Monday, May 2, 2011
Hitler and Bin Laden Deaths Announced on May 1st - 66 Years Apart
Both promoted supremacist utopian ideologies ~ in which a lot of people were going to have to die to achieve their visions.
The death of most sought after terrorist in the world Osama Bin Laden was announced on the same date as the death of Nazi leader Adolf Hitler.
Hitler's death was announced to the public on May 1st, after he supposedly took his own life on April 30th, 1945. Hither's body was never recovered (the body believed to be Hitler's was exhumed by the Russians, it turned out to be the body of a female in her 20's.)
Bin Laden's death was also announced on May 1st. His body has still not been seen.
Bin Laden is Dead - Reaction - Photos
People waving U.S. flags cheer outside the White House over the death of Osama Bin Laden in Washington, May 2, 2011 |
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A woman bows her head at the Garden of Remembrance May 2, 2011 in the Boston Public Garden in Boston, Massachusetts |
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Families of Massachusetts victims of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks place 206 white roses on the 9/11 memorial in the Boston Public Garden |
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People react to the death of Osama bin Laden in Times Square in New York early May 2, 2011 |
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A man walks carrying a American flag walks through Times Square New York May 2, 2011 the morning after US President Barack Obama announced that Al-Qaeda mastermind Osama bin Laden was dead. |
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New York City firemen in Times Square New York May 2, 2011 shortly after the announcement.. |
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People celebrate singing patriotic songs and chanting "USA, USA" after Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Ladenwas killed in Pakistan, during a spontaneous celebration in New York's Times Square, May 1, 2011. |
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N.J. man waves an American flag in New York's Times Square, Monday, May 2, 2011. |
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People celebrate after Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was killed in Pakistan, during a spontaneous celebration in New York's Times Square, May 2, 2011 |
A man takes a photo of a smiling young man next to the fence around the World Trade Center May, 2011 in New York covered with news clippings Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. |
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A woman looks at Newspaper front pages announcing the death of Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden May 2, 2011 in front of the Newseum in Washington, DC. |
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Picture of the front covers of newspapers informing on the death of Osama bin Laden, taken at a newsstand in Rio de Janeiro on May 2, 2011 |
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A supporter of al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden shouts anti-American slogans, after hearing the news of his death, during a rally in Quetta May 2, 2011 |
World News Briefs -- May 2, 2011

Getting Osama Bin Laden: How The Mission Went Down -- Politico
The helicopter carrying Navy SEALs malfunctioned as it approached Osama bin Laden’s compound at about 3:30 p.m. ET Sunday, stalling as it hovered. The pilot set it down gently inside the walls, then couldn’t get it going again.
It was a heart-stopping moment for President Barack Obama, who had been monitoring the raid in the White House Situation Room, surrounded by members of his war cabinet.
Read more ....
MIDDLE EAST
Iran leader Ahmadinejad returns to work after 'boycott'.
Syrian demonstrators vow week of protests to break siege at Dera'a. Syria: Army in Deraa arrests 500 men.
Palestinian vulnerability exposed as Israel withholds money.
Arabs riot in Jerusalem over Bin Laden's demise, Hamas angry.
Deal to end Yemen crisis is faltering as talks bog. Yemen opposition: Violence may derail deal.
Iranian military leader warns Saudi Arabia over decision in Bahrain.
New death brings US death toll in Iraq to 11 in April.
ASIA
Pakistan vital to defeating al Qaeda: White House.
Japan passes emergency budget.
Afghan Taliban uses child bomber at start of spring offensive. Two bombings rock Afghanistan.
Cambodian, Thai sporadic clashes reach 11th day.
Maldives rocked by protests against President Nasheed.
Hundreds in Sri Lanka hit streets to protest critical U.N. report.
N. Korea seizes mobile phones to curb news: report.
AFRICA
Libya crisis: Muammar Gaddafi's son buried in Tripoli. Where's Gaddafi: Libyan leader survives again after series of 'near misses'. Libyans burn UK, Italy missions after NATO strike. Kadhafi tanks pound rebel city ahead of son's funeral. U.N. says international staff leaves Tripoli.
Ousted president wants to 'heal' Ivory Coast: Tutu. Mediators seek Ivorian reconciliation.
From gun to ballot box in key Sudan border state.
Egypt military warns against sectarian strife.
Somali pirates seize Singaporean tanker off the coast of Kenya.
Ugandan capital tense after Friday’s riots.
EUROPE
Europe welcomes bin Laden's death.
Russia links bin Laden manhunt to its own anti-terror operations.
Part of Air France black box found.
Carla Bruni-Sarkozy fuels pregnancy rumours.
France counts half of 16 dead in Morocco bombing.
Spain bars ETA-linked candidates from elections.
AMERICAS
White House undecided on Bin Laden photos.
Mexico, Egypt no longer have a free press.
It's all over but the voting as Canadians head to the polls in spring election.
Security Beefed Up at Tri-State Airports, WTC Site.
Chavez says allies met with Colombian rebels.
Mexican police discover large weapons cache.
Haiti again feels pinch of rising food prices.
U.S. inflation increasing.
TERRORISM/THE LONG WAR
US official: New tape may be last from bin Laden.
After bin Laden’s death, what’s next for the U.S. and al-Qaida?
Ayman al-Zawahiri expected to replace Bin Laden on most wanted list.
Osama bin Laden killed: remaining al-Qaeda leaders.
German al-Qaeda suspects 'planning a huge bombing'.
Osama Bin Laden killed: al-Qaeda timeline.
Guantanamo's detainees come into view for first time.
ECONOMY/FINANCE/BUSINESS
Treasury extends debt ceiling window to Aug. 2.
Oil prices slip 2% after Bin Laden's death.
Dollar buoyed by Osama bin Laden's death.
Sony details restoration plans for PlayStation Network.
5 banks fail in Fla., Ga., Mich.; makes 39 in '11.
I Guess Those Extreme Interrogation Techniques Do Work
Bin Laden's Death Rekindles 'Enhanced' Interrogation Debate -- MSNBC
Did high-pressure questioning of suspected terrorists lead to al-Qaida leader?
The trail that led to the doorstep of Osama bin Laden in Pakistan began years earlier with aggressive interrogations of al-Qaida detainees at the U.S. detention facility at Guantanamo Bay and CIA “black site" prisons overseas, according to U.S. officials.
It was those sometimes controversial interrogations that first produced descriptions of members of bin Laden’s courier network, including one critical Middle Eastern courier who along with his brother was protecting bin Laden at his heavily fortified compound in Abbottabad on Sunday. Both the courier and his brother were among those killed, along with bin Laden, in the dramatic raid by U.S. special forces.
Read more ....
More News On The Impact That Interrogation techniques May have had On Finding Osama Bin Laden
First strands on bin Laden gathered in CIA prison -- AP
Rep. Michael McCaul: Aggressive interrogations gave U.S. leads on bin Laden location -- Houston Chronicle
One Unwary Phone Call Led US to Bin Laden Doorstep -- ABC News/AP
Will Bin Laden’s Death Reignite the Interrogation Debate? -- Benjamin Wittes, Lawfare
Obama Owes Thanks for Bin Laden Operation to CIA Interrogators -- Marc Thiessen, The American
How the U.S. found and finished Bin Laden -- David Ignatius, Washington Post
My Comment: I still think it is too early to make a judgement call on the effectiveness of enhanced interrogation techniques .... but this information is coming from an administration that has always been opposed to torture .... and they are making it very clear that torturing some of these detainees did produce the information that resulted in Osama Bin Laden being killed this weekend. If this is the case .... some people better start eating crow.
Musharraf: Bin Laden mission violated Pakistan
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Pakistan tourism minister ~ promoting Taliban-r-good message Has Pakistan completely given up on normal sightseers. It appears foreign fighters are the new tourists. Welcome to Pakistan in any case! |
Mr. Musharraf said the “lack of trust is very bad.”
Under President Pervez Musharraf ~ the Taliban were about to take an easy stroll onto Islamabad. One wonders if the world did not apply pressure on him to act ~ would these holy warriors been greeted with fresh cut flowers, as they had already reached 60 miles outside of the capital, in the end virtually unopposed by Pak military.
But there is growing talk about the money, as before the large international handouts to defeat this Taliban-terrorist-enemy ~ Musharraf was saying we already have Shari'a law anyway. And that there was no significant threat to the country. When he saw the money, it was ~ we are going to be taken over!! And the around the world tour began.
It is true that a large amount of Pakistani soldiers have died, but what also appears true that if no international pressure is applied, little or no effort would be made. The idea being if you stamp things out early, then there would not be the huge problem of Taliban taking complete control of whole regions ~ later!
Obviously they have a relationship with their hardliners that goes beyond waging war against India. It must be as some Pakistani officials/politicians have said, that this is an extension of their religion.
"Ulema (clerics) and Taliban are the true followers of Islamic ideology and America is the biggest terrorist of the world, which is creating hatred against them," Tourism Minister Maulana Attaur Rehman, whose Jamiat Uleme-e-Islam (JUI) party is a partner in the PPP-led government, told a public gathering in Mansehra in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province.[+]
Former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf on Monday accused the U.S. of violating his country’s sovereignty by sending in special forces to kill Osama bin Laden.
“American troops coming across the border and taking action in one of our towns, that is Abbottabad, is not acceptable to the people of Pakistan. It is a violation of our sovereignty,” Mr. Musharraf told CNN-IBN, an Indian news channel.
He added that it would have been “far better if Pakistani Special Services Group had operated and conducted the mission. To that extent, the modality of handling it and executing the operation is not correct.”
Bin Laden was killed Sunday in a firefight with Navy SEALs in a million-dollar, fortified compound located in an affluent neighborhood in Abbottabad, about a two-hour drive from Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad.
Senior U.S. officials, who briefed reporters early Monday, said the Obama administration did not inform Pakistani authorities of the mission until after it was concluded.
Mr. Musharraf said the “lack of trust is very bad.”
“If two organizations [are] conducting an operation against a common enemy, there has to be trust and confidence in each other,” he said.
Pakistan is “totally on board” on fighting al Qaeda and Taliban.
Mr. Musharraf said it was possible that some local Pakistanis had colluded with bin Laden.
“A battle has been won, but the war continues,” Mr. Musharraf said, warning that “al Qaeda is still there.”
WikiLeaks: Osama bin Laden 'protected' by Pakistani security
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Pakistani army soldiers secure the compound where Osama bin Laden was killed in Abbottabad, north west Pakistan |
“In Pakistan, Osama Bin Laden wasn’t an invisible man, and many knew his whereabouts in North Waziristan, but whenever security forces attempted a raid on his hideouts, the enemy received warning of their approach from sources in the security forces.”
Intelligence gathered from detainees at Guantanamo Bay may also have made the Americans wary of sharing their operational plans with the Pakistani government.
The Pakistanis supported the Taliban even as they were shooting women in the head, for reading a book or what other ludicrous crimes a women could now commit in this new Islamic state of Afghanistan. Clearly the Pakistanis, both then as now, were lured by the attraction of the puritanical Islamic state. Hiding Bin Laden, was likely one of the ways of expressing this.
The coincidences are mounting up for Pakistan ~ remember the Red Mosque ~ teenage girls, ready for martyrdom, sent out onto Islamabad streets with sticks, to enforce Islamic law. It was only after these burqa-ed babes took a Chinese national hostage, and an international incident developed that something was done to bring the mosque and its schools under control. Inside of the mosque there was every type of weapon, from grenades to anti-tank mines ~ was also strangely situated opposite the ministry of defence building in Islamabad.
American diplomats were told that one of the key reasons why they had failed to find bin Laden was that Pakistan’s security services tipped him off whenever US troops approached.
Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate (ISID) also allegedly smuggled al-Qaeda terrorists through airport security to help them avoid capture and sent a unit into Afghanistan to fight alongside the Taliban.
The claims, made in leaked US government files obtained by Wikileaks, will add to questions over Pakistan’s capacity to fight al-Qaeda.
Last year, David Cameron caused a diplomatic furore when he told Pakistan that it could not “look both ways” on terrorism. The Pakistani government issued a strongly-worded rebuttal.
But bin Laden was eventually tracked down and killed in compound located just a few hundred yards from Pakistan’s prestigious military academy in Abbotabad.
The raid by elite US troops was kept secret from the government of Pakistan. Only a tight circle within the Obama Administration knew of the operation.
In December 2009, the government of Tajikistan warned the United States that efforts to catch bin Laden were being thwarted by corrupt Pakistani spies.
According to a US diplomatic dispatch, General Abdullo Sadulloevich Nazarov, a senior Tajik counterterrorism official, told the Americans that “many” inside Pakistan knew where bin Laden was.
The document stated: “In Pakistan, Osama Bin Laden wasn’t an invisible man, and many knew his whereabouts in North Waziristan, but whenever security forces attempted a raid on his hideouts, the enemy received warning of their approach from sources in the security forces.”
Intelligence gathered from detainees at Guantanamo Bay may also have made the Americans wary of sharing their operational plans with the Pakistani government.
One detainee, Saber Lal Melma, an Afghan whom the US described as a probable facilitator for al-Qaeda, allegedly worked with the ISID to help members flee Afghanistan after the American bombing began in October 2001.
His US military Guantanamo Bay detainee file, obtained by Wikileaks and seen by The Daily Telegraph, claims he allegedly passed the al-Qaeda Arabs to Pakistani security forces who then smuggled them across the border into Pakistan.
He was also overheard “bragging about a time when the ISID sent a military unit into Afghanistan, posing as civilians to fight along side the Taliban against US forces”.
He also allegedly detailed “ISID's protection of Al-Qaida members at Pakistan airports. The ISID members diverted Al-Qaida members through unofficial channels to avoid detection from officials in search of terrorists,” the file claims.
Sabar Lal Melma's Guantanamo detainee file
Telegraph
Pakistan harbored Osama bin Laden for 6 years
Now that the news of Osama bin Laden's death is starting to get stale, it will certainly be fascinating in the next week or two to watch how the Pakistani government squirms out of this one: it is apparent to absolutely anyone with half a brain that the compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan where Osama bin Laden lived since it was constructed in 2005 was at least in part built, funded, maintained and secured by the Pakistani government.
No other conclusion can be drawn.
This facility was within 100 yards of Pakistan's version of West Point. It was ten times the size of all of the other structures within this community, and had the security of Fort Knox. Most of the neighbors were aware that a person of significant stature lived within these 18 foot walls for the past six years, and to think that the Pakistani government was completely unaware of its inhabitant's identification really stretches their credibility when they deny knowledge of the whereabouts of Osama bin Laden.
If you recall, the Bush Doctrine defined our enemies after 9/11 as those who committed the atrocities of that terrible day, and that we would not distinguish between these foul enemies and those who harbored them. The Pakistani government, to include former president Perves Musharref, and current president Asif Ali Zardari were complicit in the harboring of Osama bin Laden for six long years.
Now we know on which side of the fence Pakistan's loyalty lies: with the terrorists. Pakistan should now be cut off immediately from U.S. foreign aid, no trade between the U.S. and Pakistan should be allowed, and no travel by U.S. citizens to this enemy state should be authorized by the Department of State. This is the law of the land, and President Obama should follow through with this logical process.
Pakistan is a nuclear armed rogue state, and the danger it poses to the U.S. and its interests as well as world stability are enormous. The proof of this is sitting right in front of all of our noses: Pakistan is not our friend.
No other conclusion can be drawn.
This facility was within 100 yards of Pakistan's version of West Point. It was ten times the size of all of the other structures within this community, and had the security of Fort Knox. Most of the neighbors were aware that a person of significant stature lived within these 18 foot walls for the past six years, and to think that the Pakistani government was completely unaware of its inhabitant's identification really stretches their credibility when they deny knowledge of the whereabouts of Osama bin Laden.
If you recall, the Bush Doctrine defined our enemies after 9/11 as those who committed the atrocities of that terrible day, and that we would not distinguish between these foul enemies and those who harbored them. The Pakistani government, to include former president Perves Musharref, and current president Asif Ali Zardari were complicit in the harboring of Osama bin Laden for six long years.
Now we know on which side of the fence Pakistan's loyalty lies: with the terrorists. Pakistan should now be cut off immediately from U.S. foreign aid, no trade between the U.S. and Pakistan should be allowed, and no travel by U.S. citizens to this enemy state should be authorized by the Department of State. This is the law of the land, and President Obama should follow through with this logical process.
Pakistan is a nuclear armed rogue state, and the danger it poses to the U.S. and its interests as well as world stability are enormous. The proof of this is sitting right in front of all of our noses: Pakistan is not our friend.
Bin Laden Blog Comment of the Decade

I saw this included in a comment at Ace of Spades. Nothing to add, nothing to take away. Simply perfect.
I was praying the rug
Down at a place called The Jug
With a goat named Linda Lu
When in walked a man
With a gun in his hand
And he was looking for you know who.
He said, "Hey there fellow,
With the stain spreading yellow,
Watcha tryin' to prove?
'Cause that's my country there
And I'm a SEAL who cares
And this might be all for you."
I was scared and fearing for my life.
I was shakin' like a leaf on a tree.
'Cause he was lean, and mean,
And big and bad, Lord,
Pointin' that gun at me.
I said, "Wait a minute, mister,
I didn't even kiss her.
Don't want no trouble with you.
And I know you don't owe me
But I wish you'd let me
Ask one favor from you."
[Chorus]
"Won't you give me three steps,
Gimme three steps mister,
Gimme three steps towards the door?
Gimme three steps
Gimme three steps mister,
And you'll never see me no more."
The guards got blown away
And I began to pray
As their blood pooled on the floor.
And I'm telling you son,
Well, it ain't no fun
Staring straight down a forty-four.
Well he smiled then yelled Yippie Ki Yay
That's the moment he'd been training for.
And you could hear me screaming a mile away
As my brains got splattered on the floor.
- Zombie Bin Laden
Down at a place called The Jug
With a goat named Linda Lu
When in walked a man
With a gun in his hand
And he was looking for you know who.
He said, "Hey there fellow,
With the stain spreading yellow,
Watcha tryin' to prove?
'Cause that's my country there
And I'm a SEAL who cares
And this might be all for you."
I was scared and fearing for my life.
I was shakin' like a leaf on a tree.
'Cause he was lean, and mean,
And big and bad, Lord,
Pointin' that gun at me.
I said, "Wait a minute, mister,
I didn't even kiss her.
Don't want no trouble with you.
And I know you don't owe me
But I wish you'd let me
Ask one favor from you."
[Chorus]
"Won't you give me three steps,
Gimme three steps mister,
Gimme three steps towards the door?
Gimme three steps
Gimme three steps mister,
And you'll never see me no more."
The guards got blown away
And I began to pray
As their blood pooled on the floor.
And I'm telling you son,
Well, it ain't no fun
Staring straight down a forty-four.
Well he smiled then yelled Yippie Ki Yay
That's the moment he'd been training for.
And you could hear me screaming a mile away
As my brains got splattered on the floor.
- Zombie Bin Laden
Was Pakistan Protecting Osama Bin Laden?
Pakistani Complicity In Sheltering Osama bin Laden Is Evident -- Threat Matrix
As the details of the raid that killed Osama bin Laden begin to emerge, one thing is clear: the powers that be in Pakistan - its military and intelligence services - must have known for some time where the terror leader was hiding from the US and the rest of the Coalition. Below are some of the key indicators that explain how Pakistan is complicit in sheltering bin Laden.
Read more ....
More News On "Did Pakistan Protect Osama Bin Laden"
Did Pakistan know where bin Laden was hiding? -- CBS News
Osama bin Laden's last refuge was in a compund close to a Pakistani military academy -- The Australian/AP
Bin Laden Was Found at Luxury Pakistan Compound -- New York Times/Reuters
Bin Laden hid in Pakistan city laden with military -- Yahoo News/AP
Pakistani hill town astonished by bin Laden's death -- Reuters
Abbottabad -- The military town where bin Laden hid in plain sight -- CNN
This is Where Osama Was Hiding, According to Google Maps -- Techland/Time
Levin questions Pakistani knowlege of bin Laden compound -- Washington Examiner
In Pakistan, an embarrassed silence on killing of bin Laden -- Reuters
Osama Bin Laden Killing: Pakistan Reacts Cautiously to U.S. Raid on Its Soil -- ABC News
Heat on Pakistan as bin Laden killed near capital -- Yahoo News/Reuters
Suspicions grow over whether Pakistan aided Osama bin Laden -- L.A. Times
US forces jammed Pakistan radar system -- Online News
Pakistan-Jihadist Ties May Have Led U.S. to Hit Bin Laden Alone -- Bloomberg
Pakistan Military Needs to Explain on Bin Laden, Levin Says -- Bloomberg
Did Pakistan Know Where Bin Laden Was Hiding? -- Alan Greenblatt, NPR
Place of hiding increases suspicion about Pak role -- Hindustan Times
What Pakistan Knew About Bin Laden -- Dexter Filkins, New Yorker
Osama bin Laden killing may shape future of US cooperation with Pakistan -- Ben Arnoldy, Christian Science Monitor
Analysis: Death may be turning point in U.S.-Pakistan relations -- CNN
Musharraf condemns 'violation of our sovereignty' -- Politico
A really bad day for bin Laden – and for Pakistan -- Robert Haddick, Small Wars Journal
My Comment: Either this was a complete intelligence failure on the part of Pakistan (which I doubt), or some (if not most) of Pakistan's intelligence community either did not care and/or were complicit in protecting Bin laden. There are questions that need to be answered .... but I expect that they will not be answered by Pakistan today, tomorrow .... or ever.
Hamas, the Palestinian Terror Group Who Has Received Over $500 Billion From America In Aid, Condemns the U.S. Killing of Bin Laden

I swear, if I EVER see one more dollar of American aid go to Gaza, which means it goes to the ruling party there, Hamas, well...I'm gonna lose it, seriously. Even the piece of shit terror organization of the Muslim Brotherhood mildly applauded the death of bin Laden but for Hamas....hell no...they are denouncing his death.
From the article at The Telegraph:
The Hamas prime minister of the Gaza strip, Ismail Haniya, said: “We condemn the assassination of a Muslim and Arab warrior and we pray to God that his soul rests in peace.
“We regard this as the continuation of the American oppression and shedding of blood of Muslims and Arabs.”
The Hamas reaction put it immediately at odds with Mahmoud Abbas, the leader of the Palestinian Authority, with which it is due to sign a unity deal today to join the Palestinian government.
Since I'm talking about Hamas and all of the pigs that live in Gaza, this is a good time to remind America of the celebration the Palestinians had in 2001 when bin Laden killed 3,000 of our brothers and sisters. Here's the video from that day the Palestinians celebrated the blood of thousands of Americans:
So, the next time you see the college kids in your town holding a pro-Palestinian rally....or you see a "Free Palestine" protest in front of your city hall, park your damn car and confront the little bastards and show them this video. Show them the fact that Hamas has condemned the justice America has deserved for 10 years.
As for Hamas, I say this is the last straw. This group has put the world in jeopardy for years...they are one of the most vile islamic terror groups in the world and my question is simple: Why are they allowed to exist?
It's high time that the U.S. teams with Israel to wipe Hamas out - from top leadership down to the peons that carry the water for 'em. Believe me, between the IDF and U.S. special ops, it would be over in less than a week. The world will be a better place.
Osama bin Laden dead: Hamas condemns killing of bin Laden
While many Middle East leaders welcomed America’s military action, the mixed reaction across the region cast a shadow over both the “Arab Spring” and the future of talks between Israel and the Palestinians.
Many Arab leaders facing popular uprisings, including Col Gaddafi of Libya, have claimed the protests are backed by al-Qaeda. Those claims have largely been rejected by protest groups but many in the West are concerned at the possibility that greater freedom of expression will allow more room for Islamic militants to operate.
The Hamas prime minister of the Gaza strip, Ismail Haniya, said: “We condemn the assassination of a Muslim and Arab warrior and we pray to God that his soul rests in peace.
“We regard this as the continuation of the American oppression and shedding of blood of Muslims and Arabs.”
The Hamas reaction put it immediately at odds with Mahmoud Abbas, the leader of the Palestinian Authority, with which it is due to sign a unity deal today to join the Palestinian government.
The intransigent tone will confirm Israeli and American fears that the reconciliation between the two feuding Palestinian factions will make a peace deal impossible.
The Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, which is linked to Hamas but has renounced violence at home, was more ambiguous but its response also suggested it opposed the action. It issued a statement saying it was “against violence in general, against assassinations and in favor of fair trials.”
“With bin Laden’s death, one of the reasons for which violence has been practised in the world has been removed,” Essam al-Erian, one of its spokesmen, said.
With both Hamas, which is designated as a terrorist group by both Britain and the US, and the Brotherhood set to play a greater role - Hamas in the Occupied Territories and the Brotherhood in post-revolutionary Egypt - their words mark the latest clear step away from the automatic support for counter-terror operations the West has come to expect.
Although al-Qaeda was thought to have been beaten in most of the heartland nations of the Arab world, the threat jihadism still poses was reflected in government statements and in numerous expressions of sympathy on the street and radical websites.
Saudi Arabia, bin Laden’s homeland and the country whose royal family he had pledged to overthrow, issued an unqualified welcome. “Saudi Arabia hopes that the elimination of the leader of the terrorist Al-Qaeda organisation will be a step towards supporting international efforts aimed at combating terrorism,” a statement said.
Yemen, which is fighting its own branch of the organisation, Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, also welcomed the news. One AQAP member told a reporter for Agence France Presse that the news, which had been confirmed by fellow operatives in Pakistan, was a “catastrophe”.
One commentator well-known on jihadist websites by the pseudonym “Assad al-Jihad2” pledged revenge. “Woe to his enemies,” he wrote. “By God, we will avenge the killing of the sheikh of Islam. Those who wish that jihad has ended or weakened, I tell them: let us wait a little bit.”
Tellingly, staunch western allies such as the United Arab Emirates kept silent. Analysts said they feared provoking retaliatory attacks, despite the high levels of security in the region.
Even in Dubai, some ordinary residents expressed regret at bin Laden’s death.
Ironically, the death of bin Laden may prompt Al-Qaeda cells throughout the region to take a more active role in Arab Spring uprisings as a way of proving their strength, said Theodore Karasik, of the Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis.
“Because of bin Laden’s death they are going to be working more in tandem with each other,” he said.
Map of Where Osama bin Laden Was Killed
In August 2010, American intelligence officials tracked Osama bin Laden to Abbottabad, Pakistan, a medium-sized city about an hour’s drive north of Islamabad, the capital.
NY Times
NY Times
Unrest In Syria -- News Updates May 2, 2011

Syrian Troops Kill 10 in Daraa, Arrest Hundreds -- Voice of America
Syria's state news agency said on Monday that security forces have arrested nearly 500 people and killed 10 others.
Witnesses in the flashpoint southern city, Daraa, said troops backed by armored vehicles roamed the streets in a continuing push to crush protests against President Bashar al-Assad.
Read more ....
More News On The Unrest In Syria
Syria arrests hundreds, shells Deraa into submission -- Yahoo News/Reuters
Syria protesters given surrender ultimatum -- Yahoo News/AFP
Syrian Protesters Vow to Break the Siege on Dara'a -- Time
SYRIA: Siege continues on Dara as tensions rise ahead of protests -- L.A. Times
In Syria's rebel city 'they will shoot anything that moves' -- The Guardian
Teenagers' blood flows in video from Syrian city -- Reuters
Syrian authorities urge protesters to turn themselves in by mid-May -- RIA Novosti
Syria tells protesters to hand themselves in or face the consequences -- The Telegraph
Syria offers amnesty, arrests up -- UPI
Syria offers 'amnesty' after mass arrests -- Al Jazeera
Syria: Army in Deraa arrests 500 men -- BBC
Syrian government forces kill ten "terrorists", arrests 500 -- Xinhuanet
Syrian Army Conducts Widespread Raids, Arrests -- New York Times/AP
Leading activist seized in Syrian roundup -- Reuters
Syria arrests women, opposition figures: rights groups -- Reuters
Hundreds Of Syrian Protesters Held In Crackdown -- RTT News
Slaughter of the olive branch martyrs: The brutal Syrian crackdown that has left 500 dead and the West impotently wringing its hands -- The Independent
Thousands flee Syrian regime's brutal tactics -- The Independent
‘Doomsday scenario’ if Syria fails -- Washington Post
'We will never cease our struggle until we bring down Assad': Robert Fisk hears the defiance of Syrian refugees -- Robert Fisk, The Independent
Syria’s regime must be held to account -- Financial Times editorial
Libya laden ladenfam -- May 2, 2011
Libyan Crowds Mourn Gadhafi's Son As Battles Continue -- Voice of America
Libyan crowds on Monday mourned at the funeral of leader Moammar Gadhafi's son, while pro-government forces launched new attacks on the western city of Misrata.
Crowds gathered in the capital, Tripoli, chanting support for Gadhafi, whose son and three grandchildren were killed over the weekend, allegedly in a NATO air strike.
Read more ....
More News On Libya's Civil War
Mourners demand revenge in Libya after NATO strike -- Yahohttp://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gifo News/AP
Kadhafi tanks probe rebel city as son is buried -- Yahoo News/AFP
Crowds turn out for funeral of Gaddafi's son killed in NATO airstrike as government troops continue to besiege rebel town -- The Daily Mail
Strike on Libya came after West intercepted high-level communications -- L.A. Times
Gunners pound rebels, embassies sacked after Gadhafi's son said killed -- CNN
Gadhafi Strikes Port After Kin Killed -- Wall Street Journal
NATO strikes hit Gaddafi forces near Zintan: rebels -- Yahoo News/Reuters
UN staff leave Tripoli after mob attack -- Al Jazeera
Foreign embassies attacked in Tripoli after NATO airstrike that kills Gaddafi son, grandchildren -- Washington Post
After bin Laden death, Libya rebels ask US to kill Kadhafi -- AFP
If US killed Osama bin Laden, ask Libyans, why not assassinate Qaddafi? -- Christian Science Monitor
British and Italian Embassies in Libya Attacked -- Voice of America
China Calls for Libya Ceasefire After Gadhafi's Son Dies -- Voice of America
Death of Saif Al-Arab Gaddafi may backfire for Nato -- BBC
Libyan mountain town facing starvation: residents -- Reuters
Libyan refugees tell of border fight, fear revenge -- Reuters
Libyan villagers seek refuge in Tunisia -- Financial Times
Afghanistan laden ladenfam -- May 2, 2011

For U.S. Troops in Afghanistan, Bin Laden's Death Changes Nothing -- Time
Osama bin Laden's death is making waves around the world. But among U.S. troops deployed in Afghanistan, the country from which the al-Qaeda chief and 9/11 mastermind once declared war on the United States, there was barely a ripple. At a large recreational facility on Kandahar Air Field, about three dozen troops gathered around a pair of big-screen televisions Monday morning to tune into President Barack Obama's announcement. There were no impromptu cheers or chatter to be heard, just crossed arms and blank expressions. Nearly as many troops continued shooting pool and playing video games in background, nonplussed by the news.
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More News On Afghanistan
US, NATO: Bin Laden Death Won't End Afghan Mission -- New York Times
Afghan Leader Tells Taliban Not to Fight After Bin Laden Death -- New York Times
Karzai: Bin Laden death proves Afghanistan not ‘place of terrorism’ -- Washington Times
Osama Bin Laden Dead, But Afghans Fear War Will Go On -- L.A. Times
Death fails to bring hope to Afghans -- Al Jazeera
Bin Laden's Death Brings Calls for Afghan Pullout -- Wall Street Journal
Afghans Fear West May See Death as the End -- New York Times
Osama’s death spurs calls for U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, Iraq -- The Hindu
U.S. base in Afghanistan celebrates news -- USA Today
On the ground in Afghanistan -- ABC.net (Australia)
Kabul locked down as the Taliban promise “spring offensive” -- Global Post
Threat of Taliban attacks brings tighter security procedures -- Montreal Gazette, Post Media News
Taliban Renews Offensive in Afghanistan -- New York Times
Taliban renew Afghan offensive despite U.N. plea -- Reuters
Deadly start to Taliban 'spring offensive' -- Al Jazeera
Taliban warn of spring fighting season -- Seattle Times/New York Times
Taliban begins deadly spring offensive -- CBC
Seven Killed as Taliban Starts Afghanistan Offensive -- Wall Street Journal
Afghan Taliban Uses Child Bomber at Start of Spring Offensive -- Voice of America
Afghanistan: Suicide bomber 'aged 12' kills four -- BBC
Official Says Boy Set Off Afghan Blast Near Border -- New York Times
2 Afghan policeman are among 6 killed in insurgent attacks -- L.A. Times
Taliban offensive starts, six dead -- UPI
FACTBOX-Security developments in Afghanistan, May 1 -- Reuters
Brigade Leaders Cite Value of Intelligence -- US Department of Defense
Tough to secure Kandahar prison, Afghan loyalty -- Scott Taylor, Chronicle Herald
Prison chiefs arrested over Afghan jailbreak -- AFP
Costly Afghanistan Road Project Is Marred by Unsavory Alliances -- New York Times
Drug Trafficking In Afghanistan: Implications For Regional Security – Analysis -- Eurasia Review
Afghanistan Still Vital to Terrorist Fight -- Max Boot and Jeane J. Kirkpatrick , Council On Foreign Relations
Commentaries, Opinions, Analysis, And Editorials On The Death Of Osama Bin Laden
Why The U.S. Acted Alone -- Christopher Dickey, Yahoo News/Daily Beast
Osama bin Laden’s cave turned out to be a mansion. The desolate mountains where he was hiding proved, in the end, to be the pleasant little hill town of Abbottabad, only 30 miles from the Pakistani capital, Islamabad. He’s been holed up, and on Sunday was at last gunned down, in the biggest house around. He lived with relatives and an entourage behind high walls topped with barbed wire, in a community that’s also home to several Pakistani army units. A military academy is just a few hundred yards down the road.
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More Commentaries, Opinions, Analysis, And Editorials
Rejoice! Bin Laden's death is cause for international celebration -- Con Coughlin, The Telegraph
10 thoughts on Osama bin Laden's death -- Toby Harnden, The Telegraph
Ten Thoughts on bin Laden -- Carl Prine, Line Of Departure
Osama bin Laden is dead, ‘Justice has been done’ -- Jonathan Capehart, Washington Post
Osama bin Laden's Death Brings Closure -- David Paul Kuhn, Real Clear Politics
Osama Bin Laden is dead, struck down by the swift and sure hand of America’s fighting forces -- New York Daily News editorial
Osama bin Laden's death will haunt Pakistan -- Simon Tisdall, The Guardian
Analysis: Bin Laden death gives US reason to cheer -- Yahoo News/AP
Don't Get Cocky, America: Al Qaeda is still deadly without Osama bin Laden. -- Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, Foreign Policy
The End of the Trail? -- Richard Fernandez, Belmont Club, Pajamas Media
Al Qaeda without bin Laden -- Louis Klarevas, CBS News
The pursuit of bin Laden -- David Ignatius, Washington Post
Why Bin Laden's Death No Longer Really Matters -- Tony Karon, Time
Proud of the United States -- Eugene Robinson, Washington Post
Bin Laden’s death: a moment of unity -- Boston.com editorial
After Bin Laden: A Stronger America -- David Von Drehle, Time
Bin Laden's Death: A Pivotal Victory for Obama, U.S. Intelligence -- Marc Ambinder, The Atlantic
The War on Terror Is Over -- Peter Beinart, The Daily Beast
Bin Laden death 'blow to al-Qa’ida' -- Katie Hodge, The Independent
Osama bin Laden: how he evaded capture for so long -- Jon Swaine, The Telegraph
The Secret Team That Killed bin Laden -- Marc Ambinder
Bin Laden's Death: What This Means for Pakistan's ISI -- Aryn Baker, Time
What Pakistan Knew About Bin Laden -- Dexter Filkins, New Yorker
Osama bin Laden killing may shape future of US cooperation with Pakistan -- Ben Arnoldy, Christian Science Monitor
What Bin Laden’s Death Means For The War on Terror -- Ilan Berman, Forbes
OBL is Dead, Al Qaeda Isn't: Why it's too early to declare victory. -- Daniel Byman, Foreign Policy
What Ghost Will Emerge from Bin Laden's Watery Grave? -- Ishaan Tharoor, Time
Bin Laden’s Death Doesn’t Mean the End of Al Qaeda -- Eric Schmitt, New York Times
Will killing Osama kill the movement he inspired? -- Adam Goldman and Matt Apuzzo, AP
After Osama Bin Laden… -- Nicholas Kristof, New York Times
Osama Bin Laden -- Everyone's Missing the Point -- Barry Lando, Huffington Post
Osama bin Laden dead – but no body. Now for an explosion of conspiracy theories -- Damian Thompson, Daily Telegraph
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