Scheuer: US policy is bin Laden's 'indispensable ally'
"Today, bin Laden, Al-Qaeda and their allies have only one indispensable ally: the US foreign policy towards the Islamic world," said Michael Scheuer, who led the bin Laden unit from 1996-1999.
"Time is not on America's side. We're clearly losing," Scheuer told a government security conference in Washington.
"We're at a point where Al-Qaeda and bin Laden are changing into Al-Qaedism and bin Ladenism - a philosophy and a movement rather than a man and an organization," the former CIA analyst said.
"More than any other factor, the US invasion of Iraq and the prolonged occupation of this country has produced this transformation."
Scheuer said bin Laden has focused on US policies in the Islamic world, such as the US military presence of Iraq and Afghanistan, its economic and military support to Israel and its "decades old support for apostate and tyrannical government across the Islamic world."
"The cumulative impact of several events over the past two years have gone a good ways towards increasing Muslim hatred for Americans simply because they are Americans," he said, pointing to the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal, the treatment of detainees at the Guantanamo prison camp and caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed printed in European and US newspapers.
"Each of these events are unfortunate but not terribly serious for the Western minds. But from the Muslim perspective they are deliberate and vicious attacks against the things that guide their lives and their faiths," he said.
Scheuer, who resigned from the CIA in November 2004, is the author of "Imperial Hubris: Why the West is Losing the War on Terror," which was published with the approval of the CIA despite its damning conclusion that US actions are inflaming a global Muslim insurgency. Link
db: In terms of the 'Muslim perspective', how do you think Bush's threat to use nuclear weapons against Iran is going down? If I was an American I would have some concerns. Being American [in this scenario] my primary area of concern would not be for the hundreds of thousands of innocent Iranians that are likely to perish - 'cos you can't make an omelet without breaking eggs - the thing that would worry me most [as an American] would be the exponential increase in the likelihood of a terrorist crossing the porous borders of the US with a nuclear weapon in his briefcase and giving us some of our own medicine - I mean, committing a heinous terrorist act against humanity [humanity = Americans and allies only].
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