nono, he goes to Kill-Mart
2006-09-10 03:02:31
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answer #1
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answered by Japan_is_home 5
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Eliminating militant icons such as Abu Musab al-Zarqawi or his role model, Osama bin Laden, may make for gripping TV drama and a brief sense of triumph in the West. But as U.S. officials repeated yesterday after news of al-Zarqawi's death, it doesn't end the violence. And scholars of Islamic militancy stress that decapitating the movements doesn't address the core problems that radicalize young Muslims.
And unlike al-Zarqawi, bin Laden is not believed to directly command fighters or plan attacks. His original al-Qaida network has been largely destroyed and replaced by a younger, broader movement.
Still, analyst Peter Bergen, author of "The Bin Laden I Know," says capturing or killing bin Laden is important if only to remove a source of inspiration and strategic direction for Islamic extremist movements.
There is little to suggest that U.S. forces and their allies are any closer to catching bin Laden and his deputy in the old al-Qaida structure, Ayman al-Zawahri, who are believed to be hiding and moving in Pakistan or neighboring Afghanistan.
It was not immediately clear whether al-Zarqawi's self-revealing half-hour video last month -- which gave the world a rare look at his face, his aides and his surroundings in a desert -- offered any clues that helped intelligence agencies track him down.
But with that recording, al-Zarqawi took risks that bin Laden and al-Zawahri avoid in their more sterile video and audio messages.
Analysts such as Fawaz Gerges, a Middle Eastern studies professor at Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, noted last month that al-Zarqawi's environment was growing more hazardous because of divisions in the Sunni Arab section of Iraq where he operated.
But if anything, the environment providing bin Laden's cover may be improving.
In the past six months, his Taliban allies have consolidated control over a large swath of the border area, called Waziristan, and have raised a powerful new challenge to the U.S. and NATO forces in southern Afghanistan.
Also, U.S. forces cannot operate easily or openly on the Pakistani side, especially since January, when a U.S. air strike aimed at al-Zawahri instead killed at least 17 Pakistani civilians.
2006-09-10 02:58:45
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answer #2
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answered by Irina C 6
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Iceland - Tesco don't even deliver to some places in Wales
2006-09-10 02:59:22
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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No Tesco. It's just that apart from being a terrorist, he is also into gardening such as planting his own veggies and guess what.. he's a vegetarian ! Haha.
2006-09-10 03:07:09
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answer #4
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answered by adi_dude77 2
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The CIA claim to be searching the four corners of the world for him - so I'm guessing he uses a corner shop ;)
2006-09-10 03:04:27
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answer #5
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answered by ? 2
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ask Parvez Mussaraf or his detective agency. the best way to get ur answer is to try to meet Osama laden and get the answer from his mouth. the last try is to contact George Bush who first supported him and later on declared him terrorist
2006-09-10 03:03:57
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answer #6
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answered by deepak_g20 2
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I dont think he's hiding there at all, he's probably holed up in some flat in tooting disguised with the gear that all chavs wear these days
2006-09-10 03:11:36
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answer #7
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answered by lizarddd 6
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Gets home delivery from Ocado. The name gives him a tickle.
2006-09-10 03:07:24
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answer #8
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answered by Moorglademover 6
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For groceries he shops locally and for clothes it's Primark.
2006-09-10 04:01:45
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answer #9
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answered by Ludo 2
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He's flown in once a month to shop at the CIA commissary. lol
2006-09-10 03:23:28
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answer #10
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answered by worriedaboutyou 4
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Yep. It's part of his superstore of mass consumptive delicatessen's.
Wish he'd open one here in Wales lol
2006-09-10 03:09:58
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answer #11
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answered by Anonymous
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