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Politics : WAR on Terror. Will it engulf the Entire Middle East?
SPY 670.92+0.1%Nov 7 4:00 PM EST

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To: lorne who wrote (5722)1/19/2003 8:50:37 PM
From: Haim R. Branisteanu  Read Replies (1) of 32591
 
Letter purportedly from bin Laden urges Muslim unity against 'crusader coalition'

Copyright © 2003 AP Online


By MAGGIE MICHAEL, Associated Press

CAIRO, Egypt (January 19, 2003 4:17 p.m. EST) - A statement purportedly written by
Osama bin Laden urges Muslims to stop fighting each other and unite against the
"crusader coalition" that is attacking the Islamic world, according to excerpts
published Sunday in a London-based Arab newspaper.

Asharq Al-Awsat printed portions of a 26-page statement it claims was written and
signed by bin Laden, leader of the al-Qaida terror group.

The letter did not mention any nation, but earlier statements attributed to bin Laden
and other al-Qaida leaders have accused the United States and Israel of launching a
religious crusade against the Muslim world.

The journalist who wrote the article, Mohamed el-Shaf'aie, told The Associated Press
on Sunday that the statement was mailed to the paper from an Islamic source in
London with close links to a Pakistan-based Islamic research center known for its ties
to al-Qaida.

The letter attributed to bin Laden says, "the current situation Muslims are living in
requires a deployment of all efforts to fight the Islamic battle against the crusader
coalition, which has revealed its real, evil intentions."

"Their target now is Islam and Muslims and not only the (Middle East) region," the
letter added.

America has come under attack throughout the Islamic world for a perceived bias
toward Israel in the Jewish state's conflict with the Palestinians, and for the U.S.
threat to attack Iraq if it retains weapons banned by the United Nations.

The U.S.-led war in Afghanistan, launched after the Sept. 11 terror attacks in the
United States, and U.S. detention of hundreds of men with suspected links to
al-Qaida and Afghanistan's previous Taliban rulers have compounded the view in the
Islamic world that Washington is attacking Muslims.

The United States denies such claims.

Despite numerous written, audio and videotaped statements attributed to bin Laden
after the launch of the Afghanistan war, it is unclear where the Saudi-born Islamic
extremist is or if he is still alive.

No al-Qaida-affiliated Web sites immediately published the latest statement, which
normally happens whenever one appears.

The statement excerpts published by Asharq Al-Awsat urge Muslims to "wake from
their deep sleep ... and stop (acting as) rivals and fire their arrows toward their
enemies instead of themselves."

It was not clear who the letter referred to, but feuds and disputes are common within
the volatile Middle East.

The statement's author said he was "surprised by the many different controversies
and feuds among Muslims in general and those working for Islam in particular. Such a
dangerous phenomenon has become the only thing Islamic-oriented factions agree
upon."

The letter also defends al-Qaida leaders for unspecified mistakes. "The honor of
righteous men should be protected despite whatever faults they may commit," the
letter said without elaborating.
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