Originally posted by AKIron
Iraq should have a free press. One that won't condemn to death views opposing religious leaders as in so many other middle eastern countries. However, the US is at war with OBL and one of the goals of war is to deny your enemy freedom of everything except surrender. Most folks hold that those who give aid to your enemy are also your enemy. Won't you agree?
Well then to avoid that and the charge of hypocrisy you'd have to shut down AP, AFP, Reuters, CNN, Fox, the BBC and so on as well - all of whom have featured bin Laden's tapes/speeches.
You should also bear in mind when arguing the "aiding the enemy" point, that while the US may be at war (albeit an undeclared one) with bin Laden, neither Iraq nor Qatar is. And IIRC, both Qatar and Iraq are - supposedly - not part of the US either. So unless you're declaring Iraq as a part of the US - a colony or a state, it would seem (legally speaking, at least) that Qatar's broadcasting bin Laden messages in Iraq can't constitute aiding "the enemy". The "aiding the enemy" argument is further weakened by the fact that not even the US has formally declared war on Al Qaeda.
This seems a bit of a digression from the premise with which Ripsnort resurrected this thread - that Aljazeera incites violence in Iraq, too. I don't think there was a bin Laden message just before the current uprising. There was an Al-Zawahri tape broadcast on the 25th of March which called for "Muslims in Pakistan to get rid of their government which is working for Americans" - but that hardly seems to be evidence of Aljazeera inciting violence in Iraq.
So again I'll posit that the people who are really guilty of inciting violence in Iraq are Bush and Blair.