US intelligence analyses alleged bin Laden video

US: The US government has obtained a copy of a purported new videotape of al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and is studying it…

US:The US government has obtained a copy of a purported new videotape of al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and is studying it, US officials said yesterday.

"We can confirm that the US government has the video and it is being analysed," the official said on condition of anonymity.

An Islamist website said earlier it would soon show a new video of bin Laden - the first for nearly three years - to mark the sixth anniversary of the September 11th attacks on the United States.

The website published a still photograph apparently from the video, which showed bin Laden looking older than in previously available pictures.

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Al Jazeera television said the footage, produced by al-Qaeda's media arm, was likely to be shown within 72 hours.

A US intelligence official said of the tape: "we're analysing it. We need to take a look at it to see whether it's old or new, and we're doing it very quickly."

Bin Laden was last seen in a video statement on the eve of the November 2004 US presidential election.

Since then, he has issued several audio messages, the last in July 2006 when he vowed al-Qaeda would fight the United States across the world.

Some intelligence officials and security analysts suspect bin Laden has limited his appearances to maximise their impact, perhaps saving his next one to coincide with a dramatic attack.

Others say bin Laden, aged 50 and believed to suffer from a serious kidney ailment, may be too sick or too tightly pinned down in his hiding place to smuggle out a tape.