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Bin Laden's Message in the Era of Obama
By Tim Roemer,
The
Huffington Post
The
release of yet another tape from Osama Bin
Laden Wednesday serves as a reminder of the
many leftover issues Barack Obama will inherit
from the Bush administration.
In the
22-minute audio tape, the al-Qaeda leader
boasts of "new fronts" against the United
States and places the blame for the fighting in
the Gaza on the United States and moderate Arab
states.
His comments on Gaza are a
reflection of al-Qaeda's desire for relevance
to its target audience. On the issue that has
most transfixed the Islamic world, al-Qaeda,
the self-appointed spokesmen and "defenders" of
the Islamic world, are totally absent from the
storyline. The fighting in Gaza is the direct
result of Hamas's continued rain of rockets on
the heads of Israeli civilians. But Bin Laden,
vying to compete with the attention Hamas is
receiving, turns the Gaza conflict into a
parable about the need to follow al-Qaeda's
prescription of violence against America and
support for an ultra extremist Caliphate. In
the absence of an operational capability in
Gaza, Bin Laden is trying to frame his past
efforts against America and its moderate Arab
allies as a greater threat to Israel than the
rockets currently being fired by
Hamas.
Still, Al-Qaeda may reclaim its
place in the headlines sooner rather than
later. As al-Qaeda's safe haven in Pakistan
allows it to thrive and the Taliban insurgency
in Afghanistan gains momentum, the next
president will be forced to confront a
terrorist group that has gained strength since
9/11, not lost it, and remains a serious threat
to the stability of South Asia and the security
of the American homeland.
Fortunately,
Bin Laden's latest promise of "new fronts"
against the United States will not go
unmatched. President-elect Obama has already
signaled that he will open up his own "new
front" against al-Qaeda on the as-yet untouched
ideological battlefield. Obama's moves to close
Guantanamo and strong anti-torture stance will
help deny Bin Laden the political oxygen he
needs to incite potential recruits to
violence.
Fortunately, Barack Obama has
already delivered a blow to al-Qaeda in the
"war of ideas." His election, by signaling to
the world that America is a country of
limitless opportunity whose democracy can
correct its own mistakes, has turned Bin
Laden's narrative of a corrupt and belligerent
America on its head.


