ÚÑÈí
 

Counseling:

Ask the Scholar

|

Ask About Islam

|

Hajj & `Umrah

|

Cyber Counselor

|

Parenting Counselor

 

Search »

Advanced Search »

 

Bin Laden Escaped U.S. Military

Newsweek reports that Osama bin Laden evaded the U.S. operation in Tora Bora last December and may be alive

WASHINGTON, August 12 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Osama bin Laden and a thousand al-Qaeda operatives slipped through the fingers of the U.S. military deployed in Afghanistan and may become even more dangerous, Newsweek magazine said Monday, August 12.

“Our operational evaluation today is that the threat is a lot greater than it was in December,” a European counter-terrorist investigator told the news magazine.

“That is to say: The worst is ahead of us, not behind us.”

Newsweek said the U.S. war in Afghanistan is widely regarded as successful, and U.S. planners are ready to move on to the next challenge: removing Saddam Hussein from the presidency of Iraq.

Tora Bora’s altitude, the choice to bomb the wrong escape route and an attack on the Indian parliament all contributed Al-Qaeda’s escape from Afghanistan, said the weekly.

However, the military has not captured its main target, Bin Laden.

As U.S. bombers bombed the route from Tora Bora to the Afghan city of Kwost, hundreds of Al-Qaeda members were escaping through the White Mountain route to Pakistan, Newsweek said.

Bin Laden and about 28 associates were among the escaping Al-Qaeda troops.

Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf would have plugged the leak earlier, said the article, if it weren't for armed gunmen from a Pakistan-based group storming the Indian parliament over the disputed Kashmir territory.

A U.S. plan to use Afghan troops to drive al-Qaeda into the path of awaiting U.S. snipers also failed. By the time the Afghan soldiers began their drive, only one third of the 1,300 U.S. troops were acclimatized to the Tora Bora mountains, according to Newsweek.

Two people witnessed Bin Laden’s escape, one as late as mid-February, both telling Newsweek that he passed through the caves of Shahikot, Afghanistan from Tora Bora. Although, their stories do not fully corroborate, news agencies have called their accounts plausible.

The first source, described as a former Taliban official and professional guide, said Bin Laden escaped Afghanistan on horseback last December under U.S. fire, reported the weekly news magazine.

The official told the magazine he led Bin Laden’s group on the journey, sometimes through heavy snow. The guide, whom the magazine did not identify, called Bin Laden an expert rider and said he rarely dismounted during the trip, reports news agencies.

A second source, a Taliban soldier named Ali Mohammad, said he saw Bin Laden accompanied by 15 bodyguards in mid-February in Shahikot rallying Taliban troops, preparing for a U.S. attack, urging them to keep their morale up and “take care of the injured and be confident that God will award you on Judgment Day.”

U.S. officials have said they do not know whether Bin Laden is dead or alive, but, in recent statements, have assumed that he is deceased.

 

Yesterday's News

Search Articles 

 

 

News Archive :
Day:   Month: Year:   


Send Mail

News | Shari`ah | Health & Science | Politics in Depth | Reading Islam | Family | Culture | Youth | Euro-Muslims | IOL Radio

About Us | Speech of Sheikh Qaradawi | Contact Us | Advertise | Support IOL | Site Map