U.S. can't confirm bin Laden death report: official    (Reuters)  Updated: 2006-09-23 21:29  
WASHINGTON - The U.S. government is unable to confirm a French newspaper 
report that al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden is believed to have died last month 
in Pakistan, a U.S. counterterrorism official said on Saturday. 
  "We 
cannot confirm the account," said the official, who declined to be identified 
because he was not authorized to speak publicly about the issue. "It's quite 
possible (that) there was some talk of this, but in terms of being able to 
confirm this, that I can't do."
 The French regional daily L'Est Republicain reported that, according to a 
French secret service report, Saudi Arabia was convinced that bin Laden died of 
typhoid in Pakistan in late August. The French government has said it could not 
confirm the report and would investigate the intelligence leak.
 The U.S. State Department had no immediate comment and was looking into the 
reports.
 Media reports suggesting that bin Laden was dead, seriously wounded or in ill 
health have surfaced periodically over the years, especially during lengthy 
periods of time without taped messages from the al Qaeda leader.
 U.S. officials have suggested that his death would be accompanied by a surge 
of e-mail and telephone chatter among bereaved al Qaeda members, if not an 
actual announcement from the militant network.
 But officials said they were not aware of any such chatter in recent weeks.
 A factor fueling persistent speculation about bin Laden's health is that he 
has not been seen on a new videotape since late 2004, while his 
second-in-command, Ayman al-Zawahri, has made a number of videotaped 
appearances.
 But bin Laden, 49, a Saudi-born fugitive with a $25 million price on his 
head, has released several audiotapes this year, which U.S. intelligence has 
authenticated.
 His latest audiotape surfaced in July. In it, he warned Iraq's Shi'ite 
majority of retaliation for attacks on Sunni Arabs and said al Qaeda would fight 
the United States anywhere in the world. 
   
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