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CIA
Agent
Details
Terror
Threat
Nov.
14,
2004
Osama
bin
Laden
now
has
religious
approval
to
use
a
nuclear
device
against
Americans,
says
the
former
head
of
the
CIA
unit
charged
with
tracking
down
the
Saudi
terrorist.
The
former
agent,
Michael
Scheuer,
speaks
to Steve
Kroft
in
his
first
television
interview
without
disguise
to
be
broadcast
on 60
Minutes,
Sunday,
Nov.
14,
at
7
p.m.
ET/PT.
Scheuer
was
until
recently
known
as
the
"anonymous"
author
of
two
books
critical
of
the
west's
response
to
bin
Laden
and
al
Qaeda,
the
most
recent
of
which
is
titled
"Imperial
Hubris:
Why
the
West
is
Losing
the
War
on
Terror."
No
one
in
the
west
knows
more
about
the
al
Qaeda
leader
than
Scheuer,
who
has
tracked
him
since
the
mid-1980s.
The
CIA
allowed
him
to
write
the
books
provided
he
remain
anonymous,
but
now
is
allowing
him
to
reveal
himself
for
the
first
time
on
Sunday's
broadcast.
Even
if
bin
Laden
had
a
nuclear
weapon,
he
probably
wouldn't
have
used
it
for
a
lack
of
proper
religious
authority
-
authority
he
has
now.
"[Bin
Laden]
secured
from
a
Saudi
sheik...a
rather
long
treatise
on
the
possibility
of
using
nuclear
weapons
against
the
Americans,"
says
Scheuer.
"[The
treatise]
found
that
he
was
perfectly
within
his
rights
to
use
them.
Muslims
argue
that
the
United
States
is
responsible
for
millions
of
dead
Muslims
around
the
world,
so
reciprocity
would
mean
you
could
kill
millions
of
Americans."
Scheuer
says
bin
Laden
was
criticized
by
some
Muslims
for
the
Sept.
11
attack
because
he
killed
so
many
people
without
enough
warning
and
before
offering
to
help
convert
them
to
Islam.
But
now,
bin
Laden
has
addressed
the
American
people
and
given
fair
warning.
"Their
intention
is
to
end
the
war
as
soon
as
they
can,
and
to
ratchet
up
the
pain
for
the
Americans
until
we
get
out
of
their
region,"
says
Scheuer.
"If
they
acquire
the
weapon,
they
will
use
it,
whether
it's
chemical,
biological
or
some
sort
of
nuclear
weapon."
As
the
head
of
the
CIA
unit
charged
with
tracking
bin
Laden
from
1996
to
1999,
Scheuer
says
he
never
had
enough
people
to
do
the
job
right.
He
blames
former
CIA
director
George
Tenet.
"One
of
the
questions
that
should
have
been
asked
of
Mr.
Tenet
was
why
were
there
always
enough
people
for
the
public
relations
office,
for
the
academic
outreach
office,
for
the
diversity
and
multi-cultural
office,"
says
Scheuer.
"All
those
things
are
admirable
and
necessary
but
none
of
them
are
protecting
the
American
people
from
a
foreign
threat."
And
the
threat
posed
by
bin
Laden
is
also
underestimated,
says
Scheuer.
"I
think
our
leaders
over
the
last
decade
have
done
the
American
people
a
disservice...continuing
to
characterize
Osama
bin
Laden
as
a
thug,
as
a
gangster,"
he
says.
"Until
we
respect
him,
sir,
we
are
going
to
die
in
numbers
that
are
probably
unnecessary,
yes.
He's
a
very,
very
talented
man
and
a
very
worthy
opponent."
Until
Friday,
Scheuer
was
a
senior
official
in
the
CIA's
counter
terrorism
unit
and
a
special
adviser
to
the
head
of
the
agency's
bin
Laden
unit.
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MMIV,
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Inc.
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