Osama Bin Laden’s 2002 was deleted by The Guardian off their website after it went viral on social media. It was mostly being shared by Zoomers on TikTok with some saying that their perspective of the world changed after reading the letter.
Osama Bin Laden’s “Letter to America,” written in 2002, is going viral on TikTok for his assertion that the 9/11 attacks were revenge for America’s undying support of Israel.
In the letter he tells Americans that Jews “control your policies, media and economy.”
Follow:… pic.twitter.com/pNJ1GUgm06
— AF Post (@AFpost) November 16, 2023
The Guardian deleted 'The letter to America' by Osama Bin Laden to stop people who are witnessing the injustice in Gaza from understanding why Muslims are fighting the US and Israel. I think everyone has a right to read it. Here it is: https://t.co/RwW1V2MEoE https://t.co/uvlZSEZafC
— Kim Dotcom (@KimDotcom) November 16, 2023
Deleting the letter was a pretty dumb move as this is only going to draw more attention to it. Hell, I’m writing a lengthy article about it largely because of the censorship.
The letter is already archived and can be found elsewhere on the Internet. It’s honestly insane that we have media operations deleting the very things that they published years ago for current political reasons. This is not what you want to see from people who claim to be “journalists.” Journalism is at least in theory supposed to be a means to help preserve history, not to destroy or alter it.
The letter itself provides many criticisms of the United States, Israel and the Jews that I definitely agree with. The criticisms are certainly relevant considering what’s happening in Gaza today. That’s undoubtedly why the letter went viral.
With that said, I have serious doubts that this letter was written by Bin Laden himself. There were numerous reports describing how Bin Laden died of kidney failure in 2001 shortly after the 9/11 attacks took place. He also denied that he was responsible for doing the 9/11 attacks. It’s very likely he died months before this letter was published.
December 2001 – multiple stories that Bin Laden is dead and buried in Afghanistan, including statements directly from the Taliban that his death was from an “untreated lung complication” due to kidney disease.https://t.co/zARXr99VN2https://t.co/etLS0nlV7M pic.twitter.com/yQsxQ1c5WN
— Mises Caucus (@LPMisesCaucus) May 16, 2023
He appeared to be a boogieman patsy figure that the Jews used to falsely blame the 9/11 attacks on. The letter could have been written by people in the CIA or the Mossad for public consumption and as a way to continue all the “terrorism” theater.
It has been regularly said that Al-Qaeda, the organization Bin Laden was said to be in charge, of should have been called Al-CIAda. That’s because Bin Laden had all sorts of connections to the CIA during the 1980s when he was in Afghanistan fighting the Soviets. In fact, the entire Al-Qaeda entity appeared to be something funded and run out of Langley.
If you don’t believe me, maybe you’ll believe iluminatibot.
It is a fact that the CIA and Pakistani intelligence created what is now known as al-Qaeda out of the remnants of the Afghan mujahideen.
— illuminatibot (@iluminatibot) October 24, 2023
Throughout the 2000s, all sorts of ridiculous fake Bin Laden videos were put out to justify the continued so-called “War on Terrorism.” It was necessary for Bin Laden to make appearances every so often in order to bolster American public support for all the Jewish wars they were waging.
Bin Laden’s alleged killing in 2010 via a Seal Team Six raid appears to have been a totally staged hoax. The United States Navy allegedly dumped Bin Laden’s body into the ocean immediately following the purported raid so nobody could independently verify that they actually had the body of Bin Laden. They bizarrely turned the official Bin Laden Seal Team Six death narrative into the Hollywood movie Zero Dark Thirty.
The BBC even asked if the raid was staged/faked due to the amount of skepticism over the official narrative.
Was the raid on Osama Bin Laden's hideaway staged? @BBCThisWorld investigates http://t.co/ZDak28oes4 pic.twitter.com/DUjBlY4SGE
— BBC News (UK) (@BBCNews) June 17, 2015
The broader point to all of this is that most everything we’ve been told about Bin Laden after the 9/11 attacks is highly questionable. That includes this letter. It is however very good that this piece of history is causing people to raise questions about the Jews, Israel and other important topics.