ALARAB Online
Pakistan says world shares Bin Laden blame
Pakistan said Wednesday the world must share the blame for failing to unearth Osama bin Laden as a furore swelled over how the slain Al-Qaeda kingpin had managed to live undisturbed near Islamabad.
Following the killing of bin Laden by US commandos in a raid on his sprawling villa, Washington revealed that Pakistan was kept in the dark to avoid tipping off the mastermind behind the September 11, 2001 attacks.
A Pakistani intelligence official said one of bin Laden's children, now in custody with a Yemeni wife of the Al-Qaeda leader, saw her father shot dead.
The Saudi-born extremist was unarmed when he was killed early Monday, the White House revealed, fuelling speculation that the elite Navy SEAL team was under orders to kill rather than capture him.
His daughter, reported to be 12 years old, "was the one who confirmed to us that Osama was dead and shot and taken away," said the Pakistani official.
US Attorney General Eric Holder told lawmakers in Congress that the operation that killed bin Laden was an "act of national self-defence".
The raid was "lawful and consistent with our values", Holder said on Wednesday after it emerged the Al-Qaeda leader was unarmed when he was shot and killed.
US officials, meanwhile, debated whether to scotch conspiracy theories by releasing a "gruesome" photo of the dead bin Laden, conscious that such an image would likely inflame strong passions in some Muslim countries.
Television networks NBC and CBS reported that President Barack Obama would not release pictures of bin Laden's body.
Pakistan is smarting after it emerged that bin Laden had been tracked down and killed not in the mountainous caves of the Afghan border but in a purpose-built residential compound in the garrison town of Abbottabad.
The government of the nuclear-armed nation, insisting in the face of Western incredulity that it does not provide safe haven for militants, is angrily stressing its status as the victim of countless bloody attacks.
On the revelation that bin Laden was living less than two hours' drive north of the capital, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani said: "Certainly, we have intelligence failure of the rest of the world including the United States.
"There is intelligence failure of the whole world, not Pakistan alone," he told reporters during a visit to Paris.
Pakistan needed "the support of the entire world" to eradicate terrorism, Gilani added.
"We are fighting and paying a heavy price to combat terrorism and extremism... fighting not only for Pakistan but for the peace, prosperity and progress of the whole world."
But unusually frank remarks from the CIA chief betrayed the extent of distrust between the United States and Pakistan, a problematic ally in the war against the resurgent Taliban in neighbouring Afghanistan.
"It was decided that any effort to work with the Pakistanis could jeopardise the mission," Leon Panetta told Time magazine. "They might alert the targets."
Outraged US lawmakers are calling for billions of dollars in aid for Pakistan to be cut back or scrapped entirely, while several governments in Europe say Islamabad has pressing questions to answer.
Pakistani intelligence officials said agents raided the bin Laden compound in 2003 when it was still being built, looking for then Al-Qaeda number three Abu Faraj al-Libbi, who escaped and was eventually captured two years later.
They said the powerful Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency had no idea bin Laden was later holed up in the compound in Abbottabad, which is home to Pakistan's equivalent of the West Point and Sandhurst military academies.
But Salman Bashir, the top civil servant in Pakistan's foreign ministry, told the BBC Wednesday that the ISI had in fact alerted the United States to its suspicions about the imposing compound "as far back as 2009".
But it was not known at the time that bin Laden was sheltering there and there were "millions" of other suspect locations, Bashir said.
Bashir also said that Panetta's remarks were "disquieting" as he underlined the "pivotal role" played by Pakistan in fighting terror.
The White House gave the fullest account yet of the dramatic helicopter-borne raid that killed the architect of the 9/11 attacks in the dead of night and sparked scenes of relief and joy around the Western world.
"In the room with bin Laden, a woman -- bin Laden's wife -- rushed the US assaulter and was shot in the leg but not killed," White House spokesman Jay Carney said. "Bin Laden was then shot and killed. He was not armed."
When pressed further, Carney said there had been significant resistance, a "volatile firefight", and insisted: "We were prepared to capture him if that was possible."
In Pakistan itself, conspiracy theories have proliferated after bin Laden's body was buried at sea off a US warship to forestall the prospect of a grave on land becoming an extremist shrine.
About 70 lawyers staged a rally in Abbottabad, condemning the US operation in their city, witnesses said.
They shouted "Go, America go", "Osama bin Laden is our hero" and chanted slogans against the US-allied and deeply fractured Pakistani government.
Police on Wednesday sealed off the Bilal suburb of the city, after crowds gathered outside the bin Laden compound, with hundreds of officers stationed around the area.
Residents returning to their houses were searched, with some labourers prevented from going to work in the area, a reporter said.
Dozens of Pakistani youths had demonstrated outside the house on Tuesday, mocking America and shouting "Osama is alive!"
US analysts were scouring documents and computer files seized from the hideout for evidence after top counter-terrorism official John Brennan said it was "inconceivable" bin Laden did not enjoy some kind of support network in Pakistan.
For a decade, Islamabad has been America's wary Afghan war ally, despite widespread public opposition and militant bomb attacks across the country that have killed several thousand people.
But Pakistan has never been fully trusted by either Kabul or Washington. It stands accused of fostering the Afghan Taliban, and before that extremists such as bin Laden who took up arms against Afghanistan's 1980s Soviet occupiers.
With Pakistan's main Taliban faction and jihadist websites vowing vengeance for bin Laden, French Interior Minister Claude Gueant said the threat of reprisal attacks was real.
NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen urged Pakistan to step up its efforts to fight extremism, particularly along the border with Afghanistan.
Iranian Defence Minister Ahmad Vahidi said the killing amounted to a "big failure" for Washington, while a leader of Al-Qaeda's branch in restive southern Yemen vowed the group would "take revenge for the death of our Sheikh Osama bin Laden and we will prove this to the en emies of God."
US officials say DNA tests have proven conclusively that the man shot above the eye was indeed the Al-Qaeda leader who boasted about the death of nearly 3,000 people in the September 11 attacks.
-Agencies-
http://www.alarabonline.org/english/display.asp?fname=\2011\05\05-04\zalsoz\925.htm&dismode=x&ts=4-5-2011%2020:04:46
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