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This handout still photo taken from footage released by Al-Qaeda's media wing as-Sahab and provided by the SITE Intelligence Group 07 September 2007 shows Al-Qaeda chief Osama Bin Laden delivering a speech at an unidentified time and place. Bin Laden appeared on the video in his first public showing in three years, mocking the "weakness" of the United States. The US government said earlier it was studying the video as the Central Intelligence Agency warned that Al-Qaeda was plotting fresh attacks on the United States designed to inflict massive casualties. US services monitoring Islamic militant websites announced late yesterday that Bin Laden was to appear in a recording to mark next week's anniversary of the September 11, 2001 attacks.
This handout still photo taken from footage released by Al-Qaeda’s media wing as-Sahab and provided by the SITE Intelligence Group 07 September 2007 shows Al-Qaeda chief Osama Bin Laden delivering a speech at an unidentified time and place. Bin Laden appeared on the video in his first public showing in three years, mocking the “weakness” of the United States. The US government said earlier it was studying the video as the Central Intelligence Agency warned that Al-Qaeda was plotting fresh attacks on the United States designed to inflict massive casualties. US services monitoring Islamic militant websites announced late yesterday that Bin Laden was to appear in a recording to mark next week’s anniversary of the September 11, 2001 attacks.
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Osama bin Laden’s latest message is a hodgepodge of anti-capitalist vitriol, impassioned Islamic evangelism and what can best be described as a twisted attempt at reconciliation: Join us, or we’ll kill you.

Analysts say the video that came out days before the sixth anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks is more about timing than substance, an attempt by history’s most wanted fugitive to thumb his nose at the forces arrayed against him and remind the world that he hasn’t been caught.

He ridiculed President Bush on Iraq, saying events there have gotten “out of control” and comparing the American leader to “one who plows and sows the sea: He harvests nothing but failure.”

Some believe the message – bin Laden’s first since 2004 – was an attempt to stay relevant.

Anne Giudicelli, a former French diplomat specializing in the Middle East who now runs the Paris-based consultancy Terrorisc, said bin Laden is well aware that his reappearance on the world stage – looking fit and with his beard dyed a youthful black – was itself a victory that went beyond anything he actually said.

“The objective is obviously to show that despite everything in place against him, he has survived. That’s the No. 1 message,” she said. “The mere fact of appearing in a video is already a message.”

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