
"Going after bin Laden" has
served, over the last five years, to sustain the legend of the "world's
most wanted terrorist", who "haunts Americans and millions of others
around the world."
Donald Rumsfeld
has repeatedly claimed that the whereabouts of Osama bin Laden remain
unknown: "It is like looking for a needle in a stack of hay".
In November 2001, US B-52 bombers carpet bombed a
network of caves in the Tora Bora mountains of eastern Afghanistan, where
Osama bin Laden and his followers were allegedly hiding. These caves were
described as "Osama's last stronghold".
CIA "intelligence analysts" subsequently concluded
that Osama had escaped from his Tora Bora cave in the first week of
December 2001. And in January 2002, the Pentagon launched a Worldwide
search for Osama and his top lieutenants, beyond the borders of
Afghanistan. This operation, referred to by Secretary of State Colin
Powell as a "hot pursuit", was carried out with the support of the
"international community" and America's European allies. US intelligence
authorities confirmed, in this regard, that
"while
al Qaeda has been significantly shattered, ... the most wanted man - bin
Laden himself remains one step ahead of the United States, with the core
of his worldwide terror network still in place. (Global News Wire
- Asia Africa Intelligence Wire, InfoProd, January 20, 2002)
For the last five years, the US military and
intelligence apparatus (at considerable expense to US taxpayers) has been
"searching for Osama".
A CIA unit with a multimillion dollar
budget was set up, with a mandate to find Osama. This unit was apparently
disbanded in 2005. "Intelligence experts agree", he is hiding in a remote
area of Pakistan, but "we cannot find him":
"Most
intelligence analysts are convinced that Osama bin Laden is somewhere on
the Afghan-Pakistan border. Lately, it has been said that he's probably
in the vicinity of the a 7700m Hindu Kush peak Tirich Mir in the tribal
Chitral area of northwest Pakistan." Hobart Mercury (Australia),
September 9, 2006)
President Bush has repeatedly
promised to "smoke him out" of his cave, capture him dead or alive, if
necessary through ground assaults or missile strikes. According to a
recent statement by president Bush, Osama is hiding in a remote area of
Pakistan which "is extremely mountainous and very inaccessible, ... with
high mountains between 9,000 to 15,000 feet high....". We cannot get him,
because, according to the president, there is no communications
infrastructure, which would enable us to effectively go after him. (quoted
in Balochistan Times, 23 April 2006)
The pursuit of Osama has become a
highly ritualized process which feeds the news chain on a daily basis. It
is not only part of the media disinformation campaign, it also provides a
justification for the arbitrary arrest, detention and torture of numerous
"suspects", "enemy combatants" and "accomplices", who allegedly might be
aware of Osama's whereabouts. And that information is of course vital to
"the security of Americans".
The search for Osama serves both military and
political objectives. The Democrats and Republicans compete in their
resolve to weed out "islamic terrorism".
The Path to 9/11, a five-hour ABC series on "the search for Osama"
--which makes its debut on the 10th and 11th of September to marks the
fifth anniversary of the attacks-- casually accuses Bill Clinton of having
been "too busy with the Monica Lewinsky scandal to fight terrorism."
The message of the movie is that the Democrats neglected the "war on
terrorism".
The fact of the matter is that every single administration, since Jimmy
Carter have supported and financed the "Islamic terror" network, created
during the Carter administration at the outset of the Soviet-Afghan war.
(See Michel Chossudovsky,
Who is Osama bin Laden,
12 September 2001). al Qaeda is a instrument of US intelligence: a US
sponsored intelligence asset.
Where was Osama
on Septembers 11?
There is evidence that the
whereabouts of Osama are known to the Bush Administration.
On September
10. 2001, "Enemy Number One" was in a Pakistani military hospital in
Rawalpindi, courtesy of America's indefectible ally Pakistan, as confirmed
by a report of Dan Rather, CBS News. (See
our October 2003 article on this issue)
He could have been
arrested at short notice which would have "saved us a lot of trouble", but
then we would not have had an Osama Legend, which has fed the news chain
as well as George W's speeches in the course of the last five years.
According to Dan
Rather, CBS, Bin Laden was hospitalized in Rawalpindi. one day before the
9/11 attacks, on September 10, 2001.
"Pakistan.
Pakistan's Military Intelligence (ISI) told CBS that bin
Laden had received dialysis treatment in Rawalpindi, at Pak Army's
headquarters.
DAN RATHER, CBS
ANCHOR: As the United states and its allies in the war on terrorism
press the hunt for Osama bin Laden, CBS News has exclusive
information tonight about where bin Laden was and what he was doing in
the last hours before his followers struck the United States September
11.
This is the
result of hard-nosed investigative reporting by a team of CBS news
journalists, and by one of the best foreign correspondents in the
business, CBS`s Barry Petersen. Here is his report.
(BEGIN
VIDEOTAPE) BARRY PETERSEN, CBS CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Everyone
remembers what happened on September 11. Here`s the story of what may
have happened the night before. It is a tale as twisted as the hunt for
Osama bin Laden.
CBS News
has been told that the night before the September 11 terrorist attack,
Osama bin Laden was in Pakistan. He was getting medical treatment with
the support of the very military that days later pledged its backing for
the U.S. war on terror in Afghanistan.
Pakistan
intelligence sources tell CBS News that bin Laden was spirited into this
military hospital in Rawalpindi for kidney dialysis treatment. On that
night, says this medical worker who wanted her identity protected, they
moved out all the regular staff in the urology department and sent in a
secret team to replace them. She says it was treatment for a very
special person. The special team was obviously up to no good.
"The
military had him surrounded," says this hospital employee who
also wanted his identity masked, "and I saw the mysterious patient
helped out of a car. Since that time," he says, "I have seen many
pictures of the man. He is the man we know as Osama bin Laden. I also
heard two army officers talking to each other. They were saying that
Osama bin Laden had to be watched carefully and looked after." Those who
know bin Laden say he suffers from numerous ailments, back and stomach
problems. Ahmed Rashid, who has written extensively on the Taliban, says
the military was often there to help before 9/11.
(...)
PETERSEN (on
camera): Doctors at the hospital told CBS News there was nothing special
about that night, but they refused our request to see any records.
Government officials tonight denied that bin Laden had any medical
treatment on that night.
(voice-over):
But it was Pakistan's President Musharraf who said in public what many
suspected, that bin Laden suffers from kidney disease, saying he thinks
bin Laden may be near death. His evidence, watching this most recent
video, showing a pale and haggard bin Laden, his left hand never moving.
Bush administration officials admit they don`t know if bin Laden is sick
or even dead.
DONALD RUMSFELD,
DEFENSE SECRETARY: With respect to the issue of Osama bin Laden`s
health, I just am -- don`t have any knowledge.
PETERSEN: The
United States has no way of knowing who in Pakistan`s military or
intelligence supported the Taliban or Osama bin Laden maybe up to the
night before 9/11 by arranging dialysis to keep him alive. So the United
States may not know if those same people might help him again perhaps to
freedom.
Barry Petersen,
CBS News, Islamabad.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
END
(CBS News,
28 January 2002 emphasis added, the complete transcript of CBS
report sis contained in annex to this article)
It should be
noted, that the hospital is directly under the jurisdiction of the
Pakistani Armed Forces, which has close links to the Pentagon. U.S.
military advisers based in Rawalpindi. work closely with the Pakistani
Armed Forces. Again, no attempt was made to arrest America's best known
fugitive, but then maybe bin Laden was serving another "better purpose".
Rumsfeld claimed at the time that he had no knowledge regarding Osama's
health. (CBS News, 28 January 2002)
The CBS report is
a crucial piece of information in our understanding of 9/11.
It refutes the
administration's claim that the whereabouts of bin Laden are unknown. It
points to a Pakistan connection, it suggests a cover-up at the highest
levels of the Bush administration.
Dan Rather and
Barry Petersen fail to draw the implications of their January 2002
report. They suggest that the US had been deliberately misled by
Pakistani intelligence officials. They fail to ask the question:
Why does the
US administration state that they cannot find Osama?
If they are to
stand by their report, the conclusion is obvious. The administration is
lying. Osama bin Laden's whereabouts were known.
If the CBS report
is accurate and Osama had indeed been admitted to the Pakistani military
hospital on September 10, courtesy of America's ally, he was either still
in hospital in Rawalpindi on the 11th of September, when the attacks
occurred or had been released from the hospital within the last hours
before the attacks.
In other words,
Osama's whereabouts were known to US officials on the morning of September
12, when Secretary of State Colin Powell initiated negotiations with
Pakistan, with a view to arresting and extraditing bin Laden. These
negotiations, led by General Mahmoud Ahmad, head of Pakistan's military
intelligence, on behalf of the government of President Pervez Musharraf,
took place on the 12th and 13th of September in Deputy Secretary of State
Richard Armitage's office.
He could have been
arrested at short notice on September 10th, 2001. But then we would not
have been privileged to five years of Osama related media stories. The
Bush administration desperately needs the fiction of an "outside enemy of
America".
Known and
documented Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda is a construct of the US
intelligence apparatus. His essential function is to give a face to the
"war on terrorism". The image must be vivid.
According to the White house, "The greatest
threat to us is this ideology of violent extremism, and its greatest
public proponent is Osama bin Laden. Bin Laden remains the number one
target, in terms of our efforts, but he's not the only target." Recent
Statement of White House Assistant for Homeland Security Frances Townsend,
5 September 2006).
The national
security doctrine rests on the fiction of Islamic terrorists, led by Osama
who are portrayed as a "threat to the civilized World". In the words of
President Bush, "Bin Laden and his terrorist allies have made their
intentions as clear as Lenin and Hitler before them. The question is will
we listen? Will we pay attention to what these evil men say? We are on the
offensive. We will not rest. We will not retreat. And we will not withdraw
from the fight until this threat to civilization has been removed."
(quoted by CNN, September 5, 2006)
The "hot pursuit"
of Osama in the rugged mountainous areas of Pakistan must continue,
because without Osama, referred to ad nauseam in news reports and official
statements, the fragile legitimacy of the Bush administration collapses
like a deck of cards.
Moreover, the search for Osama protects the real architects of the 911
attacks. While there is no evidence that Al Qaeda was behind the 911
attacks, as revealed by nuerous studies and documents, there is mounting
evidence of complicity and coverup at the highest levels of the State,
Military and intelligence apparatus.
The continued arrest of alleged 911 accomplices and suspects has nothing
to do with "national security". It creates the illusion that Arabs and
Muslims are behind the terror plots, while shunting the conduct of a real
criminal investigation into the 911 attacks. And what were dealing with is
the criminalization of the upper echelons of State.

Michel Chossudovsky
is the author of the international
best
America’s "War on Terrorism"
Global Research, 2005. He is Professor of Economics at the University of
Ottawa and Director of the Center for Research on Globalization.
To order
Chossudovsky's book
America's "War on Terrorism", click
here
Note: Readers are welcome to cross-post this article with a view to
spreading the word and warning people of the dangers of a broader Middle
East war. Please indicate the source and copyright note.
media
inquiries
crgeditor@yahoo.com
CBS Evening
News with Dan Rather;
Author: Dan
Rather, Barry Petersen
CBS, 28 January
2002
DAN RATHER, CBS
ANCHOR: As the United states and its allies in the war on terrorism press
the hunt for Osama bin Laden, CBS News has exclusive information tonight
about where bin Laden was and what he was doing in the last hours before
his followers struck the United States September 11.
This is the result
of hard-nosed investigative reporting by a team of CBS news journalists,
and by one of the best foreign correspondents in the business, CBS`s Barry
Petersen. Here is his report.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
BARRY PETERSEN, CBS CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Everyone remembers what
happened on September 11. Here`s the story of what may have happened the
night before. It is a tale as twisted as the hunt for Osama bin Laden.
CBS News has been
told that the night before the September 11 terrorist attack, Osama bin
Laden was in Pakistan. He was getting medical treatment with the support
of the very military that days later pledged its backing for the U.S. war
on terror in Afghanistan.
Pakistan
intelligence sources tell CBS News that bin Laden was spirited into this
military hospital in Rawalpindi for kidney dialysis treatment. On that
night, says this medical worker who wanted her identity protected, they
moved out all the regular staff in the urology department and sent in a
secret team to replace them. She says it was treatment for a very special
person. The special team was obviously up to no good.
"The military had
him surrounded," says this hospital employee who also wanted his identity
masked, "and I saw the mysterious patient helped out of a car. Since that
time," he says, "I have seen many pictures of the man. He is the man we
know as Osama bin Laden. I also heard two army officers talking to each
other. They were saying that Osama bin Laden had to be watched carefully
and looked after." Those who know bin Laden say he suffers from numerous
ailments, back and stomach problems. Ahmed Rashid, who has written
extensively on the Taliban, says the military was often there to help
before 9/11.
AHMED RASHID,
TALIBAN EXPERT: There were reports that Pakistani intelligence had helped
the Taliban buy dialysis machines. And the rumor was that these were
wanted for Osama bin Laden.
PETERSEN (on
camera): Doctors at the hospital told CBS News there was nothing special
about that night, but they refused our request to see any records.
Government officials tonight denied that bin Laden had any medical
treatment on that night.
(voice-over): But
it was Pakistan`s President Musharraf who said in public what many
suspected, that bin Laden suffers from kidney disease, saying he thinks
bin Laden may be near death. His evidence, watching this most recent
video, showing a pale and haggard bin Laden, his left hand never moving.
Bush administration officials admit they don`t know if bin Laden is sick
or even dead.
DONALD RUMSFELD,
DEFENSE SECRETARY: With respect to the issue of Osama bin Laden`s health,
I just am -- don`t have any knowledge.
PETERSEN: The
United States has no way of knowing who in Pakistan`s military or
intelligence supported the Taliban or Osama bin Laden maybe up to the
night before 9/11 by arranging dialysis to keep him alive. So the United
States may not know if those same people might help him again perhaps to
freedom.
Barry Petersen,
CBS News, Islamabad.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
END
Copyright CBS News
2002
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/01/28/eveningnews/main325887.shtml
Hospital Worker: I Saw Osama
Jan. 28, 2002
Quote
"They military
had him surrounded. I have seen many pictures of the man. He is the man
we know as Osama bin Laden." Hospital employee
(CBS) Everyone
remembers what happened on Sept. 11 and, reports CBS News Correspondent
Barry Petersen, here's the story of what may have happened the night
before.
In a tale as
twisted as the hunt for Osama bin Laden, CBS Evening News has been told
that the night before the Sept. 11 terrorists attack, Osama bin Laden was
in Pakistan. He was getting medical treatment with the support of the very
military that days later pledged its backing for the U.S. war on terror in
Afghanistan.
Pakistan
intelligence sources tell CBS News that bin Laden was spirited into a
military hospital in Rawalpindi for kidney dialysis treatment.
"On that night,"
said a medical worker who wanted her identity protected, "they moved out
all the regular staff in the urology department and sent in a secret team
to replace them." She said it was treatment for a very special person and
"the special team was obviously up to no good."
"They military had
him surrounded," said a hospital employee who also wanted his identity
masked, "and I saw the mysterious patient helped out of a car. Since that
time," he said, "I have seen many pictures of the man. He is the man we
know as Osama bin Laden. I also heard two army officers talking to each
other. They were saying that Osama bin Laden had to be watched carefully
and looked after."
Those who know bin
Laden say he suffers from numerous ailments — back and stomach problems.
Ahmed Rashid, who
has written extensively on the Taliban, said the military was often there
to help before Sept. 11.
"There were
reports that Pakistan intelligence had helped the Taliban buy dialysis
machines and the rumor was that these were for wanted for Osama bin
Laden," said Rashid.
Doctors at the
hospital told CBS News there was nothing special about that night, but
they declined our request to see any records. Government officials reached
Monday night denied that bin Laden received any medical treatment that
night.
A U.S. official,
speaking on condition of anonymity, said Tuesday the United States has
seen nothing to substantiate the report.
It was Pakistan's
President Pervez Musharraf who said in public what many suspected: that
bin Laden suffers from kidney disease, saying he thinks bin Laden may be
near death.
His evidence —
watching the most recent video, showing a pale and haggard bin Laden, his
left hand never moving. Bush administration officials admit they don't
know if bin Laden is sick or even dead.
"With respect to
the issue of Osama bin Laden's health, I just am...don't have any
knowledge," said Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld.
The U.S. has no
way of knowing who in Pakistan's military or intelligence supported the
Taliban or Osama bin Lade, maybe up to the night before Sept. 11 by
arranging dialysis to keep him alive. So the U.S. may not know if those
same people might help him again — perhaps to freedom.
Copyright CBS News
2002