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No Evidence, but FBI Counterterrorism Chief Thinks Bin Laden Dead

Watson asserted that Osama bin Laden was dead, but provided no evidence

WASHINGTON, July 18 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden may be dead, but the threat to U.S. security from the remains of his organization is still real, Dale Watson, head of the FBI's anti-terrorist unit, said Wednesday, July 17, 2002.

"Is he alive or dead? I personally think he's probably no longer with us anymore. But I have no evidence to support that," Watson said in a rare public declaration.

Watson made the announcement at a speech to hundreds of local law enforcement officers gathered at a hotel in Washington. He is the first senior U.S. law enforcement official to publicly give an opinion on whether bin Laden is alive or dead, CNN reported.

Watson's belief is contrary to that of other senior FBI officials, who declined commenting on Watson’s assertion, and who have suggested that bin Laden may likely have survived the U.S. bombardments of his Afghan hideouts.

Pentagon spokeswoman Lt. Col. Catherine Abbott said she was not aware of any new information on bin Laden's fate, and said that until they see evidence to the contrary, Pentagon officials are operating on an assumption that he is alive, reports news agencies.

His comments are the latest twist to international rumors over the fate of the alleged terrorist mastermind, with the absence of hard fact only fuelling persistent - and often contradictory - speculation.

On Monday, July 15, a senior Arab journalist, Abdel-Bari-Atwan, editor of the London-based Al-Quds Al-Arabi magazine, said to have close links to the Al-Qaeda leader claimed in London that bin Laden was alive and in good health despite having sustained a shrapnel injury to his shoulder during U.S. bombardments of the Tora Bora region in eastern Afghanistan.

Germany's Federal Intelligence Service also concluded bin Laden was probably alive in the border region between Pakistan and Afghanistan, and that he authorized, but did not plan, the September 11 attacks, news agencies reported.

U.S. President George W. Bush, whose administration has avoided saying whether the government believes bin Laden is dead or alive, said last week, "Osama bin Laden, he may be alive. If he is, we'll get him. If he's not alive, we got him ... but the issue is bigger than one person."

Watson, meanwhile, insisted that the threat of further terrorist strikes against the United States was still real, regardless of bin Laden's fate.

Watson also said bin Laden's Al-Qaeda training camps has been dismantled, but that "There is no question in my mind that we will be attacked again."

Watson heads the Division of Counter-Terrorism/Counter-Intelligence at FBI Headquarters in Washington and rarely makes public appearances. He sometimes substitutes for Director Robert Mueller in White House meetings on the terrorism threat, reports CNN.

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