After all, the chain of custody of these tapes is the one way to find bin Laden. He obviously feels secure enough that he can release a number of these tapes. |
At night, temperatures here fall below the freezing point. |
Even by the standards of 1970s Saudi Arabia, it was a little unusual. |
Given the impact that Bin Laden has had on the recent history of the world, there is surprisingly a good deal that remains mysterious about him. |
He communicates by satellite phone, even though Afghanistan in some levels is back in the Middle Ages and a country that barely functions. |
He seemed to be a very intelligent guy, a very well-informed guy and a very serious guy. |
He's not living in a cave - he's living somewhere with more amenities. His most recent statements show a Talmudic attention to the news. |
In a final e-mail (she said): 'We're helping lots of kids with medical care' -- this is on the day that Marla died -- 'This place continues to break my heart. Need to get out of here, but it's hard.' |
In Islamist jurisprudence you warn enemies before you attack them. It is typical behavior. |
It indicates to me a certain degree of security, ... Live Today. |
It's extraordinary that the chain of custody of these tapes has not been traced back. After all, they're releasing these tapes very frequently, on average once every six weeks, yet it seems that American intelligence agencies or other intelligence agencies are not capable of tracing back the source of these tapes. |
Most governments around the Muslim world are falling over themselves to co-operate with the US in the war on terrorism. |
One meeting does not make a conspiracy. Saddam Hussein does not engage in these types of acts. |
Saddam Hussein was put on notice that he can't do those type of things. |
That was a direct correlation. Most of the time there is no correlation. |