Thursday 5 May 2011

Osama Bin Laden Planned To Attack 9.11 Anniversary On The Train "


Documents found at the home of Osama bin Laden in Pakistan show that he intended to further attacks against the United States, even in the 9 / 11, U.S. reports say.


One of the plan aims to target rail route in the United States, the reports said, although not a direct threat has been detected.


Authorities are looking for computers, DVD and documents seized at the home of Abbottabad where they believe that bin Laden has been hiding for six years.


Obama should meet with some of the troops involved in the operation.


She holds private meetings on Friday, Fort Campbell, Kentucky, where at least part of the Navy SEALs have taken part in the raid.


Thursday ', the President visited the scene of the attack of 11 September 2001 in New York, where a wreath to commemorate the victims were killed almost 3,000 Ground Zero, and talking with relatives of the site.


He said the families of the victims that justice had been done, but that America "will never forget."


Derail the plan


Bin Laden, the leader of al-Qaida, which was the top U.S. most wanted list after the attacks in New York and Washington in 2001, died in UP Special Forces in northern Pakistan on Monday.


His body was then thrown into the sea from a U.S. aircraft carrier.


Information on the project apparently discovered in Pakistan was contained in a joint FBI and Homeland Security bulletin, told the Associated Press.


Bulletin distributed to law enforcement officials said the idea of ​​tinkering with tracks unspecified American railway were found in handwritten notes from the compound of bin Laden.


According to the report, agents of Al Qaeda planned to derail a train, so he plunged into a valley or on a bridge, AP reported.


"While it is clear that there was some level of planning such operations in February 2010, we have no recent information indicates a parcel force continues to target the transport and no information on potential targets or specific location," the warning.


An intelligence official said the text revealed the ambition of hitting the United States with large-scale attacks in major cities and at key moments such as birthdays and holidays.


"Following the plot"


A U.S. official anonymously told the New York Times revealed that Bin Laden documents was merely a figurehead of al-Qaeda sympathizers around the world


Continued to plot and plan, get ideas on the objectives, and to communicate those ideas to other high [Al] Qaeda, "the newspaper quoted the official as saying.


Meanwhile, more details on the life of bin Laden's compound in the Abbottabad and the exact sequence of events that led to his killing of al-Qaeda.


Senior Pakistani military officials said one of the wives of bin Laden told investigators that he had lived in the same room for five years, along with her husband.


New reports of the raid appears to contradict previous information on the raid.


The White House terrorism adviser John Brennan had originally proposed that Bin Laden was one of those who were armed with inside the compound.


The first accounts of Sunday night RAID suggested a long exchange of fire throughout the 40 minutes of action.


But U.S. officials now say only one person fired U.S. Special Forces.


He is suspected of having been runner Ben Laden, Abu Ahmed al-Kuwaiti, who was killed in a raid earlier.


Critics have raised concerns about the legality of the operation, after the United States has revised its account to accept bin Laden was unarmed when shot.


However, the U.S. argued that Bin Laden was a legitimate military target, killing a "man of national self-defense."


The U.S. raid against Osama bin Laden has been launched after months of surveillance by the CIA from a safe house in Abbottabad, the Washington Post reported Friday.


Citing unnamed sources, the newspaper of this operation, the CIA used satellite images and tried to register the vote in the camera, but remained pending before the military operation was launched finally.

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