Home>News Center>World
         
 

US near seizing Osama Bin Laden -- official
(Agencies)
Updated: 2004-09-05 07:58

The United States and its allies have moved closer to capturing Osama bin Laden in the last two months, a top U.S. counterterrorism official said in a television interview broadcast Saturday.


Exiled Saudi dissident Osama bin Laden is seen in this April 1998, file photo in Afghanistan. The United States and its allies have moved closer to capturing Osama bin Laden in the last two months, a top U.S. counterterrorism official said in a television interview broadcast Saturday, Sept. 4, 2004. [AP]
"If he has a watch, he should be looking at it because the clock is ticking. He will be caught," Joseph Cofer Black, the U.S. State Department coordinator for counterterrorism, told private Geo television network.

Asked if concrete progress had been made during the last two months — when Pakistan has arrested dozens of terror suspects including some key al-Qaida operatives — Black said, "Yes, I would say this."

Black, who briefed a group of Pakistani journalists after talks with officials here Friday, said he could not predict exactly when bin Laden and other top al-Qaida fugitives would be nabbed.

"What I tell people, I would be surprised but not necessarily shocked if we wake up tomorrow and he's been caught along with all his lieutenants. That can happen because of the programs and infrastructure in place," he told Geo.

Bin Laden and his top associate, Ayman al-Zawahri, are believed to be hiding some place along the rugged border between Pakistan and Afghanistan. Officials have divulged no solid intelligence about bin Laden's precise whereabouts, and it's not clear if they have any.

Pakistan is a key ally of the United States in its war on terror, and Black's visit comes weeks after Pakistani security forces captured Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, a Tanzanian wanted for the 1998 U.S. embassy bombings in east Africa, and Mohammed Naeem Noor Khan, a Pakistani computer expert allegedly linked to al-Qaida operatives around the world.


U.S. counter-terrorism expert J. Cofer Black (R) meets former prime minister and opposition leader Sheikh Hasina Wajed in Dhaka on September 5, 2004. Black arrived in Bangladesh on Sunday to help the government investigate a grenade attack at a Dhaka opposition rally last month that killed 19 people and wounded 150. [Reuters]
The arrests led to a terror warning in the United States, and arrests in Britain and the United Arab Emirates.

Black attended a meeting of the Pakistan-U.S. Joint Working Group on Counterterrorism and Law Enforcement in Islamabad on Thursday and Friday.

During the talks, Pakistan asked U.S. officials for more helicopters, surveillance and communications equipment to help Pakistani forces guard border areas near Afghanistan "more efficiently," a Pakistani official at the talks said.

"We got a positive response from the American officials," said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Pakistan has deployed about 70,000 troops along the Afghan border and conducted several military operations this year in its lawless and largely autonomous tribal regions against al-Qaida suspects and their local supporters.

Black hailed Pakistan's efforts in counterterrorism — despite criticism from Western officials who say that elements of the former ruling Taliban regime in Afghanistan still operate inside Pakistan.

"In terms of national programs and effectiveness, I would put Pakistan up against anyone else ... If you look at the arrests they have made, the information they have developed and the lives that have been saved, Pakistan is doing a great job," he said.

He added, however, that, "you can always do more."



 
  Today's Top News     Top World News
 

Funerals planned for 340 dead in Russia school siege

 

   
 

Asian parties laud CPC's governing capability

 

   
 

Britain still waiting for Chinese tourists

 

   
 

High oil prices not to drag down economy

 

   
 

ICAPP meeting adopts Beijing Declaration

 

   
 

Beijing slams Chen's splittism remark

 

   
  Funerals planned for 340 dead in Russia school siege
   
  Child hostages recall 3 days of terror
   
  Frances lands at Florida, leaving 3m powerless
   
  ICAPP calls on Asian countries to cooperate in energy
   
  1,100 US troops injured in Iraq in August
   
  World leaders condemn killing of Russian hostages
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  News Talk  
  Are the Republicans exploiting the memory of 9/11?  
Advertisement