|
WASHINGTON, Aug. 16 (Xinhua) -- The White House
denied on Wednesday that the administration has shut down a program to capture
Osama bin Laden, leader of the terrorist organization al-Qaida.
"It's flatly untrue," spokesman Tony Snow said at a
briefing, denying allegations raised by Democrats that the government had shut
down a program designed to capture Osama bin Laden.
The CIA, in response to a more diffuse al-Qaida, had
reshaped its unit dealing with al-Qaida to reflect the diffuse threat, he said.
"It was a reorganization, not a reduction in effort
and commitment," he said.
Snow insisted that CIA's efforts to locate bin Laden
and other senior al-Qaida figures had not been downgraded, and that the CIA's
most experienced agent working to capture bin Laden "remain fully engaged in the
fight."
The New York Times reported early July that the CIA
had closed a unit that had the mission of hunting Osama bin Laden and his top
lieutenants for a decade.
Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid has cited the
disbanding of the CIA unit as an example of what he called misplaced priorities
in the Bush administration. Enditem |