CAIRO,
May 24, 2006 (IslamOnline.net) – America's number one public enemy
continues to haunt the Bush administration with his audiotapes, this
time refuting claims that Zacarias Moussaoui or detainees in the
notorious Guantanamo detention camp had links to the 9/11 attacks.
"I
am responsible for assigning the roles of the 19 brothers to conduct
these conquests and I did not order Zacarias to be with those on this
mission," Osama bin Laden said in an audio recording posted on the
internet.
"His
confession that he was assigned to participate in those raids is a false
confession," added the speaker.
"No
intelligent person doubts (the confession) is a result of the pressure
put upon him for the past four and a half years."
A
US official said they had no reason to doubt the authenticity of the
recording. Washington had authenticated all recent tapes by bin Laden.
In
a new stinging defeat for the Bush administration, a federal jury on
Wednesday, May 3, spared Moussaoui, the only person convicted for the
9/11 attacks, the death sentence and slapped him with a life sentence.
After
seven days of deliberations, the jury of nine men and three women did
not find Moussaoui's actions resulted in the deaths of about 3,000
people on 9/11, a central part of the government's demand for the death
penalty.
Three
of the 12 jurors found that the role of Moussaoui, a 37-year-old
Frenchman of Moroccan origin, in the 9/11 operation, if any, was minor.
Two
Groups
Bin
Laden said the 9/11 attackers were split in two groups: pilots and
support teams to control the hijacked planes.
Moussaoui
was learning how to fly so he could not have been the so-called 20th
hijacker supposed to help control the airplanes as Washington had
claimed, he noted.
"And
if Moussaoui was studying aviation to become a pilot of one of the
planes, then let him tell us the names of those assigned to help him
control the plane.
"But
he won't be able to tell us their names, for a simple reason: that in
fact they don't exist."
The
speaker recalled that Moussaoui had been arrested two weeks before the
attacks.
"If
he had known something — even very little — about the Sept. 11
group, we would have informed the leader of the operation, Mohammad
Atta, and the others ... to leave America before being discovered,"
Bin Laden said.
Moussaoui
had pleaded guilty to six charges of conspiracy over the Al-Qaeda
attacks using hijacked planes.
He
told the court he would have piloted a fifth airplane into the White
House – a contradiction of his earlier claims he was meant to be part
of a second wave of attacks.
Moussaoui
later tried in vain to withdraw his guilty plea.
No
Links
Bin
Laden also said that the hundreds of detainees held by the US at
Guantanamo have no links with the 9/11.
"Our
brothers in Guantanamo ... have no connection whatsoever to the events
of Sept. 11."
He
stressed that they were not even Al-Qaeda sympathizers.
"Many
of them have no connection with Al-Qaeda in the first place, and even
more amazing is that some of them oppose Al-Qaeda's methodology of
calling for war with America."
Bin
Laden said the Bush administration was well aware of this fact but they
avoid mentioning it for reasons.
"There
must be some justification for the tremendous spending of hundreds of
billions of dollars on the Defense Department and other agencies,"
he said.
He
did indicate that two suspects had links to the attacks on the World
Trade Center and Pentagon.
"All
the prisoners to date have no connection to the Sept. 11 events or knew
anything about them, except for two of the brothers," he said
without naming or elaborating.
Bin
Laden also cleared two journalists and a relief worker of links to his
network, saying they had no such ties.
Sami
al-Hajj, an Al-Jazeera cameraman, was arrested in Afghanistan in 2001
and held at Guantanamo.
Tayssir
Alouni, an Al-Jazeera correspondent, was convicted by a Spanish court of
collaborating with Al-Qaeda, a charge he vehemently denies.
Abdul
Aziz al-Matrafi, the founder of an Afghan charity, is accused by the US
of supporting terror.
If
authentic, this would be third tape by bin Laden this year.
In
a tape aired on Arab television in April, he denounced the US and Europe
for cutting off funds to the Hamas-led Palestinian government, accusing
them of leading a "Zionist" war on Islam.
In
January, he offered the American people a truce. The message was his
first in over a year, his longest period of silence since the 9/11
attacks.