CAIRO, Egypt - Osama bin Laden's deputy, Ayman al-Zawahri, urged Muslims to 
intensify their resistance against the US and warned of new terror strikes in a 
video aired by CNN early Monday on the fifth anniversary of the Sept 11 attacks. 
Al-Zawahir said the Persian Gulf and Israel would be al-Qaida's next targets. 
 
 
 | 
    Al-Qaida deputy Ayman al-Zawahri, shown here 
 in this videotape from December 2005, purportedly issued a new video 
 Monday in which he warns of new terror strikes. The release coincided with 
 the fifth anniversary of the attacks in New York and Washington. In the 
 video, al-Zawahri addresses the United States: 'You should worry about 
 your presence in the (Persian) Gulf, and the second place you should worry 
 about is Israel.' [AP]
  | 
The film was the latest in a flurry of al-Qaida videos released ahead of the 
anniversary. But unlike the others, it appeared to be new with references to 
Israel's bombardment of Lebanon this summer and the capture of Israeli soldiers 
by Hezbollah and Palestinian militants in Gaza. 
"You gave us every legitimacy and every opportunity to continue fighting 
you," said al-Zawahri, al-Qaida's No 2, addressing the US "You should worry 
about your presence in the (Persian) Gulf, and the second place you should worry 
about is Israel." 
The video shows the Egyptian-born Al-Zawahri dressed in white and seated in 
front of a wall of bookshelves. 
"Your leaders are hiding from you the true extent of the disaster," he said. 
"And the days are pregnant and giving birth to new events, with Allah's 
permission and guidance." 
 
 
 Al-Zawahri criticized the West for supplying Israel with weapons,and 
called on the Muslim world "to rush with everything at its disposal 
to the aid of its Muslim brothers in Lebanon and Gaza." 
Late Sunday, another videotape posted on the Internet, purportedly by 
al-Qaida, showed previously unseen footage of a smiling Bin Laden and other 
commanders in a mountain camp apparently planning the Sept 11 attacks on New 
York and Washington. 
That tape's documentary-like retrospective of the five years since the 
attacks was unusually long - 91 minutes, split into two segments - and 
sophisticated in its production quality compared to previous al-Qaida videos. 
The footage - with English subtitles - surfaced on the eve of the 
fifth anniversary of the attacks, on a Web site that frequently airs messages 
from bin Laden's terror network. 
"Planning for Sept 11 did not take place behind computer monitors or radar 
screens, nor inside military command and control centers, but was surrounded 
with divine protection in an atmosphere brimming with brotherliness ... and love 
for sacrificing life," an unidentified narrator said.