Sunday, May 8, 2011

Vanity, thy name is Osama

Vanity, thy name is Osama

Washington, May 7: The Obama administration on Saturday released five videos that show Osama bin Laden watching himself on television and rehearsing speeches, revealing that even from the walled confines of his Pakistani hideout, he remained a media maestro who was eager to craft his own image for the cameras.

The videos, seized from Osama's Abbottabad hideout, were offered as further proof that Navy SEALs killed the world's most wanted terrorist this week. But they also served to show Osama as vain, someone obsessed with his portrayal by the world's media.

Perhaps the most revealing video shows Osama sitting on the floor in a small room, his unkempt beard mostly white, wrapped in a blanket as he watches news clips about himself on television. He flips back and forth between what appears to be live news coverage of himself. The old, small television is perched on top of a desk with a large tangle of electrical wires running to a nearby control box.

In another, he has apparently dyed and neatly trimmed his beard for the filming of a propaganda video. The video, which the US released without sound, was titled "Message to the American People" and believed to be made sometime last fall, a senior intelligence official said during a briefing for reporters on condition of anonymity.

The official said that Osama's concern about his appearance suggested that he was intensely interested in the image he presented to his supporters, and that he was deeply immersed in the propaganda efforts of the terrorist organisation al Qaida.

That view contrasts sharply with earlier theories that he had become a marginal character who served as a figurehead for the group.

The official described the Abbottabad compound as a command-and-control centre for al Qaida, where the group not only plotted attacks but was also deeply involved in the operations of Qaida lieutenants.

Officials said the clips were part of the largest trove of terrorist materials ever collected. The evidence seized during the raid also includes phone numbers and documents that officials hope will help break the back of the organisation behind the September 11, 2001, attacks

Intelligence officials have known that Osama and al Qaida monitored the news. But for years, when it was assumed that he was living in Pakistan's rugged, mountainous tribal region, some believed he might not be able to get real-time news.

After the CIA discovered Osama's suburban compound, they realised that a satellite dish provided a television feed to the compound.

The video also reveals that Osama had a computer in his home, though officials say there were no Internet or phone lines running from the house.

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