Osama bin Laden had remained an active leader in Al Qaeda before he was killed at a mansion in Abbottabad in a US raid and had overseen both strategy and operations from his secret compound, a top US official has said.
The three-storey mansion in Abbottabad, near a major military establishment, some 80 kms from Islamabad, was in fact an active Al Qaeda command and control centre run by its leader Osama bin laden, the official said.
"It is suffice to say that this compound in Abbottabad was an active command and control center for Al Qaeda's top leader. It is clear that he was not just a strategic thinker of the group. He was active in operational planning and driving tactical decisions inside Al Qaeda," the senior intelligence official said, based on the information obtained from the huge cache of material that was recovered by the US forces from this Abbottabad compound early this month.
During the raid, the US Special Forces found 10 hard drives, five computers and more than 100 storage devices such as disks and thumb drives.
The CIA has set up a task force to infer the information from these electronic devices and other materials recovered from this Abbottabad hideout.
Noting that bin laden, who declared war on the United States, is responsible for the deaths of thousands of innocents, the official said it was "entirely unsurprising to us and was always our working assumption" that he was involved in aspects of Al Qaeda's planning.
Osama bin Laden relied heavily on courier network, which helped him maintain his command and control over the terrorist network, without having any access to telephone, Internet and cell phone.
"That is precisely what led us to this," the official