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Al-Jazeera airs pre-9/11 bin Laden
tape
Cairo -
Al-Jazeera broadcast Thursday a previously unshown video of the
preparations for the Sept. 11 attacks, in which al-Qaida chief Osama
bin Laden is seen meeting with some of the planners in an Afghan
mountain camp.
The station said that bin Laden also
is shown greeting some of the hijackers, although their faces were not
clear and it was not immediately known which are purportedly shown.
The video included the last wills and
testaments of hijackers Wail al-Shehri and Hamza al-Ghamdi.
Al-Jazeera did not say how it
obtained the video, which was produced by As-Sahab, al-Qaida's media
branch. Islamic militant Web forums said the entire video would be
posted soon on the Internet. Such advertisements in the past have come
a day or two before the video appears on the Web.
Thursday's was the fourth in a series
of long videos that al-Qaida has put out to memorialize the Sept. 11,
2001, attacks on the Pentagon and World Trade Center, said Ben Venzke,
head of IntelCenter, a private U.S. company that monitors militant
message traffic and provides counterterrorism intelligence services
for the American government.
The previous ones were issued in
April and September 2002 and September 2003, each showing video from
the planning of the suicide hijackings and farewell statements from
some of the hijackers, Venzke said.
In the latest video, bin Laden is
shown sitting outside with his former lieutenant Mohammed Atef and
Ramzi Binalshibh, another suspected planner of the Sept. 11 attacks.
Venzke
said the scenes had not been previously broadcast.
Atef,
also known as Abu Hafs al-Masri, was killed by a U.S. airstrike in
Afghanistan in 2001. Binalshibh was captured four years ago in
Pakistan and is in U.S. custody. President Bush announced plans to put
him on military trial.
The video shows bin Laden in a dark
robe and white headgear, strolling through the camp and greeting
dozens of followers, some masked, and many carrying automatic weapons.
A voice-over narration praises the fighters and refers to the camp
being "on the soil of Kandahar" — a city in southern Afghanistan.
The footage shows scenes of training
at the camp. Masked militants perform martial-arts kicks or learn how
to break the hold of someone who grabs them from behind. Several
militants are shown practicing with fold-out knives.
Venzke
said the footage was part of a video he expected would be more than an
hour long, based on previous releases.
He said the full version of the video
was believed to include a message from Azzam al-Amriki, the nom de
guerre of Adam Yehiye Gadahn, an American who the FBI says has
associated with al-Qaida. Gadahn appeared in an al-Qaida video
released last week, in which he called on Americans to convert to
Islam.
The full video also likely includes
messages from bin Laden or his deputy, Ayman al-Zawahri, though they
may not be new, Venzke said, without elaborating on why he believed
that.
"They produce long videos like these
not just for 9/11, but for any significant events they feel warrant
their attention," Venzke said.
One aim is to boost recruitment, but
such videos have other purposes — "to speak to their supporters, to
raise morale within their own group, to facilitate fundraising, and to
serve as a psychological attack," he said.
The footage also shows glimpses of
daily life in the camp, with men chopping wood and cutting up
vegetables for dinner.
Al-Shehri and al-Ghamdi are each
shown speaking to the camera, their images superimposed over pictures
of the crumbling World Trade Center towers and the burning Pentagon,
as well as a model of a passenger jet.
They both say Muslims must stand up
and fight the West.
"If jihad now is not an obligation
(on Muslims), when will it be?" said al-Shehri, pointing to attacks on
Muslims in Bosnia, Afghanistan and Chechnya.
"If we are content with being
humiliated and inclined to comfort, the tooth of the enemy will
stretch from Jerusalem to Mecca, and then everyone will regret on a
day when regret is of no use," al-Ghamdi said. -- The
Associated Press
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