The Borneo Post (Sabah)

CIA releases vast Osama archive seized in deadly 2011 raid

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Today’s release provides the opportunit­y for the American people to gain further insights into the plans and workings of this terrorist organisati­on.

WASHINGTON: The-CIA-released a vast archive of intimate al-Qaeda documents, including Osama bin Laden’s handwritte­n diary, seized in the deadly 2011 raid on his Pakistani compound.

The huge trove includes images of diary pages left by the Saudiborn global extremist leader and a wedding video that includes the first public images of his son Hamza as an adult.

Controvers­ially, scholars from a Washington think-tank who were given access to the now declassifi­ed trove say the documents also shed new light on al-Qaeda’s murky relationsh­ip with Iran.

“Today’s release provides the opportunit­y for the American people to gain further insights into the plans and workings of this terrorist organisati­on,” said CIA director Mike Pompeo.

The CIA put online 470,000 additional files seized in May 2011 when US Navy SEALs burst into the Abbottabad compound and shot dead the leader of al-Qaeda’s global extremist network.

According to Thomas Joscelyn and Bill Roggio, scholars from the Foundation for Defence of Democracie­s who were allowed to see the trove before it was made public, it provides new insights.

“These documents will go a long way to help fill in some of the blanks we still have about al-Qaeda’s leadership,” Roggio said.

The inclusion of Hamza Bin Laden’s wedding video, for example, gives the world public the first image of Osama’s favourite son as an adult – an image apparently shot in Iran.

Previous document releases, including letters revealed by AFP in May 2015, show that Osama was grooming Hamza to succeed him as leader of al-Qaeda’s global jihadist campaign.

But plans for him to come to Osama’s Abbottabad hideout seem to have been abandoned after the deadly US raid, and the young man – now aged 27 or 28 – is presumed to be in Iran.

According to Joscelyn and Roggio, writing in the FDD’s Long War Journal, one of the newly released documents is a 19-page study of al-Qaeda’s links to Iran written by a Osama lieutenant.

Last month, at a seminar hosted by the same FDD that had an advance look at the files, Pompeo had promised to release Abbott a bad documents that would show Iran al-Qaeda ties.

“There have been relationsh­ips, there are connection­s. There have been times the Iranians have worked alongside al-Qaeda,” the US spy chief argued.

“There have been connection­s where, at the very least, they have cut deals so as not to come after each other.”

This raised alarm bells among critics of President Donald Trump’ s new strategy to counter Iranian influence, wary that hawks like

CIA director Mike Pompeo.

Pompeo may be making a case for war.

The full extent and true nature of this relationsh­ip is unclear and a matter of dispute among scholars and policy-makers.

On the one hand, Tehran and its largely Shiite proxy forces in the Middle East often fight against Sunni movements aligned with al-Qaeda’s deeply sectarian ideology.

The Iranian backed Hezbollah, for example, is locked in conflict against al-Qaeda linked Syrian rebels.

But the very fact that Hamza and other senior figures appear to be able to live under Iranian protection or custody supports claims that Tehran and Osama had a working relationsh­ip.

One document, Joscelyn and Roggio write, recounts how Iran offered training, money and arms to some of al-Qaeda’s ‘Saudi brothers’ on condition they attack US interests in the Gulf.

But the files also show Tehran and al-Qaeda sometimes had stark disagreeme­nts, and Osama once wrote to Iranian leader the Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to demand his relatives be released.

“Other files show that al-Qaeda kidnapped an Iranian diplomat in order to force an exchange,” Joscelyn writes. — AFP

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— AFP photo Afghan men receive treatment at a hospital in Kabul.
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— Reuters photo Palestinia­ns take part in a protest against Balfour Declaratio­n, in Gaza City.
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Osama bin Laden

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