Prime Minister David Cameron MP - The Death of Usama Bin Laden and Counter-terrorism

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    STATEMENT

    BY

    THE PRIME MINISTER

    THE RIGHT HONOURABLE DAVID CAMERON MP

    ON

    THE DEATH OF USAMA BIN LADEN AND COUNTER-TERRORISM

    3RD

    MAY 2011

    CHECK AGAINST DELIVERY

    Thank you, Mr Speaker.

    The death of Usama bin Laden will have important consequences for the

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    security of our people at home and abroad and for our foreign policy,

    including our partnership with Pakistan, our military action in Afghanistan and

    the wider fight against terrorism across the world.

    Last night I chaired a meeting of COBR to begin to address some of these

    issues.

    The National Security Council has met this morning.

    And I wanted to come to the House this afternoon, to take the first opportunity

    to address these consequences directly and answer Hon Members

    questions.

    Mr Speaker, at 3am yesterday I received a call from President Obama. He

    informed me that US Special Forces had successfully mounted a targeted

    operation against a compound in Abbottabad, in Pakistan.

    Usama bin Laden had been killed, along with four others: bin Ladens son,

    two others linked to him, and a female member of his family entourage. There

    was a ferocious firefight, and a US helicopter had to be destroyed but there

    was no loss of American life.

    I am sure the whole House will join me in congratulating President Obama

    and praising the courage and skill of the American Special Forces who

    carried out this operation.

    It is a strike at the heart of international terrorism, and a great achievement

    for America and for all who have joined in the long struggle to defeat Al

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    Qaeda.

    We should remember today in particular the brave British servicemen and

    women who have given their lives in the fight against terrorism across the

    world.

    And we should pay tribute especially to those British forces who have played

    their part over the last decade in the hunt for bin Laden.

    He was the man who was responsible for 9/11 - which was not only an horrific

    killing of Americans, but remains to this day, the largest loss of British life in

    any terrorist attack.

    A man who inspired further atrocities including in Bali, Madrid, Istanbul and of

    course, here in London on 7/7.

    And, let us remember, a man who posed as a leader of Muslims but was

    actually a mass murderer of Muslims all over the world. Indeed he killed more

    Muslims than people of any other faith.

    Mr Speaker, nothing will bring back the loved ones who have been lost and of

    course no punishment at our disposal can remotely fit the many appalling

    crimes for which he was responsible.

    But I hope that at least for the victims families there is now a sense of justice

    being served, as a long dark chapter in their lives is finally closed.

    As the head of a family group for United Airlines Flight 93 put it, we are

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    raised, obviously, never to hope for someone's death but we are willing to

    make an exception in this case. He was evil personified, and our world is a

    better place without him."

    Mr Speaker, Britain was with America from the first day of the struggle to

    defeat Al Qaeda. Our resolve today is as strong as it was then. There can be

    no impunity and no safe-refuge for those who kill in the name of this

    poisonous ideology.

    SECURITY

    Mr Speaker, our first focus must be our own security.

    While bin Laden is gone, the threat of Al Qaeda remains.

    Clearly there is a risk that Al Qaeda and its affiliates in places like Yemen and

    the Mahgreb will want to demonstrate they are able to operate effectively.

    And, of course, there is always the risk of a radicalised individual acting

    alone, a so-called lone-wolf attack.

    So we must be more vigilant than ever and we must maintain that vigilance

    for some time to come.

    The terrorist threat level in the UK is already at Severe which is as high as it

    can go without intelligence of a specific threat.

    We will keep that threat level under review working closely with the

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    intelligence agencies and the police.

    In terms of people travelling overseas, we have updated our advice and

    encourage British nationals to monitor the media carefully for local reactions,

    remain vigilant, exercise caution in public places and avoid demonstrations.

    And we have ordered our embassies across the world to review their security.

    PAKISTAN

    Mr Speaker, let me turn next to Pakistan.

    The fact that bin Laden was living in a large house in a populated area

    suggests that he must have had a support network in Pakistan.

    We dont currently know the extent of that network, so it is right that we ask

    searching questions about it. And we will.

    But lets start with what we do know.

    Pakistan has suffered more from terrorism than any other country in the

    world.

    As President Zardari and Prime Minister Gilani said to me when I spoke to

    them yesterday, as many as 30,000 innocent civilians have been killed. And

    more Pakistani soldiers and security forces have died fighting extremism than

    international forces killed in Afghanistan.

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    Usama Bin Laden was an enemy of Pakistan. He had declared war against

    the Pakistani people. And he had ordered attacks against them.

    President Obama said in his statement: counterterrorism cooperation with

    Pakistan helped lead us to bin Laden and the compound where he was

    hiding.

    Continued co-operation will be just as important in the days ahead.

    I believe it is in Britains national interest to recognise that we share the same

    struggle against terrorism.

    Thats why we will continue to work with our Pakistani counterparts on

    intelligence gathering, tracing plots and taking action to stop them.

    Its why we will continue to honour our aid promises including our support

    for education as a critical way of helping the next generation of Pakistanis to

    turn their back on extremism and look forward to a brighter and more

    prosperous future.

    But above all, its why we were one of the founder members of the Friends of

    Democratic Pakistan. Because it is by working with the democrats in Pakistan

    that we can make sure the whole country shares the same determination to

    fight terror.

    AFGHANISTAN

    Mr Speaker, I also spoke yesterday to President Karzai in Afghanistan.

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    We both agreed that the death of bin Laden provides a new opportunity for

    Afghanistan and Pakistan to work together to achieve stability on both sides

    of the border.

    Our strategy towards Afghanistan is straightforward and has not changed.

    We want an Afghanistan capable of looking after its own security without the

    help of foreign forces.

    We should take this opportunity to send a clear message to the Taleban: now

    is the time for them to separate themselves from Al Qaeda and participate in

    a peaceful political process.

    Mr Speaker, the myth of Bin Laden was one of a freedom fighter, living in

    austerity and risking his life for the cause as he moved around in the hills and

    mountainous caverns of the tribal areas.

    The reality of Bin Laden was very different: a man who encouraged others to

    make the ultimate sacrifice while he himself hid in the comfort of a large,

    expensive villa in Pakistan, experiencing none of the hardship he expected

    his supporters to endure.

    LIBYA

    Mr Speaker, finally let me briefly update the House on Libya.

    In recent weeks we have stepped up our air campaign to protect the civilian

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    The British embassy was looted as well as destroyed.

    The World War Two Memorial was desecrated.

    And the UN have felt obliged to pull their people out for fear of attack.

    Qadhafi made much of his call for a ceasefire.

    But at the very moment Qadhafi claimed he wanted to talk, he had in fact

    been laying mines in Misurata harbour to stop humanitarian aid getting in and

    continuing his attacks on civilians, including attacks across the border in

    neighbouring Tunisia.

    Mr Speaker, we must continue to enforce the UN resolutions fully until such a

    time as they are completely complied with.

    And that means continuing the NATO mission until there is an end to all

    attacks on and threats to civilians.

    CONCLUSION

    Mr Speaker, bin Laden and Qadhafi were said to have hated each other. But

    there was a common thread running between them.

    They both feared the idea that democracy and civil rights could take hold in

    the Arab world.

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    While we should continue to degrade, dismantle and defeat the terrorist

    networks, a big part of the long term answer is the success of democracy in

    the Middle East and the conclusion of the Arab-Israeli peace process.

    For twenty years, bin Laden claimed that the future of the Muslim world would

    be his.

    But what Libya has shown as Egypt and Tunisia before it is that people

    are rejecting everything that bin Laden stood for.

    Instead of replacing dictatorship with his extremist totalitarianism, they are

    choosing democracy.

    Ten years on from the terrible tragedy of 9/11, with the end of bin Laden and

    the democratic awakening across the Arab world, we must seize this unique

    opportunity to deliver a decisive break with the forces of Al Qaeda and its

    poisonous ideology which has caused so much suffering for so many years.

    And I commend this statement to the House.

    ENDS