Laden urges Europeans to end help to US
December 01, 2007 00:00:00
CAIRO, Nov 30 (AP): Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden called on Europeans to stop helping the United States (US) in the war in Afghanistan, according to a new tape released Thursday.
Bin Laden said it was unjust for the United States to have invaded Afghanistan for sheltering him after the Sept. 11 terror attacks, saying he was the 'only one responsible' for the deadly assaults on New York and Washington.
"The events of Manhattan were retaliation against the American-Israeli alliance's aggression against our people in Palestine and Lebanon, and I am the only one responsible for it. The Afghan people and government knew nothing about it. America knows that," the al-Qaeda leader said.
Two brief excerpts of the tape titled "Message to the European Peoples" were initially broadcast Thursday on Al-Jazeera television. An English transcript of the entire five-minute tape was later provided to The Associated Press by the SITE Institute and the IntelCenter, both private groups that monitor terror web sites. The tape was released as a video but the groups said that the only image was an old photo of bin Laden.
The message appeared to be another attempt by the terror mastermind to influence public opinion in the West. In 2004, he offered Europeans a truce if they stopped attacking Muslims, then later spoke of a truce with the U.S. In both cases, al-Qaeda then denounced those areas for not accepting its offer.
In the latest tape, bin Laden said that Afghans have been caught up in decades of struggle, first "at the hands of the Russians ... and before their wounds had healed and their grief had ended, they were invaded without right by your unjust governments."
FBI analysts were reviewing the tape but were not immediately able to say when it might have been recorded nor could they provide other details. Spokesman Richard Kolko said it was being examined "to determine if it is authentic and for any intelligence value."