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Bin Laden message not seen as threat to US: Obama
The US government on Wednesday dismissed a new audio message from Al Qaida leader Osama bin Laden and said he was not a threat to President-elect Barack Obama's inauguration.
Washington: The US government on Wednesday dismissed a new audio message from Al Qaida leader Osama bin Laden and said he was not a threat to President-elect Barack Obama's inauguration.
The tape surfaced as the United States prepares for a handover of power from President George W. Bush to Obama on Tuesday.
Bin Laden focused his message on a call for a holy war over the Israeli offensive in Gaza. He also discussed Obama and said the new US president would inherit the "heavy legacy" of a long guerrilla war that would widen to more fronts, said the Internet terrorism monitor SITE Intelligence Group.
US officials exhibited more of a growing confidence that bin Laden and other top Al Qaida leaders have been greatly weakened by military pressure on the Afghanistan-Pakistan border areas where they are believed to be hiding.
"It appears this tape demonstrates his isolation and continued attempts to remain relevant at a time when Al Qaida's ideology, mission, and agenda are being questioned and challenged throughout the world," White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe said. He said it also looked like a fund-raising effort.
After the September 11, 2001, attacks, Bush declared that he wanted bin Laden captured dead or alive. But the Al Qaida leader has eluded a US manhunt.
The inauguration is expected to draw record crowds of 1.5 million or more to the US capital next week for three days of festivities. Asked if the tape represented a threat to the inauguration, FBI spokesman Richard Kolko said, "We have no specific or credible threat to the inauguration."
Tens of thousands of police and US troops are planning to take part in an unprecedented inauguration security effort.
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