Osama bin Laden's deputy warned Wednesday that
America faces not individual terrorists or groups but an
international community of Muslims that seek to destroy it and its
allies. He was delivering a28-minute videotaped eulogy to slain
al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden.
Ayman al-Zawahri, al-Qaida's longtime No. 2 and considered the
network's operational head, also sought to cast a role for the
terror group in the popular uprisings shaking Arab world.
"Today, praise God, America is not facing an individual, a group
or a faction," he said, wearing a white robe and turban with an
assault rifle leaned on a wall behind him. "It is facing a nation
than is in revolt, having risen from its lethargy to a renaissance
of jihad."
Al-Zawahri also heaped praise on bin Laden, who was killed in the
May 2 raid by U.S. Navy SEALs in the Pakistani garrison town of
Abbottabad. Al-Zawahri, who is believed to be operating from
somewhere near the PakistanAfghanistan border, also criticized the
U.S. for burying bin Laden at sea.
"He went to his God as a martyr, the man who terrified American
while alive and terrifies it in death, so much so that they trembled
at the idea of his having tomb" he said.
Al-Zawahri - who referenced the toppling of rulers i Tunisia and
Egypt and continued uprisings in Libya, Yemen and Syria - tried to
cast recent developments as in line with his group's longtime goal:
to destroy America and its allies. He said America now faces the
international Muslim community.
"Our brothers who are working in Islam in all places, I tell ou
that our hands are extended to you and our hearts are open to you,
so that we can work together to make Allah's word the highest and to
make Islamic law in Muslim lands the ruler, not the ruled," he said
in a video released on militant websites.
Al-Qaida has long sought to topple many of the Arab leades whose
regimes have been shaken or toppled by popular uprisings this year,
though militant Islam has played next to no role in any of them and
most activists say they seek civil, not religious rule.
Within days of th bin Laden raid, al-Qaida had issued a
statement vowing to keep fighting the United States, a message that
was likely designed to convince followers that the organization
would remain vigorous and intact even after its founder's demise.
But al-Zawahri's eulogy was the first comment by one of his
potential successors on bin Laden's killing.
He also said U.S. officials withheld the release of photographs
of bin Laden's body, fearing the "Islamic peoples' anger and hate"
for America. He claimed bin Laden "achieved what he wanted to do,
which is to incite the Islamic nation to holy war, and his message
had reached all."
Al-Zawahri, who is Egyptian, is a less charismatic figure
believed to lack bin Laden's ability to bring together the many
nationalities and ethnic groups that make up al-Qaida. His
appointment as the next al-Qaida leader could further fracture an
organization that is thought to be increasingly decentralized.
The eulogy included five poems of praise for bin Laden,
describing him alternately as modest, noble and shrewd commander and
"the vanguard of jihad against the communists and then the
Crusaders," a reference to bin Laden's campaign in the Afghan war
against the Soviets in the 1980s and the Sept. 11, 2011 attacks
against the United States.
Al-Zawahri also vented his anger at Pakistani military leaders
and politicians, implying they had a role in bin Laden's death.
"I call on the Pakistani nation to rise up against the mercenary
military traitors and the corrupt politicians who turned Pakistan
into an American colony, allowing it (America) to kill or capture
whoever it wants," al-Zawahri said.
He concluded by saying bin Laden will remain a "source of horror
and a nightmare chasing America, Israel and their allies."