A Letter from Osama Bin Laden
Whi
Other material found in the Faisalabad hideaway of Abu Zubaydah, whom U.S. officials are interrogating at an undisclosed location, is also proving rich. "Abu Zubaydah's papers are saying more than he is," says Roland Jacquard, a terrorism expert close to the office of the French President. Among the documents are plans for attacks on tankers and cruise ships, says Jacquard, as well as evidence that bin Laden's son Saad was also in Faisalabad, though he evaded capture. As for the elder bin Laden, even if he is still alive, evidence of his failing health is mounting. Intelligence experts have long believed that bin Laden suffers from kidney troubleperhaps brought on by diabetesthat requires him to undergo regular dialysis. Now, according to a source with access to intelligence on the al-Qaeda leader's health, a group of physicians has hypothesized, after analyzing bin Laden's appearance in photographs over time, that he also suffers from the related problem of secondary osteoporosis. This condition can produce crippling back pain, and it makes for brittle bones that can easily snap with ordinary slips or falls, not to mention the hard knocks that can come from scampering in and out of hideaways while on the run.
Most Popular »
- How Bad Are Auto Sales? Ten Questions and Answers
- Why Obama's Afghan War Is Different
- Why Sarah Palin Quit as Governor
- The Challenge That Awaits Obama in Moscow
- When Benedict Meets Barack
- Is There Hope for the American Marriage?
- How Medicated Was Michael Jackson?
- Afterbirth: It's What's For Dinner
- Searching for Palin's 'Hot Photos'
- What Michael Jackson Did on His Last Day
- Afterbirth: It's What's For Dinner
- How Bad Are Auto Sales? Ten Questions and Answers
- Is There Hope for the American Marriage?
- Why Obama's Afghan War Is Different
- Germany's Bright Idea: Street Lighting on Demand
- When Benedict Meets Barack
- Why Sarah Palin Quit as Governor
- The Honduran Coup: How Should the U.S. Respond?
- How Twitter Will Change the Way We Live
- Why VW and Porsche are On a Collision Course







RSS