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In a five-minute audio message released Wednesday, Osama bin
Laden condemns Europeans for allying with the United
States in Afghanistan
and for repeatedly publishing satirical cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad in
newspapers and magazines.
The message comes as the Muslim world celebrated the holiday
that marks the birthday of the Prophet.
“You went overboard in your unbelief and freed yourselves of
the etiquettes of dispute and fighting and went to the extent of publishing
these insulting drawings. This is the greater and more serious tragedy, and the
reckoning for it will be more severe,” the voice attributed to bin Laden says in
the recorded message.
The message released by As-Sahab, the media arm of al-Qaeda,
was posted after Danish newspapers on Feb. 13 republished a cartoon showing
Muhammad wearing a bomb-shaped turban to show their commitment to freedom of
speech after the police said they had uncovered a plot to kill the artist
behind them. The drawing was one of the 12 satirical cartoons first published
in a Danish newspaper that set off major protests in Muslim countries in 2006. “Publishing
these insulting drawings is the greatest misfortune and the most dangerous,”
the voice accompanying a still picture of bin Laden holding an automatic rifle,
said. In fact, the message was named: “The response will be what you see, not
what you hear,” without naming what action would be taken. Followers of the
faith generally consider depictions of the Prophet blasphemous.
The bin Laden statement says the cartoons are part of a new
crusade against Islam in which the Vatican has played a large and
lengthy role. Pope Benedict is scheduled to visit the U.S. next month, with scheduled stops at the
White House, the United Nations and Ground Zero, where the Twin Towers
stood until al-Qaeda’s attack.
The message is bin Laden’s first public statement since
December last year, when he urged his followers in Iraq
to continue battling U.S.
troops there. Analysts at the SITE Institute, a U.S.
group that monitors terror messages, found bin Laden’s silence on Wednesday
fifth anniversary of the U.S.-led invasion on Iraq suspect.
“The tape doesn’t give any specific evidence that would
allow us to determine when it was recorded,” Adam Raisman, senior analyst at
the SITE Institute, said according to the Associated Press.
According to Ben Venzke, the head of IntelCenter, another U.S. group that
monitors militant messages, bin Laden's appearance is a “clear threat against EU member
countries and an indicator of a possible upcoming significant attack.”
Photo Credit: AP
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