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WASHINGTON, Aug. 17 (Xinhuanet) -- The Clinton
administration in 1996 ignored warning of intelligence analysts that Osama bin
Laden's move to Afghanistan would make him even more dangerous, The New York
Times said Wednesday.
In that summer, analysts at the
State Department said in a top-secret assessment of bin Laden that "his
prolonged stay in Afghanistan... could prove more dangerous to US interests in
the long run," the newspaper quoted newly declassified intelligence documents as
saying.
Two years after that assessment, operatives of al
Qaeda linked to bin Laden's training and financial base in Afghanistan attacked
two US embassies in East Africa, leading to failed military initiatives against
him in Afghanistan.
And five years after the assessment, bin Laden's
followers struck the United States in the Sept. 11 terror attacks.
However, former Clinton administration officials
argued that the newly disclosed documents should be viewed in the context of
what was going on in 1996, rather than in the hindsight of events after the
Sept. 11 attacks.
In 1996, "the question was getting him out of Sudan,"
said a former official.
Michael Scheuer, a former CIA supervisor who ran the
agency's unit tracking down bin Laden, said the declassified document reflected
the growing danger that analysts realized bin Laden posed if he were allowed to
move to Afghanistan.
"The analytical side of the State Department had it
exactly right," he said, adding that the CIA believed that it had a greater
chance to catch bin Laden in Afghanistan than in Sudan.
"The thinking was that he (bin Laden) was in
Afghanistan, and he was dangerous. But because he was there, we had a better
chanceto kill him," said Scheuer.
"But at the end of the day, we settled for the worst
possibility -- he was there and we didn't do anything." Enditem
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