from State of the Union by Linh Dinh 
Since September 11, 2001, Bin Laden had been mostly an absence. His few  video or audio tapes were highly suspect, and speculations about his  death had often surfaced. On July 11, 2002, Amir Taheri wrote in the New  York Times, “Osama bin Laden is dead. The news first came from sources  in Afghanistan and Pakistan almost six months ago: the fugitive died in  December and was buried in the mountains of southeast Afghanistan […]  With an ego the size of Mount Everest, Osama bin Laden would not have,  could not have, remained silent for so long if he were still alive. He  always liked to take credit even for things he had nothing to do with.  Would he remain silent for nine months and not trumpet his own  survival?”
But save for one doubtful video, Bin Laden never took  credit for 9/11. In fact, he repeatedly denied any responsibility for  those mass murders. On September 28, 2001, he was interviewed by the Karachi Ummat, an Urdu language newspaper. The US Foreign Broadcast Information Service, a component of the CIA, translated:
[…]  I have already said that I am not involved in the 11 September attacks  in the United States. As a Muslim, I try my best to avoid telling a lie.  Neither I had any knowledge of these attacks nor I consider the killing  of innocent women, children, and other humans as an appreciable act.  Islam strictly forbids causing harm to innocent women, children, and  other people. Such a practice is forbidden ever in the course of a  battle. It is the United States, which is perpetrating every  maltreatment on women, children, and common people of other faiths,  particularly the followers of Islam. All that is going on in Palestine  for the last 11 months is sufficient to call the wrath of God upon the  United States and Israel. There is also a warning for those Muslim  countries, which witnessed all these as a silent spectator. What had  earlier been done to the innocent people of Iraq, Chechnya, and Bosnia?  Only one conclusion could be derived from the indifference of the United  States and the West to these acts of terror and the patronage of the  tyrants by these powers that America is an anti-Islamic power and it is  patronizing the anti-Islamic forces. Its friendship with the Muslim  countries is just a show, rather deceit. By enticing or intimidating  these countries, the United States is forcing them to play a role of its  choice. Put a glance all around and you will see that the slaves of the  United States are either rulers or enemies [of Muslims]. The US has no  friends, nor it wants to keep one because the prerequisite of friendship  is to come to the level of the friend or consider him at par with you.  America does not want to see anyone equal to it. It expects slavery from  others. Therefore, other countries are either its slaves or  subordinates […] Whoever committed the act of 11 September are not the  friends of the American people. I have already said that we are against  the American system, not against its people, whereas in these attacks,  the common American people have been killed […] The United States should  try to trace the perpetrators of these attacks within itself; the  people who are a part of the US system, but are dissenting against it.  Or those who are working for some other system; persons who want to make  the present century as a century of conflict between Islam and  Christianity so that their own civilization, nation, country, or  ideology could survive […] Then there are intelligence agencies in the  US, which require billions of dollars worth of funds from the Congress  and the government every year. This [funding issue] was not a big  problem till the existence of the former Soviet Union but after that the  budget of these agencies has been in danger. They needed an enemy. So,  they first started propaganda against Usama and Taliban and then this  incident happened. You see, the Bush administration approved a budget of  $40 billion. Where will this huge amount go? It will be provided to the  same agencies, which need huge funds and want to exert their  importance. Now they will spend the money for their expansion and for  increasing their importance. I will give you an example. Drug smugglers  from all over the world are in contact with the US secret agencies.  These agencies do not want to eradicate narcotics cultivation and  trafficking because their importance will be diminished. The people in  the US Drug Enforcement Department are encouraging drug trade so that  they could show performance and get millions of dollars worth of budget.  General Noriega was made a drug baron by the CIA and, in need, he was  made a scapegoat. In the same way, whether it is President Bush or any  other US President, they cannot bring Israel to justice for its human  rights abuses or to hold it accountable for such crimes. What is this?  Is it not that there exists a government within the government in the  United Sates? That secret government must be asked as to who made the  attacks […]
Judge for yourself. Does this sound like the  raving of some mad man with an ego the size of Mount Everest? He sounds  quite composed, actually, and far more lucid, perceptive and concise  than all American politicians and most intellectuals. In any case, this  interview was the last substantial utterance from Bin Laden. After this,  he more or less disappeared.
Though neither seen nor heard, he  was often evoked to justify the crimes America was committing against  others, and even her own citizens. Bin Laden vindicated whatever our  leaders chose to do. But ten years is a long time, however, to throw  this shadow against our walls. This bearded man had become a bit of a  joke, frankly. On a cartoon show, the folks of South Park Colorado, even  asked Bin Laden to help them kill an invading horde from New Jersey.
This  week, our government decided, finally, to kill off the Bin Laden  apparition. Since the United States had supposedly been after him since  1998, you would think they’d hang on to their man a bit longer after  they got him, if they got him, but within hours of finding her public  enemy number one, America got rid of Bin Laden!
Hey, if you can’t  show me something, maybe you don’t have it, especially since you are a  chronic liar and in the cloak and dagger business. For most  English-language trials since the disappearance of William Harrison in  1660, there has been the principle of no corpse, no murder, but here you  actually have an open admission of murder, widely broadcast, but no  corpse, which is tantamount to destruction of evidence, whatever it was.
So  the CIA is basically saying to us, The dog ate my cadaver. Frankly,  this farce was so crudely put together, the explanation so ridiculous,  that our overlords must think most of us are morons, brainwashed as we  are by cradle-to-grave propaganda delivered via print or pixels. I hate  to think they might be right.
Though the important questions are  not being asked, the official lessons are being pounded into our heads.  According to governmental bobbleheads and embedded media pundits, this  virtual assassination is a vindication of America and her (evil) ways.  The end justifies the means, you see, so waterboarding, extra-rendition  and all the rest have been and are necessary.
Ari Fleischer,  former Bush mouthpiece, attributed this week’s happy outcome to “a  strong foundation of anti-terrorist efforts including the predator  strikes in northern Pakistan, indefinite detention, Guantanamo where we  had interrogation techniques that led to the courier […] all that is  what Barack Obama continued that George Bush started. This is a day for  all of us to just be proud of what our country has accomplished.”
Obama  also dished up some righteousness, “Tonight, we are once again reminded  that America can do whatever we set our mind to. That is the story of  our history, whether it’s the pursuit of prosperity for our people, or  the struggle for equality for all our citizens; our commitment to stand  up for our values abroad, and our sacrifices to make the world a safer  place.”
An additional lesson was provided by New York Times  columnist Thomas Friedman. With Bin Laden gone, he said to CNN, it was  time to eradicate Bin Ladenism, which he defined as using violence to  affect political changes. An apologist for the ultra violent state  Israel and America’s invasion of Iraq, Friedman did not seem to care  that it is the US that leads the world in violence for political and  economic ends. Even before 9/11, the Taliban made repeated overtures to  hand Bin Laden over to the US, but America would have none of it. Our  intention, then as now, was to bomb, bomb and bomb!
So like a  great clean up batter, dead man Bin Laden brought everyone safely home.  Bush could round the bases at last, could find closure and high five  Obama at home plate. We’re all on the same team, see? Even Colin Powell  could be defrosted long enough to gush over our Navy Seals.
To  prove his U.S. birth, Obama showed us an electronic file then, jokingly,  a cartoon excerpt, but to prove Bin Laden’s death, Obama’s handlers  have given us nothing but a cartoon narrative suitable only for  dimwitted children. The bloody crooks hustling us must be incredulous,  if not laughing uproariously, at what they can get away with in this  nation of suckers.