Posted on 08/11/2002 12:09:53 AM PDT by kattracks
Clinton: At the time, 1996, he had committed no crime against America so I did not bring him here because we had no basis on which to hold him, though we knew he wanted to commit crimes against America.
If Laden wasn't wanted by the United States for doing something against us, why did Mansour Ijaz even know who he was? Did Ijaz have a silly habit of trying to arrange the extradition of unknowns to the US? Somehow I doubt it. Isn't it time for another "is = is" statement by Bill?
Can someone jog my memory? What did we know and when did we know it about a connection between OBL and the bombing of the WTC?
Doesn't that seem a little odd for such a smart guy who's got no end of iron-clad and fang-toothed handlers?
I'm surprised he hasn't stepped up to the plate to take credit for the Yankee's World Series loss last year.
After all ... we're talking about a guy who issued his Own Personal Apology for Waco but weeks before Danforth cleared him entirely in his report issued November 8, 2000.
On August 7, 1998, a truck bomb destroyed the U.S. Embassy in Kenya. Moments later another truck bomb exploded outside the U.S. Embassy in Tanzania. The bombings killed 213 in Kenya and 11 in Tanzania. (sourced here)
He is thought to be complicit in the 1993 bombing of the WTC ...... but I'm not sure when the connection was made.
According to the US, Bin Laden was involved in at least three major attacks - the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, the 1996 killing of 19 US soldiers in Saudi Arabia, and the 1998 bombings in Kenya and Tanzania. (sourced here)
Here's the LINK.
. . . first time I remember Ossama bin Laden's name mentioned was when Orin Hatch held Senate hearings and warned about the man. I remember that it hit me out of the blue at the time, didn't know what to make of it.
Good dates there. I thought those bombings were earlier.
Feds want to keep bin
Laden-Somalia link in trial
April 20, 2001
Web posted at: 4:32 p.m. EDT (2032
GMT)
From Phil Hirschkorn
CNN New York Bureau
NEW YORK (CNN) -- The defense
presentation in the embassy bombings
trial will pause Monday so federal
prosecutors can make their case that
Islamic militants loyal to Osama bin
Laden trained the Somali fighters who killed 18 American soldiers in 1993.
The charge, largely ignored in 10 weeks of trial testimony and evidence about
the August 7, 1998, bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, is one
the U.S. attorney has not dropped in a proposal for reduced charges submitted
to the trial judge.
In a one-day presentation, the government is expected to call an expert witness
from the U.S. military to sum up what happened in the Somalia capital of
Mogadishu on October 3, 1993.
On that day, a firefight resulting from a U.S.
Army raid to capture lieutenants of Somali tribal
leader Mohammed Farrah Aidid left 18 U.S.
soldiers dead.
The U.S. troops were in Somalia to assist a U.N.
mission distributing food and relief supplies and
restoring order to the war-torn nation. The United
Nations had put a bounty on Aidid after his men
ambushed and killed 24 Pakistani peacekeepers
that June.
A federal indictment accuses bin Laden and 21
others in a terrorist conspiracy to kill Americans
dating to the early 1990s. Four of those named in
the indictment have been on trial since January,
accused of roles in the embassy bombings, which
prosecutors say were the culmination of the
conspiracy. The two truck bombings killed 224
people, including 12 Americans.
Prosecutors completed their initial evidence
presentation to the jury on April 4 after calling
more than 90 witnesses.
On Thursday, at the request of U.S. District
Judge Leonard Sand, the U.S. attorney's office
submitted a revised indictment to simplify the
charges the jury will be asked to consider.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald said in
court this week that one of the six terror
conspiracy charges -- plotting to attack U.S.
national defense facilities -- would be dropped and that the list of more than
150 overt acts alleged in the main conspiracy count would be reduced.
Copies of the revised indictment were under court seal, pending a court
conference scheduled Monday afternoon.
Fitzgerald has told Sand the actions alleged in Somalia will remain in the
government's case.
Defendant Mohamed Sadeek Odeh, 36, a Jordanian national, is the only
defendant in court directly implicated in Somalia. The indictment names Odeh
as one of seven known members of bin Laden's group, al Qaeda, who trained
Somali tribes.
Aside from the unforeseen casualties, the U.S. military action on October 3,
1993, "was a success," according to a memo by Maj. Gen. William Garrison,
the commanding officer. "The targeted individuals were captured." More than
500 Somalis died from the battle.
Aidid died in 1996, his son Hussein succeeding him as tribal leader and de facto
president, although Somalia had no central government until last year. A
peace-brokered parliament installed last summer elected a new president,
Abdiqasim Salad Hasan, to a transitional three-year term.
The three men now on trial in New York along with Odeh are Mohamed
Rashed Daoud al-'Owhali, 24, a Saudi; Khalfan Khamis Mohamed, 27, a
Tanzanian; and Wadih el Hage, 40, a naturalized American.
None of the defendants are expected to testify. The defense is expected to
rest at the end of next week.
In Sudan, bin Laden appeared to concentrate on
switching gears. He reportedly built a road from Khartoum
to Port Sudan on the Red Sea, and apparently farmed.
Plenty of Afghans came to join him.
Bin Laden was certainly close to Egyptian radical
groups based in Khartoum among them, Islamic Jihad.
Through an organization he funded in London, bin Laden
continued to call for radical change in Saudi Arabia. But
after years of continued criticism of the Saudi royal family,
his own family disowned him.
In 1992, bin Laden claimed responsibility for attempting
to bomb U.S. soldiers in Yemen, and again for attacks in
Somalia in 1993.
By 1994, the Saudis wanted bin Laden out of their back
yard. The Americans joined them in putting pressure on the
Sudanese to expel him.
He left Sudan for Afghanistan in the spring of 1996, by
which time he had been identified in a State Department
report as a major financier of terrorism.
Osama bin Laden: A Chronology of His Life
A couple of very interesting items
...... Spring 1996 - President Clinton signed a top secret order that authorized the CIA to use any and all means to destroy bin Laden's network.
.....June 25, 1996 - A large truck bomb devastates the US military residence in Dhahran called Khobar Towers, killing 19 servicemen. The US military initially linked bin Laden to the attack but now believe a Saudi Shiite group was responsible (Source: Washington Post 8/23/98). U.S. investigators still believe bin Laden was somehow involved.
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