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​Prosecutor: Terror defendant served bin Laden before embassy bombings

NEW YORK -- A Saudi Arabian on trial for allegedly conspiring to kill Americans made sure Osama bin Laden's messages were spread throughout the world before he was arrested in the wake of two deadly bombings of U.S. embassies in Africa in 1998, a prosecutor told jurors Wednesday at the start of closing arguments.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Sean Buckley pointed at Khaled al-Fawwaz as he accused him of being one of al Qaeda's top operatives for nearly a decade, serving as a "bridge to the West" as bin Laden sought to spread his message that Americans should be killed wherever they are found.

He called al-Fawwaz al Qaeda's "expert on how to reach the West" and said he "understood the language of the Western media."

Buckley said al-Fawwaz "operated at the very heart of this conspiracy."

Buckley's closing was to be followed Thursday by those from a defense lawyer and another prosecutor before jurors begin deliberations, likely on Friday.

Al-Fawwaz has pleaded not guilty. He did not testify during the three-week trial.

He was extradited from Great Britain in 2012. He had been scheduled to stand trial with Abu Anas al-Libi -- who was snatched off the streets of Libya in 2013 -- but al-Libi died last month after a long illness.

During an argument spanning several hours, Buckley leaned heavily on a list of al Qaeda members recovered in 2001 by U.S. Special Forces during raids on residences of al Qaeda's leaders in Afghanistan.

Al-Fawwaz, he said, was No. 9 on the list, a role earned through years spent as the leader of an al Qaeda training camp in Afghanistan, as a member of a Kenya terrorism cell and finally as bin Laden's London-based link to the media.

Buckley told jurors they could convict al-Fawwaz of conspiracy charges based on the list alone, though "there is much, much more."

"He initially proved himself by violence -- bombing and killing," the prosecutor said, according to CBS New York. "From there, he became the leader in charge of a jihad training camp in Afghanistan, teaching others to bomb and kill."

During the trial, U.S. Army Sgt. Maj. David Karnes testified the list was recovered during December 2001 raids in the southern Afghan city of Kandahar, where bin Laden and al Qaeda's Egyptian military chief, Mohammed Atef, both had homes.

Atef was killed by U.S. airstrikes in Afghanistan in November 2001, while bin Laden was killed in Pakistan by U.S. Special Forces in 2011.

Al-Fawwaz was arrested in London weeks after the 1998 bombings of embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, which killed 224 people, including a dozen Americans, and injured thousands.

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In this Friday, Aug. 7, 1998 file photo, rescue workers carry Susan Francisca Murianki, a U.S. Embassy office worker, over the rubble of a collapsed building next to the embassy, in Nairobi, Kenya. AP Photo/Khalil Senosi, File

The bombings were al Qaeda's deadliest attack until 9/11. Several family members of the victims have attended the trial.

In an opening statement in January, defense lawyer Bobbi Sternheim said al-Fawwaz knew bin Laden but never joined al Qaeda.

"He never shared those horrible views of Osama bin Laden. He never shared al Qaeda's support of violence," she said.

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