Bin Laden used the spokesman, Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, "to send a message, a message that al-Qaida's attacks on Sept. 11 were justified that the United States got what it deserved," Assistant US Attorney John Cronan said in federal court in Manhattan.
Abu Ghaith, an imam from Kuwait, delivered fiery videotaped sermons intended to drive "more men to al-Qaida and its mission. Al-Qaida needed these young men to be its next generation of terrorists."
The prosecutor told jurors the evidence against the defendant, including audio and videotapes of him speaking on behalf of al-Qaida, is overwhelming. He also argued that Abu Ghaith's own testimony at the trial showed he had full knowledge of the terrorist group's goals and was willing to advance them.
Taking the witness stand last week, Abu Ghaith recounted how he was summoned to meet with bin Laden in a cave on the night of Sept. 11. When the attacks came up in the conversation, bin Laden told him, "We are the ones who did it," he testified.
The next day, Abu Ghaith was recorded sitting next to bin Laden and saying, "We are capable of engaging in this confrontation."
The jury also heard audio of the defendant warning, "The storm of airplanes will not stop."
Cronan cited another recording in 2002 in which Abu Ghaith assured his audience that bin Laden was in good health, arguing it was further proof the defendant was a trusted al-Qaida insider.
"How many people on the planet knew Osama bin Laden, the most wanted man on the planet, was in good health?" Cronan said.
The defense was to give its closing arguments later today.
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