Of course he's still alive in Iran...William would make a good fictional
writer.
 
Bruce
 

Where bin Laden is, why he's still alive
Author: Boy Scouts could get terror chief who's still planning 'American
Hiroshima'

  _____  

Posted: August 6, 2005
1:00 a.m. Eastern http://worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=45634

Paul Williams, author of "Osama's Revenge" and a new book, "The Al Qaeda
Connection: International Terrorism, Organized Crime and the Coming
Apocalypse," has stirred a national controversy with his reporting on the
imminent nuclear terror threat posed by Osama bin Laden. In this exclusive
WND dispatch, he pinpoints the current location of the terrorist leader and
explains why he has not been captured to date. For continuing coverage of
bin Laden's "American Hiroshima" plot, subscribe to
<http://www.g2bulletin.com/> Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin. 

By Paul L. Williams
C 2005 WorldNetDaily.com 



Where in the world is Osama bin Laden? 


Let's face it. He shouldn't be hard to find, especially from a Predator, an
aerial reconnaissance vehicle that can read the minute hand of a wristwatch
from an altitude of 26,000 feet. 


Bin Laden is very tall - slightly over 6'6" - and incredibly thin, less than
150 pounds. He wears shalwart kameez - the loose-fitting tunics and baggy
pants of al-Qaida and Taliban soldiers - and, when the weather is cold, he
dons a camouflage jacket. 


Although he was born in 1957 and far from retirement age, the al-Qaida
chieftain appears to be very old. His long scraggly beard is pure white; his
face is lined with countless wrinkles; and his shoulders are hunched and
rounded. He is bent forward to such a degree that he seems to suffer from a
form of osteoporosis. He is left-handed and walks with a cane. 


Osama is almost always surrounded by fawning attendants who hail him not as
Sultan bin Laden or Emir bin Laden but rather as "awaited enlightened one,"
the title reserved for the Mahdi." 


The Mahdi is the rightly guided caliph who will appear during the last days
of human history. His coming is foretold by the Haddith, the sacred
teachings that supplement the Quran. In such writings, the Mahdi is depicted
as the figure who will bring forth the "Day of Islam," when all people
throughout the world - believers and unbelievers alike - will fall in
submission before the throne of Allah. 


Bin Laden possesses the distinguishing marks of the Mahdi - the high
forehead, the prominent nose, the gap between his teeth, and the black mole
on his face. He is pleased to point out these features to photographers and
reporters from al-Jazeera and other Arabic news outlets. 


Despite his pre-eminence among Muslims, the $25 million price tag on his
head and the fact that his image is omnipresent in marketplaces, stores,
shops, murals on the sides of buildings throughout the Middle East, no one
has been able to find him. 


This initially gave rise to speculation that he had been killed by the
bombings of al-Qaida cells and safe homes at the launching of Operation
Enduring Freedom on Oct. 7, 2001. 


Such speculation was put to rest by the appearance of Osama with his
sidekick Ayman al-Zawahiri on Kabul television in late October 2001. In the
broadcast, the twosome sat before a campfire with sticks and appeared like
Muslim Boy Scouts about to roast some marshmallows. 


In November 2001, after coalition forces seized control of Kandahar,
Afghanistan, U. S. officials received word that bin Laden and company were
safely sequestered within an impregnable mountain fortress that had been
created 350 yards beneath solid rock at the highest peak of the Spin Ghar or
"White Mountains," a peak known as Tora Bora. 


Elaborate drawings of this fortress were published in major newspapers
throughout the world, including The New York Times. The drawings depicted a
vast underground complex that contained a bakery, a hospital with ultrasound
equipment, a hotel for 2,000 occupants, a mosque, a library, an arsenal for
weapons of mass destruction and a hydro-electric plant. 


And so the massive bombing of Tora Bora began. For nearly two weeks, the
mountain peak was pounded with "bunker blasters" in an attempt to collapse
the troglodyte lair of the terrorists. At one point, a "daisy cutter" - a
6,800 kiloton bomb, the largest in the U.S. arsenal - was dropped on the
target. 


At the end of the siege, coalition forces combed the mountainside in search
of hundreds of bodies. But few bodies were found and only 19 emaciated and
toothless captives could be rounded up for the victory parade before the
international press in Kandahar. 


The vast underground complex did not exist. It had been a figment of
overactive imaginations of members of the Northern Alliance that had been
accepted without question by U.S. intelligence officials. 


Next came word that the elusive bin Laden had regrouped his forces and was
hiding in the mountainous region of Shah-i-Kot. Two tall, thin and bearded
men in shalwart kameez were spotted by an aerial reconnaissance vehicle
standing before a tarpaulin at the entrance to a cave. U.S. military heads
assumed that the tarpaulin was covering a machine-gun post and that the men,
because of their height, dress and posture, were Arabs and, therefore,
al-Qaida operatives. 


Operation Anaconda, the plan to encircle Shah-i-Kot and squeeze the al-Qaida
and Taliban operatives out of their hiding places, got underway on March 2,
2003. Fierce resistance was reported by the coalition forces. Megaton bombs
were dropped at the rate of 260 a day to ferret out the terrorists. The
reported enemy death toll rose and fell like the fluctuations of a troubled
currency: 100, 500, 200, 800, 300. When the fighting came to an end on March
12, only 10 enemy soldiers were taken prisoner and less than 20 bodies were
found within the battle zone. The full military offensive, replete with the
dropping of 3,250 bombs, had been conducted on largely uninhabited
territory. 


In the wake of the first phase of Operation Enduring Freedom, U.S.
intelligence sources were able to confirm over 500 al-Qaida and Taliban
soldiers had fled Afghanistan by scaling the mountains in the south along
the Afghanistan-Pakistan border and cutting through Afghanistan's
southernmost provinces toward the border with Iran, where they found safe
haven. 


The enemy operatives within Iran included Saad bin Laden, Osama's eldest
son; Yaaz bin Sifat, a top-ranking al-Qaida planner; Mohammed Islam Haani,
the major of Kabul under the Taliban; and Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who had been
in charge of al-Qaida's attacks on Europe. By spring of 2002, al Zawahiri,
bin Laden's top lieutenant, was spotted in Iran, where he reportedly donned
the disguise of an Iranian cleric with a black turban and a dyed beard. 


Within Iran, the al-Qaida guests were placed in safe houses by SAVAMA, the
Iranian intelligence service. These villas, located in southern Iran, with
saunas and swimming pools, are lavish even by American standards. The
operatives remain in this villa at this writing. 


But where was Osama? 


In 2003, Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence, ISI, informed CIA officials
that the al-Qaida head was sequestered in the wilds of Waziristan, a region
between Balochistan and the North West Frontier in Pakistan. 


In July 2003, Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf shelled out millions in
cold cash (thanks to the largesse of the CIA) to tribal chieftains within
Northern Waziristan in order to obtain permission for Pakistani troops to
enter their semi-autonomous tribal territories. It was the first time that
such troops were allowed to set foot within the province since the creation
of Pakistan in 1947. 


It was small surprise to many observers that the payments were for nothing.
The Pakistani troops combed the Tirah and Shawai valleys and discovered not
a trace of Osama or any al-Qaida officials. 


Attention now turned to South Waziristan. In March 2004, President
Musharraf, upon receiving the consent of the chieftains, sent an army of
70,000 into the province. A welter of excitement followed the invasion when
Musharraf announced that a high value target had been pinned down. The
speculation, fueled by U.S. military sources, was that it was bin Laden or
al-Zawahiri. But neither one showed up. There were foreign militants in the
area, but less than 600, far fewer than the Pakistani authorities claimed,
and most were Uzbeks. 


The hunt for Osama bin Laden had grown cold. There were no confirmed
sightings; no intercepts of satellite phone calls; no evidence of e-mails.
The only assurance of his existence came from his periodic appearances on
al-Jazeera. He had performed the most remarkable disappearing act in human
history. 


Still and all, stories surfaced that he had made his way to Chechnya and
that he was safely sequestered among the Uighurs in China. 


Where is Osama bin Laden? 


His whereabouts cannot be pinpointed by official military and intelligence
sources, despite the drones that fly day and night over the Afghan-Pakistani
border. Nor can his hiding place be determined by members of the media, who
continue to provide c-notes to Pashtuns and Tajiks for useless information. 


To discover the whereabouts of the world's most wanted man, it is best to
turn to unofficial yet reliable sources, such as the professional soldiers
for paramilitary corporations that attend the annual Soldier of Fortune
convention in Las Vegas. The mercenaries - "mercs" for short - know where he
is since they are anxious albeit not willing to collect the $25 million
bounty. 


Osama bin Laden is alive and well and living in the valley of Dir within the
North West Frontier Province of Pakistan. He has been there since he escaped
from Tora Bora in December 2001. 


To substantiate this claim, the mercs produce shabnamas or "night letters"
that are circulated among the various tribes within the frontier. The night
letters contain updates of Osama at work and play and photos of the al-Qaida
leader with Maulvi Sufi Mohamed, an old and revered Muslim scholar, who
maintains a Taliban-style rule over the valley of Dir with public executions
of adulterers, homosexuals, apostates and Christian infidels. 


Mercs point out that news of Osama's whereabouts was even published on the
front page of the Daily Ummat, the leading Urdu language paper of Karachi,
on Aug. 10, 2003. Unfortunately, no one in the U.S. defense department - let
alone the U. S. intelligence community - took heed of the article with the
smiling face of the great emir before the invasions of Waziristan. 


Dir remains within the Malakand Pass, the site of some of the fiercest
skirmishes under the British Raj. A Pakistani army fort still stands where
the young Winston Churchill shot down rebels and received a citation for
heroism. Ironically, it now serves as the headquarters of the leader of the
Mujahadeen who has unleashed a wave of terrorist attacks against Great
Britain. 


Despite the bounty, bin Laden remains not only safe and secure in Dir but
also free to travel to other parts of the country, including regular trips
to Peshawar and the smuggler-infested bazaar town of Rebat at the center of
"the Devil's Triangle," the conjunction of the borders of Pakistan,
Afghanistan, and Iran. 


No Muslim will dare to capture or kill him - not even a squadron of elite
military personnel from the Musharraf government, let alone a group of
professional bounty hunters. It is the duty of all Muslims to honor the
revered leader of the Mujahadeen, who has been ordained to bring forth the
Day of Islam. 


What's more, bin Laden is protected by milmastia - the Islamic code of
hospitality that demands protection for fellow Muslims who seek shelter in
their country - even if such protection means risking their lives. Believing
Muslims know that the $25 million reward comes with the price tag of
apostasy and eternal damnation. Mercs point out that Pakistani soldiers and
ISI officials are even unwilling to collar Osama and his cohorts when they
appear in Peshawar. They don't want to go to hell for money or Musharraf. 


Bin Laden remains protected by yet another factor. Any concerted attempt by
the United States to invade any part of the North West Frontier Province by
crossing the 680-mile border between Afghanistan and Pakistan in an effort
to capture the world's most wanted man will be met by the resistance of the
vast majority of 20 million Muslims who inhabit the formidable area. 


Such resistance could lead to the toppling of the Musharraf regime with the
result that Pakistan, with its arsenal of strategic nuclear weapons, would
fall under the control of the radical mullahs, who wait in the wings. 


At present, the way to Dir, according to the mercs, remains strewn with the
bodies of would-be bounty hunters. They have been cast in the pines beside
the dirt road. All have been tortured, stripped naked and castrated. Their
eyeballs have been plucked from their sockets; their ears have been hacked
off; and their tongues have been ripped from their mouths. Notes have been
strapped to the groin of every victim. "Do not be angry or shocked," the
notes say in Pashtu. "These are the bodies of agents of the USA." All rights
reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or
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