A selection from more than 6,000
pages of documents seized during the May 1, 2011, raid that killed Osama
bin Laden was released on Thursday by West Point's Combating Terrorism Center (CTC), giving the public a rare glimpse of the al-Qaida leader's terror plans and his largely solitary life.
The center released a group of 17
documents totalling 175 pages, which had been uncovered by U.S. forces
in bin Laden's Abbottabad compound. Shortly before 9 a.m. ET, the center
posted on its website both the Arabic originals and versions translated and summarized in English.
As was previously reported, some
of the documents show that bin Laden ordered the assassinations of
President Barack Obama and U.S. Gen. David Petraeus, but did not have
the resources to carry out the killings.
"Obama is the head of infidelity
and killing him automatically will make [Vice President Joe] Biden take
over the presidency for the remainder of the term, as it is the norm
over there," bin Laden wrote in a letter to one of his top lieutenants.
"Biden is totally unprepared for that post, which will lead the U.S.
into a crisis. As for Petraeus, he is the man of the hour in this last
year of the war, and killing him would alter the war's path."
The earliest letter is dated
September 2006 and the latest April 2011, the center said. Several
al-Qaida leaders, including bin Laden, Atiyya Abd al-Rahman, Abu Yahya
al-Libi and Adam Gadahn, the terror group's American spokesman, authored
the internal communications.
Given that the electronic
documents were "saved on thumb drives, memory cards or the hard drive of
bin Laden's computer," the center noted, it's unclear whether any of
these letters reached their intended destinations.
In another letter, bin Laden vows to avenge the war in Afghanistan,
while assuring one of his deputies that America does not have the
financial resources to continue it.
"They struck us and we will
strike them back," he wrote, according to the center's translation.
"This year has been the worst year for them in Afghanistan since they
invaded it. The number of their dead has never been this high according
to their own reports. Their financial crisis continues. Britain has
lowered its defense budget and America is reducing the budget of the
Pentagon. Anyone who knows the world and knows politics, knows that it
is impossible for them to continue with the war."
In another, bin Laden compares
two of al-Qaida's enemies: Arab leaders and America, concluding that the
U.S. should remain its most important target:
The Ummah is fighting an internal enemy, which are the leaders of the Arab World. The Ummah is also fighting an external enemy, which is America. Although the former is far more blasphemous, the latter is clearly the unbeliever. At this stage of our war with our enemies, America poses a greater threat to the Ummah than any other enemy. America is the head of the infidels. If God wills it, America's head can be cut off. Once the head has been removed, then it would be easier to cut off America's wings.
A January 2011 letter from Gadahn to an unknown recipient discusses al-Qaida's media strategy ahead of the tenth anniversary of the Sept. 11 terror attacks, and explains where the group might focus its press efforts.
"From the professional point of
view, they are all on one level—except [Fox News] channel which falls
into the abyss as you know, and lacks neutrality too," Gadahn wrote. "I
used to think that MSNBC channel may be good and neutral a bit, but is
has lately fired two of the most famous journalists—Keith Olberman and
Octavia Nasser the Lebanese—because they released some statements that
were open for argument."
Gadahn continued: "In conclusion,
we can say that there is no single channel that we could rely on for
our messages. [They] may ignore them, and even the channel that
broadcast them, probably it would distort them somehow. Or they may
ignore the message and conduct a smearing of the individuals, to the end
of the list of what you know about their cunning methods."
He added: "As for Fox News, let her die in her anger."