State Department may double the bounty for bin Laden to $50 milliom

MrFriday18

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WASHINGTON (CNN) -- As part of an intensified effort to capture terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden, the State Department is considering doubling the bounty on his head to $50 million, State Department officials said Monday.

Legislation passed in November by Congress as part of the appropriations bill allowed the State Department to double the current $25 million reward for information leading to bin Laden's capture, under the Rewards for Justice Program.

The program seeks to prevent acts of terrorism against the United States. It pays rewards for information leading to the arrest and/or conviction of terrorists attempting to commit or committing acts against U.S. interests.

Bin Laden is still thought to be hiding somewhere along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, but intelligence officials in both countries say there has been no sign of him for the past 20 months, according to Time magazine.

In 2003, the Bush administration paid a $30 million reward -- $15 million each for Uday and Qusay Hussein -- to the informant who provided the tip that led U.S. troops to the home in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul where Uday and Qusay were hiding. They died there in a firefight with American forces.

Last July, the State Department raised the bounty for Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the accused terrorist mastermind in Iraq, from $10 million to $25 million.

On Monday, the al-Zarqawi group al Qaeda in Iraq claimed responsibility for a suicide car bomb in Baghdad, Iraq, at a checkpoint near the headquarters of interim Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi's party, according to an Internet statement. (Full story)

Officials said the State Department is reviewing whether to double the reward for bin Laden to $50 million, with the final decision to be made by incoming Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

This month, the Rewards for Justice Program also launched an advertising campaign in Pakistan to publicize the existing reward for bin Laden.

Print ads in Urdu and Pashto languages have begun to run in Pakistani newspapers featuring photos and reward amounts for bin Laden, Taliban leader Mullah Omar and other Taliban and al Qaeda leaders.

The print ads will be followed by a broadcast ad blitz in cities and border areas where U.S. officials believe bin Laden is hiding.

"The people there are largely illiterate," said Rep. Mark Kirk, who wrote the legislation that would allow the doubling of the reward. "So we're going to back up this campaign with a radio campaign that is the primary way people find out about the world."

Kirk, an Illinois Republican, returned last week from a visit to Pakistan.

Officials said the scripts for the radio ads are being finalized, and that the ads should be running within 10 days to two weeks. A television ad campaign is also in development, the officials said.
Link from CNN

Honestly we can offer a billion dollars and no one will ever turn him in. The only way we'll ever find him is if we just stumble across him like Saddam Husein. But I am praying that we'll get him I would just feel better with him in a prison cell or dead.
 
I really don't see why someone would turn him in for $50M but not for $25M. Its not like $25M is chump change. I suppose that increasing the reward at least makes it a newstory again, instead of being old news, so the reward getting more attention temporarily might make someone who hasn't heard about it discover it...
 
[quote name='MrFriday18']
This month, the Rewards for Justice Program also launched an advertising campaign in Pakistan to publicize the existing reward for bin Laden.

Print ads in Urdu and Pashto languages have begun to run in Pakistani newspapers featuring photos and reward amounts for bin Laden, Taliban leader Mullah Omar and other Taliban and al Qaeda leaders.

The print ads will be followed by a broadcast ad blitz in cities and border areas where U.S. officials believe bin Laden is hiding.
[/quote]

It will come as no surprise if all hell breaks loose over there when they announce this. Someone with the information's gonna bust.
 
Hopefully, but even if we do get Bin Laden this does not mean mission accompished. If we get osama we must get all of Al-Quaida top leaders also to put a large dent in their day to day operations.
 
Even if we get all of them it means nothing.

Some government office came out about a week ago with what they think the world will be like in 2020. China and India will be huge, China will be close to a world power, and that small terror groups of like 10 will try to nuke us and shit.
 
Ya make it one billion and give it to some Osama worshiper so they can rise to power, and buy nukes from Russia or North Korea.
 
[quote name='MrFriday18']Ya make it one billion and give it to some Osama worshiper so they can rise to power, and buy nukes from Russia or North Korea.[/quote]

No, make the total 1 billion but only really give out a fraction of it. Besides his whorshipers are to fanatical to do it for a billion, other terrorist groups might however be qutie tempted.
 
sounds good to me. No one ever gets the full reward anyways. Remember the DC snipers where they guy who saw them never got the full reward.
 
[quote name='MrFriday18']sounds good to me. No one ever gets the full reward anyways. Remember the DC snipers where they guy who saw them never got the full reward.[/quote]

Yep the trick is you make the reward very big but the payout for information very small.
 
hell for a bill, I'll pack my bags a look for him myself, I'll kidnap him for fifty, deprogram him for a hundred, and kill him for five hundred.
 
bread's done
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