Washington: US President Obama has decided not to release photographs of Osama bin Laden's body, CBS News reported on Wednesday. Mr. Obama said he concluded that images of bin Laden, bloodied by gunshots, would do nothing to persuade skeptics, but could inflame tensions in the Muslim world and pose problems for America's national security.He disclosed his decision in an interview for the CBS program 60 Minutes, part of which will be broadcast on the network's evening news programs on Wednesday.According to a transcript read aloud at a White House press briefing, Mr. Obama said that there was no doubt bin Laden was dead and that "we don't trot this stuff out as trophies - that's not who we are."The debate over whether to release photos of bin Laden had consumed the White House over the last two days. Some senior officials said the release of photos was inevitable. On Tuesday, the director of the Central Intelligence Agency, Leon E Panetta, said he did not think "there was any question that ultimately a photograph would be presented to the public."Read More
http://www.ndtv.com/article/world/we-don-t-trot-out-this-stuff-as-trophies-obama-on-osama-photo-103425

A SHIVER ran down Nasser al-Bahri’s spine as he heard the gruesome details of Osama bin Laden’s final moments.He was suddenly transported back in time to a cave in Afghanistan where the terrorist mastermind had told him exactly how he intended to die.It was August, 1998, and al-Qaeda had just bombed two US embassies.Bin Laden knew he was now America’s most hunted man so he called in his devoted bodyguard and gave him a chilling order.Al-Bahri recalls how “The Sheik”, pulled out a revolver with two bullets in the chamber and handed it to him.“He told me, ‘If ever the Americans encircle me, I absolutely do not want to end my life as a prisoner of the United States. So you will be in charge of killing me’.”Bin Laden drew him closer and explained: “I would rather receive two bullets in the head than be taken prisoner. I want to die a martyr – but certainly not in prison.”Al-Bahri says: “When I heard of his death my first thought was that he had got his wish. But I’m glad I did not have to pull the trigger.”While millions in the West were celebrating the death of his former boss, al-Bahri, 39, was mourning the loss of the fanatic he still describes as “an unrivalled leader of men”.Read more: http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/top-stories/2011/05/04/osama-bin-laden-s-bodyguard-i-had-orders-to-kill-him-if-the-americans-tried-to-take-him-alive-115875-23105618/#ixzz1LM4EkuQc
Washington: US would not make any apology for its unilateral military action against al Qaeda chief
Osama bin Laden at his hideout in Pakistan, the White House has said."We make no apologies about that," White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said when asked that US should not have gone unilaterally inside Pakistan to get bin Laden."He was enemy number one for this country and killed many many innocent civilians. And no apologies," Carney said.On Monday, Pakistan termed the US commando operation in Abbottabad that killed Laden an "unauthorised, unilateral action" without its knowledge.The White House said America has never been at war with Islam. "This has never been a war against Islam. President (George W) Bush said that; President (Barack) Obama has said that. Osama bin Laden was not a Muslim leader; he was a mass murderer of Muslims, as well as people of other faiths," Carney said.Read More
http://www.ndtv.com/article/world/no-apology-for-violating-pakistan-air-space-white-house-103239

Without him, there would probably be no Department of Homeland Security, no Patriot Act, no Qur’an-burning pastors.Had Osama bin Laden never been born, there would surely be fewer memorials to slain firefighters, less need for prosthetic limbs for young troops, an American public still largely ignorant of the Muslim notion of martyrdom.Our military probably would still be more interested in tanks and aircraft carriers, less wary of roadside bombs and suicide belts. The development of killer robot planes might not have come so far. The need to deal with asymmetric threats — battling an army not of battalions but of insurgents — would not be so pressing.And America would certainly be a country with far fewer long-fading yellow ribbons.The man who came to symbolize a bloody rejection of all things U.S. left a legacy among those he hated, and those he inspired to hate them. Little wonder that his demise brought so little sympathy.“In the past few years, (bin Laden’s) main military triumphs have been against such targets as Afghan schoolgirls, Shiite Muslim civilians, and defenseless synagogues in Tunisia and Turkey,” wrote pundit Christopher Hitchens on news of bin Laden’s death and dumping at sea. “Has there ever been a more contemptible leader from behind, or a commander who authorized more blanket death sentences on bystanders?”In ways small and monumental, bin Laden’s two decades on the world stage changed how America operated within its borders and with other nations. It may not have been entirely his doing, but his life had a profound impact on the nation he so loathed.It was after he mobilized al-Qaida against the United States, after all, that Washington set up the legal purgatory of Guantanamo Bay for foreign fighters. Since then, the country tormented itself over whether waterboarding is torture and whether torture is always a bad idea.As fate would have it, the first bits of intelligence that ultimately tracked down bin Laden came from secret prisons overseas. That won’t end the torture debate, but it looks to have ended bin Laden’s run.Current and former U.S. officials told The Associated Press that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the chief planner of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, provided the pseudonym of a bin Laden courier. The CIA also got tips from Mohammed’s successor, Abu Faraj al-Libi. Both men underwent harsh interrogation at CIA prisons in Poland and Romania.It was, in a way, the nature of bin Laden’s tactics that prompted America to bend its own ways.Bin Laden no more invented the suicide bomber than Henry Ford invented the automobile. He just made more of them than anyone had before.Under his leadership, al-Qaida shifted the rationalization behind suicide bombings. The ultimate attacks of 9/11 weren’t done with bombs, but they fit with a devolved sense of justifications for killing. No longer did a man with an explosive vest need to aim for Israeli soldiers or some other combatants. Now, went the reasoning sold by bin Laden’s organization, truck bombs could target civilians as long as the victims could be painted as somehow sympathetic to Islam’s supposed enemies.“They built this narrative that Muslims are being besieged and humiliated and targeted by the West in wars and occupation,” said Mohammed M. Hafez, an associate professor at the Naval Post Graduate School who has researched suicide bombers. “They elevated martyrdom in online documents and videos. … They’ve really taken the art of martyrdom veneration to a new level.”Impact on politicsBin Laden’s more lethal brand of terrorism changed, too, the dynamics of American politics.George W. Bush arguably would have had a harder time at re-election in 2004 were he not, as he put it, “a war president.”Barack Obama’s re-election prospects — had he ever made it to the White House — might look bleaker now had troops on his watch not slain the face of terrorism.And the hope that bin Laden’s 9/11 terrorist attacks might unite a polarized U.S. turned out to be fleeting at best.Read more:
http://www.kansascity.com/2011/05/02/2844626/osama-bin-laden-changed-us-in.html#ixzz1LGFH9sU3