leader Mullah Omar.

"At high levels, high levels being the intelligence service, at high levels they knew it," Levin said in an interview with ABC's Jonathan Karl.

Levin is the highest ranking U.S. elected official to accuse the Pakistan government of knowing Bin Laden's whereabouts.

"I can't prove it," Levin said. "I can't imagine how someone higher up didn't know it." The Armed Services Committee, Levin said, has already started a preliminary investigation into Pakistan's involvement and, based on that investigation, will make a decision on holding public hearings to investigate further.

Copyright 2011 ABC News Radio

Friday
May062011

Osama Bin Laden Raid: Al Qaeda 'Playbook' Revealed

JEWEL SAMAD/AFP/Getty Images(WASHINGTON) -- U.S. intelligence is now in possession of a veritable "playbook" of al Qaeda operations -- from potential terror attack targets to information on international safe houses and top commanders -- thanks to the Navy SEAL raid that took down Osama bin Laden Sunday, officials told ABC News on Friday.

The cache of electronic and handwritten materials includes numerous hallmark al Qaeda plots including attacks on infrastructure targets such as water supply and transportation including rail and air. In the past, al Qaeda planned for attacks on water supplies have included an interest in mining dams and in poisoning water supply. In the days since the SEAL raid, intelligence experts have also have found what appears to be information about safe houses around the world and about al Qaeda leadership.

It is unclear just how active bin Laden was in coordinating any operations or in blessing overall strategies and plots. What is clear, officials said, is that intelligence analysts see weeks ahead of data mining and linking the cache of materials to past knowledge of plots that has come from detainees, cases and various forms of intercepts and surveillance.

While as yet no specific plots have been uncovered, there is a clear interest in attacks on the for most prominent U.S. cities such as New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and Washington, D.C.

The materials make clear that while at times in the past it has been suggested that dates are not a factor in Al Qaeda attack planning, in fact, one of the terror group's aspirations was to launch attacks on symbolic dates like Sept. 11, in hopes of giving even greater resonance to any success.

A bulletin issued Thursday by the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security and obtained by ABC News describes the terror organization's chilling desire to derail a train on the tenth anniversary of the 9/11 terror attacks.

"As of February 2010, al-Qa'ida was allegedly contemplating conducting an operation against trains at an unspecified location in the United States on the 10th anniversary of September 11, 2001," the document reads, using an alternate spelling for bin Laden's terror group. "As one option, al-Qa'ida was looking into trying to tip a train by tampering with the rails so that the train would fall off the track at either a valley or a bridge."

In a statement, DHS press secretary Matt Chandler stressed that the message it sent out to its rail partners about a potential al Qaeda plot was "based on initial reporting, which is often misleading and inaccurate and subject to change. We remain at a heightened state of vigilance, but do not intend to issue [a National Terrorism Advisory System] alert at this time." Chandler said the Transportation Security Administration would also send a bulletin to its rail sector stakeholders.

"We have no information of any imminent terrorist threat to the U.S. rail sector, but wanted to make our partners aware of the alleged plotting," said Chandler.

Copyright 2011 ABC News Radio

Friday
May062011

Al Qaeda Confirms Osama Bin Laden's Death

AFP/Getty Images(WASHINGTON) -- Osama bin Laden's terror network admitted Friday that U.S. forces had tracked and killed their leader, but vowed to keep on attacking America.

The statement by al Qaeda, released on the Internet, vowed that bin Laden's blood "will not be wasted" and that the terror network will continue attacking America and its allies.

President Obama has refused to release what some officials who have seen the pictures have described as gruesome photos showing bin Laden's body with a bullet hole in his head.

Copyright 2011 ABC News Radio

Thursday
May052011

Three Osama Bin Laden Wives in Pakistani Custody

ABC News Radio Graphic/Photo by CNN via Getty Images(ISLAMABAD, Pakistan) -- Pakistani intelligence agents are interrogating three women -- all wives of Osama bin Laden -- who were captured during the U.S.-led raid on Sunday.

The wives, including the youngest, 29-year-old Yemeni Amal Ahmed Abdul Fatah, were all living with bin Laden inside the compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan.

According to one of the women, bin Laden confined himself to two rooms in the house, including the bedroom where he was killed. He never left those rooms, she claims, for the five years he was hiding there.

Officials also have in custody bin Laden's 13-year-old daughter, who saw her father killed "in front of her eyes," a senior Pakistani security official told ABC News in an exclusive interview Wednesday.

They are also questioning six or seven other children who were captured in the raid.

The reports come as relations between the United States and Pakistan grow increasingly tense. The U.S. intelligence community kept Pakistani officials in the dark until after the top-secret mission to hunt down bin Laden was finished, worried that the information could leak.

The Pakistani army has suffered a major blow to its credibility -- at home for its inability to detect U.S. planes in its airspace through the 40-minute mission, and abroad for not finding bin Laden, who was hiding only steps away from one of the country's top military academies.

In his first public statement since the operation, Pakistan's army chief Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani on Thursday warned that "violating the sovereignty of Pakistan will warrant a review on the level of military/intelligence cooperation with the United States."

He also said that U.S. military personnel in Pakistan would be reduced to the "minimum essential."

There are currently about 100 U.S. troops in Pakistan.

This is not the first time Pakistan has threatened to cut U.S. forces on the ground. A report published a month ago, following the case of CIA contractor Raymond Davis who allegedly shot and killed two Pakistani men, stated that Pakistanis wanted to cut the U.S. trainer force by 30 percent.

Copyright 2011 ABC News Radio

Wednesday
May042011

The Young Wife Who Defended Osama Bin Laden

AFP/Getty Images(WASHINGTON) -- The woman who the White House said charged U.S. Navy SEALs in an apparent desperate last ditch effort to protect Osama bin Laden has been identified as bin Laden's youngest wife, a woman nearly half his age.

The woman, identified by a passport found inside the al Qaeda leader's compound as 29-year-old Amal Ahmed Abdul Fatah, was in the room when the SEALs took the final, fateful shots at 54-year-old Osama bin Laden and was herself shot in the leg when she rushed, unarmed, at the special operators. She was treated for her wounds and is in custody in Pakistan, officials said.

Fatah, bin Laden's fifth wife and the only one left living with him in the house, had been gifted to the al Qaeda leader from a Yemeni family when she was just a teenager and later had three children with him. Of his other wives, he had divorced one and three others had moved to Syria.

To former high-ranking CIA analyst and former FBI counterterrorism official Phil Mudd, it's not surprising that she apparently was willing to risk her life for the man the U.S. has been hunting for more than a decade.

"He is, in the al Qaeda context, an honorable man and he's viewed in their context not as a terrorist but as a statesman," Mudd told ABC News. "I would be surprised if this guy would sacrifice a wife for this operation, but I'm sure she was willing to get in front of a bullet for him."

But bin Laden's children with Fatah are not his only offspring, as he was survived by at least 18 children. None of the sons, however, are in line to succeed their father for leadership of one of the most feared terror organizations in the world.

"Unlike a lot of Arab governments that are dynastic," said former White House counterterrorism advisor Richard Clarke, now an ABC News consultant, "al Qaeda has not been and his sons have never played a real operational role of any significance. They did not appear to be groomed for leadership roles in al Qaeda."

During the 40-minute Navy SEAL operation that took bin Laden's life, the U.S. forces also found what one U.S. official described as the "motherlode" of intelligence in the compound.

The material, which includes more than 100 thumb drives and several cell phones, is being analyzed by U.S. intelligence officials in Washington, D.C. as well as Afghanistan and officials hope the information gleaned could help dismantle the entire al Qaeda terror network.

"After attack plans," said Clarke, "[they're looking for] the location of his deputies ... where the money is, where the money comes from, where does it live, and how big an organization is al Qaeda central these days? Is it really an organization anymore at all?"

Copyright 2011 ABC News Radio

Tuesday
May032011

Osama Bin Laden Unarmed When Killed, White House Says

AFP/Getty Images(WASHINGTON) -- Osama bin Laden was not armed when he was shot and killed by U.S. Navy SEALs during a daring raid on his compound in Pakistan, the White House said today.

"We were prepared to capture him if that was possible," White House spokesman Jay Carney said. But even though bin Laden was not carrying a weapon, Carney said he had "resisted" and several people in the compound were armed and firing at the American special operators.

"Resistance does not require a firearm," Carney said.

When the SEALs entered the room in which bin Laden was hiding, his wife charged them and was shot in the leg, Carney said. Bin Laden was then shot in the chest and head.

"U.S. personnel on the ground handled themselves with the utmost professionalism," he said. "[Bin Laden] was killed in an operation because of the resistance they met."

The decision to kill, rather than capture, came from commanders on the ground, Carney said.

Officials initially said that bin Laden had been among several people in the compound who took up arms and engaged in a firefight with the SEALs.

President Obama's counterterror chief John Brennan also initially said that bin Laden used one of his wives as a human shield and the woman was killed in the gun battle. That has turned out to be incorrect and officials attributed the mistake to the confusion that usually accompanies a fast-moving gun battle, or "the fog of war."

In a photograph released by the White House, the President and his top advisors – including a visibly tense Secretary of State Hillary Clinton – are shown watching a screen very intently in the White House Situation Room. What was on the screen at the time is not clear, but CIA Director Leon Panetta told the Public Broadcasting Service that Obama was not watching the Navy SEALs helmet-cam footage that showed the shots that took Osama down.

Like the White House's Situation Room, screens in both the Pentagon and the CIA were showing real-time footage of the compound – possibly footage from a circling drone -- creating not one, but three incredibly tense rooms in the highest echelons of U.S. security.

The operation began when two U.S. helicopters flew in low from Afghanistan and swept into the compound where bin Laden was thought to be hiding late Sunday night Pakistan time, or Sunday afternoon Washington time.

Two teams of SEALs slid down fast-ropes from the helicopters as soon as they were in position and stormed the compound. One of the helicopters stalled and made a hard landing just outside the walled compound before the SEALs stormed in. The Navy SEAL team on this mission was supported by helicopter pilots from the 160th Special Ops Air Regiment, part of the Joint Special Operations Command.

After what Carney called a "volatile" firefight, the SEALs killed bin Laden and at least four others with him. The SEALs alerted the White House through the cryptic phrase "Geronimo-E KIA" code. "E" stood for enemy and "KIA" for killed in action.

"Once those teams went into the compound, I can tell you that there was a time period of almost 20 or 25 minutes that we really didn't know just exactly what was going on. There were some very tense moments as we were waiting for information. But finally Adm. [William] McRaven came back and said he had picked up the word 'Geronimo,' which was the code word that represented they got bin Laden," Panetta told PBS.

The SEALs words, however, were not sufficient proof that the mastermind of the 9/11 terror attacks was finally dead. As the evidence piled up -- verbal ID, face recognition analysis and DNA matches -- the White House debate continued.

Obama ended the discussion with a terse, "We got him."

Before they left, the SEALs gathered a trove of evidence from among bin Laden's personal possessions, from computer hard drives to CDs and papers. U.S. intelligence analysts are expected to pour over the information in coming days, hoping to turn information kept by the al Qaeda leader against the entire terror network.

Copyright 2011 ABC News Radio

Tuesday
May032011

Osama Bin Laden's Compound: Built Specifically for Al Qaeda Leader?

This graphic provided by the Dept of Defense shows the layout of the compound in Abbottabad where Osama Bin Laden was killed. (U.S. Department of Defense)(WASHINGTON) -- Administration officials believe Osama bin Laden had been living at the Abbottabad, Pakistan, compound for years, ABC News has learned, with one senior administration source even suggesting the compound was specifically built in 2005 for the al Qaeda leader.

That this compound was constructed in the neighborhood of former Pakistani military officials and a local military academy calls into question the participation of the local -- if not national -- government.

“It’s inconceivable that bin Laden did not have a support system in the country that allowed him to remain there for an extended period of time,” said White House counterterrorism adviser John Brennan on Monday, who noted that the Obama administration was “pursuing all leads in this issue.”

“We’ve had differences of view with the Pakistani government on counterterrorism cooperation, on areas of cooperation, and what we think they should and shouldn’t be doing,” Brennan acknowledged.

“At the same time,” he added, “Pakistan has been responsible for capturing and killing more terrorists inside of Pakistan than any country, and it’s by a wide margin.  And there have been many, many brave Pakistani soldiers, security officials, as well as citizens, who have given their lives because of the terrorism scourge in that country.”

Copyright 2011 ABC News Radio

Tuesday
May032011

Did Osama Bin Laden Tell Sons Not to Join Al Qaeda?

JEWEL SAMAD/AFP/Getty Images(WASHINGTON) -- In a document purporting to be the last will and testament of Osama bin Laden, the life-long terror chief allegedly apologizes to his children for devoting his life to jihad and tells them not to join al Qaeda.

The document, first published in a Lebanese newspaper in 2001, has resurfaced several times, including this week following confirmation of bin Laden's death at the hands of U.S. soldiers.

Despite the document's longevity and ubiquity -- it was even cited in a recent Senate report -- U.S. intelligence sources are skeptical of its authenticity.

In the will, bin Laden apologizes to his children for spending so much time devoted to jihad. He tells them not work for al Qaeda. He compares himself to a seventh century caliph and suggests if they want to climb the ranks of the terror network, they must do so by their own murderous deeds and not by riding his bloody coattails.

"As for you my children: Forgive me for not giving you except but a minimum amount of my time since I have begun my call for jihad," bin Laden allegedly writes in the will. "And I advise you not to join in the work of al Qaeda."

The document's contradictions -- a boastful list of deadly accomplishments that includes the 1993 U.S. embassy bombing in Kenya and the 9/11 terror attacks along with his apology for jihad -- has led experts both inside and outside the U.S. government to debate its authenticity.

Bin Laden tells his children not to join al Qaeda, but by many accounts, including those of his own children, the terror chief was grooming his offspring to take over.

"He never asked me to join al Qaeda, but he did tell me I was the son chosen to carry on his work," Omar bin Laden, Osama's son and author of "Growing Up Bin Laden" told the Guardian in 2009.

Omar bin Laden also recounted in his book his indignation when his father suggested his sons volunteer to be suicide bombers.

Another son, Saad Bin Laden, who was killed in a 2009 drone attack, is believed to have been a close confidant of his father who fought alongside him in Pakistan. A second son, Khalid, died with bin Laden during the SEAL raid on Sunday.

For Rohan Gunaratna, author of "Inside Al Qaeda" and head of the International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research, bin Laden's reluctance to guarantee his sons a leadership role in al Qaeda ironically helps prove the document likely is genuine.

"I have no doubt this document is real," he said. "Despite being puritanical, bin Laden had a rather modern management style," Gunaratna said.

"He didn't want them to inherit what he built simply because they were his sons," he said. "He wanted them to work from the bottom up." Bin Laden also allegedly insists that his four wives not remarry after his death.

"Do not think of remarrying for it is sufficient for you to care for our children and sacrifice for them and make prayers for them," he allegedly wrote.

Lending credence to its possible authenticity is the date. The will dated Dec. 14, 2001 was released at the same time as "Knights Under the Prophet's Banner," a book written by Al Qaeda's number two, Ayman al-Zawahiri.

"The will and the book were both released when al Qaeda's leadership was most at risk following 9/11 and both men looked for ways to make their final wishes known," Gunaratna said.

"Zawahiri is a prolific writer, but bin Laden is not. This particular document was to be a testament because [bin Laden] believed he would be killed," he said.

Gunaratna also said the signature at the bottom of the document belonged to bin Laden.

In a 2009, report released by the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations about the U.S. failure to capture bin Laden earlier, says the will is "regarded as authentic."

Calls to the committee asking for how the document was authenticated were not immediately returned.

But for the man who first raised the alarm about al Qaeda and hunted bin Laden in the days following 9/11, the document is an obvious fraud.

"It's a Saudi fabrication and it's been around for years," said Michael Scheuer, a veteran CIA agent who headed the secretive Bin Laden Issue Station, nicknamed Alec Station, and was later the chief of the bin Laden Unit.

"Nothing in it resembles bin Laden's thought patterns," he said. "The structure of the language is all wrong. One thing that never appears in his documents is despair, and this thing is full of despair."

"It's a direct contradiction to what we know about bin Laden," he said.

Copyright 2011 ABC News Radio