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Israel and Hamas at war | The Guardian removes link to Osama bin Laden letter

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(London) British newspaper The Guardian has removed a link to a letter attributed to Osama bin Laden, published in 2002, which claimed responsibility for the September 11, 2001 attacks, denouncing American support for Israel and calling for revenge against the Palestinian people, a text today widely used on social networks and taken out of context, in the middle of the Hamas-Israel war.

The document “was withdrawn” on Wednesday, the Guardian website now indicates in place of the text, which has gone viral in recent days on social networks, often associated with favorable comments.

“This transcript posted on our website has been widely shared on social media without the full context. We therefore decided to remove it and instead redirect our readers to the article which originally contextualized it,” specifies the newspaper.

In this “Letter to America”, Osama bin Laden, killed in 2011 by an elite American unit in northern Pakistan, justified the September 11 attacks in the United States and threatened to attack again to Western interests.

This letter, which also calls for revenge on the Palestinian people, resurfaced in particular on TikTok, in the context of the conflict triggered on October 7 by the deadly attack by Hamas in Israel, which in retaliation promised to eradicate the Islamist group and is leading massive bombings in the Gaza Strip.

The origin of the resurgence of the letter was associated by several media with a video published Tuesday on TikTok by an influencer.

The White House strongly criticized the phenomenon and TikTok assured that it was taking measures to delete the publications concerned.

The White House, in a statement on

“Particularly now, at a time of increasing anti-Semitic violence around the world, and just after Hamas terrorists committed the worst massacre of the Jewish people since the Holocaust in the name of the same conspiracy theories,” the text adds.

TikTok assured X that it was “proactively removing this content” and “investigating how it arrived on the platform.” “This is not unique to TikTok and has appeared on multiple platforms and media outlets,” the Chinese app added.

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