Letters

  • Why Can't We Catch bin Laden?

    How soon will it be before Osama bin Laden strikes again? Let's forget Iraq and focus on getting him before he gets us.
    Karl McNish
    St. Petersburg, Fla.


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    CNN.com: Latest News

    It should come as no great surprise to anyone that the U.S. has been unable to catch Osama bin Laden [WORLD, Nov. 25]. It took 17 years to catch the Unabomber, Ted Kaczynski; 23 and 27 years, respectively, to catch Kathleen Soliah and James Kilgore of the Symbionese Liberation Army; and for six years and counting, Eric Rudolph, the alleged '96 Atlanta Olympics bomber, has been at large, happily grilling venison burgers deep in the backwoods of our own backyard.
    Stephen Phillips
    Narberth, Pa.

    Why don't we double the reward for bin Laden and add an offer of citizenship in the U.S. or a country of one's choosing? It would be cheaper than trying to get him through the means we are using now. We should also use more methods to spread the word about the reward. He is probably hiding among people who don't know what a scoundrel he is.
    Robert King
    Normal, Ill.

    I believe that bin Laden is dead. but as long as the American people think he is still alive, they are nervous and motivated to keep up the fight. For this reason, the government will not tell us whether he is dead.
    Michael Trovato
    East Brunswick, N.J.

    Each release of an audio-or videotape alleged to be of bin Laden alerts the intelligence communities of the world to an impending assault. Security forces increase their vigilance, intelligence communities go on red alert, and local citizens become more safety conscious. Any possible terrorist activity will automatically be more difficult to accomplish after an advance warning has been given. So why would a terrorist want to give us advance warning? I am not convinced for a moment that these tapes are authentic. I believe they are designed to keep the flames of Western paranoia burning brightly, so that the U.S. juggernaut to destroy Iraq can be kept on schedule.
    Ken Bobrosky
    Istanbul

    We can't catch bin Laden because he has built a wall of friends around himself. In contrast, America is building a wall of enemies. For example, after receiving a message of sympathy from Iran about Sept. 11, we declared that country part of the "axis of evil."
    Michael A. Brown
    Columbia, Md.

    I am perplexed that we never suggest the most likely hideout for bin Laden — Saudi Arabia. Where do you go when there is no place left to go? You go home! His rich family has the financial ability and the political influence to protect him. He could easily exist there without our knowledge.
    George Merriweather
    Ojai, Calif.

    Bin Laden would have been caught ages ago if media and government leaks did not warn him and his followers of every strategy the allies are using to try to catch him. Breaking the Enigma code in World War II contributed massively to the success of the campaign against Germany and significantly shortened the fighting. This was a success only because the media did not hear of the code or announce that it had been broken. The Germans never knew any of this until after the war was over. Does anybody believe that an equivalent secret could be kept today?
    Nicholas Boote
    London

    The capture or killing of bin Laden may lead to acts of retribution. It is naive to think that his death would end the war on terrorism. That will end only when people around the world start to recognize and respect one another's values and beliefs.
    Jeff Price
    Aurora, Colo.

    "St. Anthony, St. Anthony, please come around, bin Laden's been lost and must be found." This isn't the prayer a lot of us remember, but St. Anthony helps me find my keys and wedding ring and just about everything else a distracted mother of three misplaces. Why can't he find a terrorist? Given the saint's track record, I give Osama about a week.
    Kim McCarthy
    Los Angeles

    --Several readers were concerned that the cover image of bin Laden's faded visage floating in a field of white might convey something other than his uncanny elusiveness. "Maybe you were trying to suggest a ghostly image," granted one woman, "but, in fact, the cover gives a very heavenly, angelic appearance to this monster." "The background should have been red and yellow," suggested an upstate New York reader, "to symbolize the blood of thousands of innocent victims and the fire of hatred he has ignited among his followers." And a Massachusetts woman felt an urge known to so many schoolchildren: "At least you could have added horns and a pitchfork!"

    Resuming Inspections

    "To Catch A Cheat" paints an optimistic picture of U.N. weapons inspections in Iraq, owing to new tools of detection [WORLD, Nov. 25]. But discovering nuclear material will still be like finding a needle in a haystack. Sending in a dozen U.N. inspectors to search a potential 700 weapons-production and -storage sites spread throughout Iraq doesn't seem too promising. Saddam Hussein wouldn't let us in if he didn't think he could keep us from finding his illegal armaments.
    Jesse Murray
    Emporia, Kans.

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