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Osama says Obama can not stop Iraq, Afghan wars
Osama bin Laden has warned that action against Americans will continue till US brings the war in Afghanistan and Iraq to an end. In an audio message released on a Jihadi website, Osama said that war against US has been launched to liberate Palestine.
TWO DAYS after 9/11 anniversary, Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden has warned that action against Americans will continue till United States brings the war in Afghanistan and Iraq to an end. In an audio message, which was released on a Jihadi website, Osama said that the war against America has been launched to liberate Palestine.

In the 11-minute video, which carries a still image of the al-Qaida chief, Laden lists the long standing grievances against the United States. The biggest foe of United States alleges that President Barack Obama will not be able to stop the war in Iraq as well as Afghanisan as the White House is controlled by certain pressure groups.

His message is also critical of the Obama for filling his administration with key figures from previous Bush presidency.

The Al-Qaeda chief is believed to be hiding in tribal areas near the Pakistan-Afghanistan border, though Pakistan government has repeatedly claimed that he is dead. American intelligence agencies, however, hold that there is not enough evidence to prove that Laden no more.

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.Americans wanted to believe that their version of democracy was just waiting to spring to life in Iraq — a peaceful multi-ethnic, multi-religious society adhering to the rule of law. That longing to find in another country a mirror of ourselves trumped cold analysis and led to years of denial that came to an end only when the mutilated bodies at the Baghdad morgue mounted each day: to 30, 40 and finally 75 to 100. Shiites murdered by Sunnis; Sunnis murdered by Shiites. I realized that a sectarian fight was starting to play out in November 2003, but I had no idea how far it would go. I should have been the canary in the coal mine — but like so many others around me, I did not want to believe what I saw. I was working for The Los Angeles Times then; it would be nearly four years before I would come to this newspaper. It was early winter, gray and damp, and in a poor neighborhood called Washash a blind imam had been assassinated as he walked home from the dawn prayer on the first day of Ramadan. Killed with him was his brother and a small boy who acted as his guide. The area was run down, the houses cramped, the narrow streets littered. Under tattered awnings, an open-air fruit market sold mangy cauliflowers, browning romaine lettuce and bruised oranges. The neighborhood was predominantly Shiite although most surrounding areas were Sunni. Two years later Shiite thugs and killers would force many of the Sunnis to flee, but that hadn’t happened yet. People in the market didn’t want to talk about the imam, who was a Sunni. They shrugged when I asked what had happened. I asked if he had debts, if he had hurt anyone. They shook their heads; even the Shiites among them were afraid of the gunmen. I found the imam’s house, a humble building with just one room to a floor on one of two streets where Sunnis lived. His son told me his father’s story. Blind for many years, his father preached at a small mosque just a few blocks away, rising every morning before dawn, using his blind man’s stick to help him arrive in time to offer the prayer. Soon after the fall of Saddam Hussein, the imam began to hear threats; when he had finished cleaning the mosque and emerged alone into the street, people would whisper that his time was up. Sunnis were no longer welcome there.
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