24-11-2024 12:21 AM Jerusalem Timing

Daily Telegraph: Ex-CIA Man Had Opportunity to Kill Bin Laden 10 Times

Daily Telegraph: Ex-CIA Man Had Opportunity to Kill Bin Laden 10 Times

Former CIA agent tells the Daily Telegraph how he was repeatedly ordered not to stop the al-Qaeda chief

Under the title “Bin Laden Hunter”, The British newspaper Daily Telegraph published an interview with former head of the CIA's Osama bin Laden unit Michael Scheuer.

During his 22 years in the CIA – three and a half as head of a 18-man Osama bin Laden unit – he told his bosses at Langley on 10 occasions that he had a clear opportunity to kill or capture the Al-Qaeda chief. On all 10 he was told to hold his fire.

He said they had two clear opportunities in the first half of 1998, but senior CIA officers were not convinced they were up to the job.

In August 1998 al-Qaeda killed 12 Americans and 200 others in bombings at two American embassies in east Africa. President Clinton ordered the CIA to dismantle al-Qaeda and, in Scheuer’s words, “take care” of bin Laden. The Pentagon launched cruise missile attacks on bin Laden’s training camps, but he had left the compound hours earlier. Scheuer estimates they had at least eight further opportunities to assassinate bin Laden in the following months.

“I’m not saying it would have been simple to take care of the problem, but it got progressively harder when we didn’t take those opportunities. One 50 cent round could have put us all out of our agony.”

In June 1999, he sent off an angry memo to senior officers asking why his men were risking their lives on someone America apparently had no interest in stopping. “I don’t know what you are doing when you talk to the President but he will not get a better opportunity than this,” he told them.

Scheuer was dismissed from his job and spent the next two years running counter-heroin operations in Pakistan and the Middle East. On September 11, 2001, he was back at CIA headquarters in Langley.

Scheuer continued to act as an adviser to the bin Laden unit until 2004 when he resigned in disgust at the way in which the public was being lied to over the opportunities to capture the Al-Qaeda leader.

His books have pointed out the many failings of American policy in the Middle East, not least their inability to address the other causes of western unpopularity in the region while portraying a myopic image of bin Laden as a lunatic.