Originally posted by JaTo:
I think he was referring to the lack of agency identifcation in terms of the terrorists that trained there. His wording is certainly strange, though in the next sentence he goes on to refer to Al-Qaeda; "Nobody will talk about Al-Qaeda or any other orginzation."...

The world damn-sure knows they exist as the US government has in it's posession a large amount of training and propaganda material that came from Al-Qaeda sites in Afghanistan.

Again, I don't read it as him denying the existance of Al-Qaeda. His English isn't top-shelf British boarding school, as one can tell from numerous places in the interview.



Quote:

They didn't tell us they were part of Al Qaeda; there's no such thing.



Here is another interview from the very same site: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/binladen/interviews/al-fagih.html

I am not saying bin Laden and his terrorists do not exist, I just find it very disturbing how the government focuses on 'Al Qaeda.'
Originally posted by JaTo:
I though we were going after "terrorism", not just Al-Qaeda, as I've heard our mindset and goals referred to as "The War on Terrorism", not the "War on Al-Qaeda"...



You realize there are not only terror camps in Iraq and Afghanistan, but the ENTIRE Middle East?


-Giovanni One turbocharger. Two intercoolers. All love.