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Prosecutors want to introduce jurors to bin Laden in opening statements through threats he made against the U.S. and its citizens between 1996 and 1998. They cite two printed statements he made to a London-based Arabic-language newspaper and two television interviews bin Laden gave to U.S. networks. The government said bin Laden in 1996 began making anti-American statements meant to enhance al-Qaida's terrorist image, communicate its goals to its far-flung members and help it recruit new supporters. The link to bin Laden was considered so strong in the embassy attacks that then-President Bill Clinton launched cruise missile attacks two weeks afterward on bin Laden's Afghan camps. Bin Laden is charged in the indictment as well. Prosecutors said the embassy bombings were carried out by an al-Qaida cell in East Africa. They said Ghailani fled East Africa on a flight to Pakistan the day before the bombings on the same flight that two senior al-Qaida members fled, including an al-Qaida explosives trainer and bomb maker. They said Ghailani helped purchase the truck used to bomb the U.S. embassy in Tanzania and helped remove sections of the truck to make more room for bomb components. They also accused him of buying several boxes of TNT, scores of electric detonators and detonation cord used to create the bombs destined for Tanzania and Kenya. Ghailani has denied knowing that the TNT and oxygen tanks he delivered would be used to make a bomb. He also has denied buying a vehicle used in one of the attacks, saying he could not drive. Four men already are serving life sentences in the bombings after they were convicted at a 2001 trial. If Ghailani is convicted, he too faces life. U.S. District Judge Lewis A. Kaplan was set to begin orally questioning jurors Wednesday based on answers to a 31-point questionnaire that probes their feelings about terrorism, Muslims, Islam and whether they are afraid they'll be killed or injured in a terrorism attack. The trial is expected to last three to six months.
[Associated
Press;
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