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Politics : WAR on Terror. Will it engulf the Entire Middle East? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: lorne who wrote (18531)12/19/2006 1:42:12 PM
From: Ichy Smith  Respond to of 32591
 
Oh I have no doubt Europeans will soon start killing their enemies....

At some point the Russians and the Chinese will join in, and make it unanimous. And Israel can have all the land it wants, because Islam will be viewed finally as the aggressive cult that it is.....



To: lorne who wrote (18531)12/19/2006 6:01:28 PM
From: DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32591
 
French 'had bin Laden in sights'

english.aljazeera.net


Bin Laden is believed to be hiding in the mountains along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border


A new documentary says that French special forces had Osama bin Laden in their sights twice about three years ago but their US superiors never ordered them to fire.

The French military, however, said that the incidents never happened and the report was "erroneous information".

A cable television channel plans to air the documentary in March.




The documentary says that the troops could have killed bin Laden in Afghanistan but the order to shoot never came, maybe because it took too long to request.

An anonymous French soldier is quoted as saying: "In 2003 and 2004 we had bin Laden in our sights. The sniper said 'I have bin Laden.'"






Hesitation
The documentary 'Bin Laden, the failings of a manhunt' was made by journalists Emmanuel Razavi and Eric de Lavarene, who have worked for several major French media outlets in Afghanistan.

Razavi said the soldier told them it took roughly two hours for the request to reach the US officers who could authorise it but the anonymous man is also quoted in the documentary as saying: "There was a hesitation in command."

Razavi said several sources told them the sightings were six months apart and they declined to be more specific.

Christophe Prazuck, a French armed forces spokesman, said "that never happened" when asked about the bin Laden sightings.

French withdrawal

Bin Laden, the mastermind behind the September 11 attacks which killed nearly 3,000 people, is believed to be hiding in the mountains along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border.

France has roughly 200 elite troops operating under US command near Afghanistan's border with Pakistan. Paris announced on Sunday it was withdrawing them at the start of 2007.

France is part of the 32,000-strong Nato-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan, which took command of the war against the Taliban from US-led forces in October and has since launched a series of military offensives.

ISAF's special forces were deployed in 2003 to bolster Operation Enduring Freedom, a US-led campaign against the Taliban and al-Qaeda in response to the September 11 attacks.

Afghans questioned in the documentary said they believed the US was not interested in finding bin Laden, despite the $25m price Washington has placed on his head.

The documentary stopped short of that conclusion but raised questions about the US hunt for bin Laden, such as whether Washington is more concerned about preserving stability in Pakistan, where many support bin Laden, than in finding him.

In September, George Bush, the US president, dismissed as an "urban myth" the idea his administration had become distracted from its effort to track down bin Laden.






Source: Al Jazeera