Bin laden wer ist dad

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In the weeks following the raid on Osama bin Laden’s compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan by United States forces, U.S. Intelligence Community analysts sifted through the recovered digital and hard copy materials in search of clues that would reveal ongoing al-Qa`ida plots, identities and locations of al-Qa`ida personnel, and other information of immediate importance. Following a rigorous interagency review, on May 20, 2015 the ODNI began a multi-stage public release of documents recovered from the compound used to hide Osama bin Laden.

 
 
View the Media Release      
 
In the weeks following the raid on Osama bin Laden’s compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, by United States forces, U.S. Intelligence Community analysts sifted through the recovered digital and hard copy materials in search of clues that would reveal ongoing al-Qa`ida plots, identities and locations of al-Qa`ida personnel, and other information of immediate importance.

On May 20, 2015, the ODNI released a sizeable tranche of documents recovered from the compound used to hide Osama bin Laden. On March 1, 2016, the ODNI released a second tranche of material gleaned from the Abbottabad raid. On January 19, 2017, the ODNI released the final tranche of documents. These releases, which followed a rigorous interagency review, align with the President’s call for increased transparency–consistent with national security prerogatives–and the 2014 Intelligence Authorization Act, which required the ODNI to conduct a review of the documents for release.
 
Editor's note: After the raid on Abbottabad, an interagency task force worked 24/7 to identify which of the recovered materials presented intelligence value. Once the task force pinpointed which materials were most useful to the Intelligence Community, they produced intelligence cables that were shared throughout the IC. The underpinning materials—hundreds of documents—that informed those cables were then reviewed for declassification and public release. All interagency declassification reviews of the Abbottabad materials were scoped specifically to this distilled set of materials—those with intelligence value—as opposed to the entire trove recovered at Abbottabad. Career intelligence professionals executed this interagency effort, with CIA as Executive Agent. On November 1, 2017, CIA released nearly 470,000 files that included draft versions of items previously reviewed as well as other correspondence and materials outside the scope of previous declassification reviews.
 
 
 
 
Declassified Material - November 01, 2017
  
 
 
 
Declassified Material - January 19, 2017  (49 items)   
 
 
 
Declassified Material - March 1, 2016  (113 items)   
 
 
 
Declassified Material - May 20, 2015   (103 items)  
 
 
 
Publicly Available U.S. Government Documents   (75 items)  
 
 
 
English Language Books   (39 items) 
 
 
 
Material Published by Violent Extremists & Terror Groups   (35 items) 
 
 
 
Materials Regarding France   (19 items) 
 
 
 
Media Articles   (33 items) 
 
 
 
Other Religious Documents   (11 items) 
 
 
 
Think Tank & Other Studies  (40 items) 
 
 
 
Software & Technical Manuals   (30 items) 
 
 
 
Other Miscellaneous Documents   (14 items) 
 
 
 
Documents Probably Used by Other Compound Residents   (10 items) 
 
 
 

An interagency Intelligence Community taskforce, under the auspices of the White House and with the agreement of the DNI,  reviewed all documents from Abbottabad. As of January 19, 2017, all documents whose publication would not jeopardize ongoing operations against al-Qa‘ida or their affiliates have been released.

This list contains U.S. person information that is being released in accordance with the Fiscal Year 2014 Intelligence Authorization Act (section 309) requirement that the Director of National Intelligence conduct a declassification review of certain items collected during the mission that killed Osama bin Laden on May 1, 2011, and make publicly available any information declassified as a result of such review.

All publications are unclassified and available commercially or in the public domain. The U.S. Intelligence Community does not endorse any of the publications appearing on this list. 

 

War Bin Laden ein Taliban?

Im Mai 1996 kam der international gesuchte Top-Terrorist Osama Bin Laden auf der Flucht aus dem Sudan nach Afghanistan und schloss schnell Freundschaft mit dem Taliban-Führer Mullah Omar. Der Multimillionär etablierte sich als Dauergast und finanzierte Ausbildungslager und Waffen für die Gotteskrieger.

Bin Laden Haus?

Der Gebäudekomplex wurde regional Waziristan Haveli genannt, weil ein Verbindungsmann Bin Ladens, der den Bau des Gebäudes organisierte, aus der Region Wasiristan kam. Das Anwesen wurde von 2003 bis 2005 gebaut. Als Bauunternehmer gilt Noor Mohammed, als Statiker Gul Mohammed.

Bin Laden Ort?

Am 02. Mai 2011 wurde der Terrorist Osama Bin Laden in Abbotabad (Pakistan) von einer US-amerikanischen Spezialeinheit getötet. Bin Laden war der Gründer und Anführer der Terrororganisation al-Qaida und galt als Drahtzieher der Anschläge vom 11.

Bin Laden gefangen?

Der Staatsfeind Nummer eins der USA ist tot: Fast zehn Jahre nach dem 11. September 2001 hat ein US-Spezialkommando den Chef des Terrornetzwerks Al Kaida, Osama Bin Laden, in Pakistan getötet. Nun hofft die internationale Gemeinschaft, durch den Tod Bin Ladens werde der internationale Terrorismus geschwächt.

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