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Bin Laden’s son-in-law was al-Qaida chief’s right-hand man: prosecutors

By Korea Herald

Published : March 6, 2014 - 20:59

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NEW YORK (AFP) ― The son-in-law of Osama bin Laden acted as the al-Qaida leader’s right-hand man and appeared alongside the terror mastermind in a propaganda video just one day after the carnage of the 9/11 attacks, U.S. prosecutors said Wednesday.

Launching the most prominent 9/11-related terror trial held in New York to date, federal prosecutors said Suleiman Abu Ghaith had been one of bin Laden’s key lieutenants in the days and months after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks which left 3,000 people dead.

The Manhattan trial is taking place just streets from where the World Trade Center was reduced to burning rubble by two airliners hijacked by al-Qaida suicide attackers.

Abu Ghaith is on trial for conspiracy to kill Americans, conspiracy to provide support and providing material support to terrorists.

The 48-year-old from Kuwait pleads not guilty to all three charges. He faces life in prison if convicted.

He is the most senior alleged al-Qaida member to face trial in a U.S. federal court rather than at Guantanamo Bay, which the White House has promised to close.

Wearing a dark suit, he sat impassively as prosecutors played the video in which he sat next to bin Laden and the current leader of al-Qaida, Ayman al-Zawahiri, in Afghanistan on Sept. 12, 2001.

He was similarly unmoved as the court watched a clip of him lecturing and gesticulating, dressed in a black turban in Afghanistan.

He spoke only to confirm when asked by Judge Lewis Kaplan that he understood proceedings, and listened to simultaneous translation provided on an ear piece.

His salt-and-pepper beard was neatly trimmed and although balding, dark curls tapered into his neck.

By the afternoon session he had removed a blue silk tie and unbuttoned the top button of his shirt.

Abu Ghaith is not accused of involvement in the 9/11 attacks, but of recruiting personnel for al-Qaida, or what the prosecution called its “very lifeblood.”

The prosecution also claims he was complicit in the December 2001 shoe-bombing plot to bring down an airliner flying from Paris to Miami.

U.S. prosecutor Nicholas Lewin described Abu Ghaith as a “trusted” al-Qaida insider who quickly met bin Laden after leaving Kuwait for Afghanistan in spring 2001.

He spent the summer of 2001 speaking to hundreds of young al-Qaida recruits at Afghan training camps, preparing them for war and earning his stripes.

Then after the 9/11 attacks, his job changed.

“Literally hours after the attacks, Osama bin Laden turned to this man,” said Lewin, standing behind the defendant and pointing at him.

The al-Qaida terror chief wanted this “important religious scholar” and “inspirational and charismatic speaker” to recruit men globally for jihad, he added.

“Osama bin Laden asked that man to deliver al-Qaida’s murderous decree to the world,” Lewin told the court.

“What did the defendant do? He agreed.”

“You don’t sit outside a cave on Sept. 12, 2001, with the most wanted man on earth unless you‘re inside al-Qaida at the very, very top,” added Lewin.

Abu Ghaith “sat at the right hand of Osama bin Laden,” Lewin said, quoting liberally from Abu Ghaith’s proclamations threatening a “storm of airplanes.”