
CAIRO — Softening his tone, al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden issued a humanitarian appeal Saturday urging Muslim governments to do more to help Pakistan’s flood victims and expressing worry about climate change.
It was his second purported audiotape in as many days.
The less aggressive approach contrasted with al-Qaeda’s previous calls for a violent response in what experts say could be a “good cop, bad cop” ploy to exploit anger over the flooding and rally support for the terrorism network.
Al-Qaeda is under pressure to rebuild support among Pakistanis as it faces a surge in U.S. missile strikes and government crackdowns on insurgents who easily move between Afghanistan and Pakistan’s porous border. American officials have asserted for months that the core of the network has been weakened and is struggling to raise money and attract recruits.
Bin Laden, who is thought to be hiding in the lawless border area that separates the two countries, said governments of Muslim nations have not done enough to help Pakistanis hit by devastating floods that killed hundreds and affected about 20 million people this summer.
“The effort should have been bigger from the beginning,” he said in a recording posted Saturday on militant websites. It was distributed along with a photograph of a smiling bin Laden superimposed over pictures of flood victims.
A copy of the 13-minute, nine-second audiotape, titled “Help your Pakistani Brothers,” was made available by the U.S.-based SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors jihadi forums. Its authenticity could not be independently confirmed, though the voice resembled that of bin Laden in previous confirmed messages.



