That simply isn't true. Do a little research from someone other than newsmax or the Washington Times - meaning someone, you know, credible.
How about one of the Left's most high profile bloggers - Josh Marshall?
In October 2001, he wrote on his blog, talkingpointsmemo.com:
More and more is being made of the story of how Sudan offered to turn over Osama bin Laden to the United States in 1996. There's been much foolish Monday-morning quarterbacking questioning various errors the Clinton administration allegedly made in counter-terrorism policy. And as a Clinton loyalist I'd be more than happy to point out how this Sudan story is just another example of that. But I can't. Because it's not. This really was a missed opportunity of immense proportions.
A week prior to this post, he wrote this (which was what I was originally looking for, but the search function on his site isn't that great):
Oh well. For a few months now -- that is to say, long before 9/11 -- I've been working on a story about Osama bin Laden. Particularly how the government of Sudan had opened a back channel to the United States in 1996 offering to take bin Laden -- then resident in Sudan -- into custody and turn him over either to the Saudis or to the United States.
In essence, we passed on the offer. It wasn't quite that simple. The Saudis didn't want him back. And at the time the United States had no criminal indictment against him. Nonetheless, at the end of the day, we passed on the offer. We told the Sudanese we didn't want him going to Somalia and regretfully acquiesced in his departure for Afghanistan on May 18th 1996.
I've been interviewing various players in this little drama for some time now -- something I've alluded to elliptically in a few posts over the last couple months. And though I was able to nail down the Saudi part of the equation, sufficient confirmation of the US part of puzzle eluded me.
So why am I telling you all this? Shouldn't I be more hush-hush about it?
Well, when the Washington Post broke the story in Wednesday's edition of the paper that sort of made secrecy a tad less important, didn't it?
Oh well.
He posts the link to a WP story that broke that morning, entitled "U.S. Was Foiled Multiple Times in Efforts To Capture Bin Laden or Have Him Killed
Sudan's Offer to Arrest Militant Fell Through After Saudis Said No"
We didn't want Bin Laden here, we wanted the Saudis to deal with him. When they refused, we let him go to Afghanistan.
No none have called her that and the only thing that came up for dispute was people were questioning her years...