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Date: Sun, 16 Sep 2001 02:23:15 -0400
From: Bill Friend <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Palestine Diary <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [PalestineDiary] The Independent UK - The Truth about Bin Laden

This article in Sunday's Independent, counters much of the hype that the
corporate media has been subjecting the public to recently on the world's
latest boogeyman.

Osama bin Laden: The truth about the world's most wanted man
The truth about the prime suspect for the world's worst terrorist atrocity
is shrouded in myth and misinformation. But Chris Blackhurst has gained
unprecedented access to private dossiers, friends and family to reveal the
real Osama bin Laden
16 September 2001
Osama bin Laden has never received funding from the US Central Intelligence
Agency and does not have a huge fortune, say sources close to the fugitive
terrorist leader.

An Independent on Sunday investigation has gained unprecedented access to an
exhaustive dossier on the life of the world's most wanted man. Including
material supplied anonymously by a bin Laden relative and fellow Saudi
dissidents, it paints a remarkable picture of the suspected instigator of
last week's carnage, countering the widely accepted notion that he accepted
aid from the CIA. It also suggests that far from being able to draw upon a
$300m fortune, a claim made regularly in the Western press, his wealth
amounts to no more than a few million dollars.

Mr bin Laden has survived numerous assassination and kidnap attempts,
achieving almost mythical status among his militant Muslim supporters. They
do not believe his mountain hideaway will be penetrated, and they point to a
secret planned raid by US special forces in 1997 which had to be aborted.
This and a series of other incidents have contributed towards Mr bin Laden
being seen by his followers as a virtual superman.

It was not always so. Like other figures who went on to become monsters,
much of his life was relatively carefree and mundane. Osama, or to give him
his family spelling, Ussama, was born in 1957, the seventh son among 54
children (an incredible tally in Western eyes but not in the Muslim world
where more than one wife is common). In all, his father had 30 wives. His
mother was Syrian, his father a South Yemeni. Mohammed Awad, his father,
emigrated to Saudi Arabia around 1930. He was poor and worked as a porter in
Jeddah. By the time he died in 1970, he was the owner of the biggest
construction company in the Saudi kingdom. Mohammed made his big break by
tendering to build palaces for King Saud at much lower rates than his
rivals. He became close to the royal family, especially Faisal. In the
Saud-Faisal power struggle in the 1960s he persuaded Saud to stand down in
favour of Faisal.

When Saud went, the government coffers were bare and Mr bin Laden paid the
whole country's civil servants' wages for six months. Such support did not
go unrewarded: he was made minister of public works and all projects were to
go to Mohammed's firm. According to members of the bin Laden family, their
father was a devoted Muslim; not crazily so, just a regular worshipper. He
was also humble, despite his wealth, keeping his old bag from his days as a
porter as a reminder of where he had come from. Bin Laden senior was a tough
character, ordering his children to follow a special daily regime he had
devised for them. From an early age, they were expected to behave
confidently and politely. Several of the children, though not Osama, were
educated in more Western Arab countries such as Egypt, and travelled widely.

Osama's father died when he was 13. Four years later he married a Syrian
girl who was also a distant member of his family. Today he has four wives.
He was religious but, like his father, not especially so. At school and
university he joined the Muslim Brotherhood. Again, this was not
extraordinary: his interest, like many others of his age, was scholarly.
Certainly, say those who knew him from that time he was not the zealot he is
today.

Contrary to reports, claim Saudi sources, the only countries he has been to
are those on the Arabian peninsula, Syria, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Sudan.
Stories of trips to Switzerland, Philippines and London are all unfounded.

At university, Islam was compulsory, and he was taught by two renowned
scholars: Abdulla Azzam, who later became a major figure in Afghanistan, and
Mohammed Quttub, a writer and philosopher. When the Soviets invaded
Afghanistan in 1979, the young and well-off bin Laden went to Pakistan and
was taken by his hosts, Jammat Islami, to meet the refugees and their
leaders. When he returned he collected money and supplies for the Afghan
resistance, the Mujahedin. He made another trip to deliver the aid, taking
with him Afghan and Pakistani workers from the Bin Laden Company. In 1982,
Mr bin Laden reinforced his links with the Mujahedin, sending them equipment
and arms.

He spent more time in Afghanistan and became involved in gun battles with
the Soviets. As a wealthy Saudi he stood out. Other Arabs followed him. Two
years later, he opened a guesthouse in Peshawar, which became a stopping-off
point for Arab Mujahedin fighters. At the same time, Abdullah Azzam, his old
mentor, launched the Jihad Service Bureau, a Mujahedin press and publishing
centre, in Peshawar. The town, with its guesthouse and media bureau, became
a focus for Saudi and other Arab guerrillas. Numbers became so large that Mr
bin Laden built camps for the Arab Mujahedin inside Afghanistan.He assumed
command, although the legion had been joined by former officers from Egypt,
Syria, Saudi and Algeria. This was remarkable.

Mr bin Laden is shy, says little and is studiously serious, none of the
usual qualities attributed to a leader of soldiers. He deliberately set
himself apart from the rest, preferring to read and think alone (or to be
seen reading and thinking, thus adding to his allure). He does, though, have
more of the attributes associated with mythical warriors than any son of a
Saudi multi-millionaire. He is tall, lean and has high cheekbones. His
fellow soldiers could not fail to be impressed by his dedication.

Whatever he lacked in experience, Mr bin Laden made up with organisational
skills, and was adept at managing the media. He was brave, unafraid to face
enemy fire. Overall, he was bombed 40 times. He was wounded several times
and hospitalised more than once. He was also extremely careful. Try as they
might, the Soviets could not kill him.

Early on, he realised that any unknown package, any unexpected visitor could
spell danger. While other commanders died, Mr bin Laden lived. From 1984 to
1989, he was a committed soldier, leading his foreign legionnaires in at
least six major encounters with the Soviets. To many people in the Islamic
world, he began to cut a romantic, T E Lawrence-type figure, a freedom
fighter against the oppressive Soviet invader.

In 1988, he decided to put his affairs and those of his colleagues on a
firmer footing. He gave the umbrella group for his guesthouse and camps a
name: Al-Qa'edah, Arabic for "the base". Talk of the CIA funding him and
assisting him at this time, say Mr bin Laden and his supporters, is
unfounded. They even go further, to insist he has never had any contact with
US officials. The CIA did back the Mujahedin, but these, they say, were
different factions from Mr bin Laden's.

He was always a committed Muslim, believing his struggle was as much about
defending his religion as defeating the Soviet Union. (It would be wrong,
though, to suppose this automatically made him a religious fanatic because
his views were shared by many Muslims.) From his Muslim Brotherhood days he
had an anti-US streak – again, not uncommon among young Muslims – and had
feared for US encroachment in Saudi.

The idea he needed US money, say his close associates, is not true, either.
He was of independent means; he knew rich Saudis; many of his fundamentalist
followers were themselves idealists from relatively wealthy families and the
weapons they used were cheap. After the Soviets withdrew in 1989, Mr bin
Laden returned home. Fired by his success in Afghanistan, he wanted to start
a new front or jihad in South Yemen. The Saudis, alarmed at the prospect of
his growing power, banned him from leaving. The restriction did not silence
him. He denounced Saddam Hussein, claiming the Iraqi leader was about to
invade Kuwait. In Saudi, such behaviour did not endear him to the
authorities. He was told to shut up and refused, but all the time he was
quietly advising the Saudi King Fahd of the danger coming from Iraq.

Today, Mr bin Laden is always described as a Saudi dissident. It was not
always so. In those days he was loyal to the Saudi royal family. When he
warned about Iraq they listened; all they asked was that he kept his
strictures private. His contact with the Saudi rulers was via two of his
brothers. They were close to two senior Saudi ministers who received his
messages and passed them on to the king. He stayed distant from Saudi
intelligence, which he saw as under the influence of the US.

Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait should have been Mr bin Laden's finest
hour in Saudi: the putting to use of everything he had learned in the war
against the Soviets for the benefit of his home country. In fact, it proved
anything but. He sent a "told you so" letter to Fahd, setting out how the
kingdom could defend itself with its own forces. All his Al-Qa'edah forces
would relocate to Saudi Arabia, promised Mr bin Laden. There would be a huge
surge in Arab Mujahedin, he claimed. Instead of grabbing his plan, Fahd was
dismissive. Worse, Fahd sent for the Americans. This was a shattering blow,
"the most shocking moment of my life" Mr bin Laden has called it.

Depressed and ignored, he cut himself off from the royal family and sought
solace with religious scholars. At his request, they issued a fatwa that
military training was a religious duty. He went into overdrive, circulating
the edict throughout Saudi and persuading people to head for Afghanistan for
their training. Around 4,000 made the trip. The Saudis moved against him. He
was taken in for questioning, more to scare him than anything else. The die
was cast: he had to leave the country. Claiming he needed to go overseas
temporarily to sort out a business difficulty, Mr bin Laden went straight to
Pakistan, from where he sent a letter to his brother saying he would not
return and apologising for the deceit.

He could not stay in Pakistan – he did not trust the Pakistani authorities
to extradite him to Saudi – so went straight to Afghanistan. There he tried
to act as a peace broker between the rival factions. His own Mujahedin were
ordered to stay out because, he said, it was not their place to get drawn
into domestic politics. Rightly or wrongly, the Saudis and Pakistanis, both
of whom were increasingly reliant on the US, saw him as a target. Attempts
were made to kidnap or kill him. At the end of 1991, he fled to what he saw
as a safer haven, in Sudan.

Contrary to reports, say his friends, his motivation was not to embark on
another jihad in Africa. Sudan was under purist Muslim rulers, desperately
poor and in urgent need of his engineering and construction expertise. The
Sudanese government welcomed him, but they were also wary, refusing for a
time to allow his Al-Qa'edah followers to go anywhere near the troubled
south of the country. It was hard, though, for ministers not to embrace the
new arrival. He threw himself into large-scale building projects.

His move to Sudan provoked suspicion in Saudi and the US. Sudan was one of
the few countries to support Iraq in the Gulf War. Secretly, the Saudis
outlawed him, freezing his assets in the kingdom. In Sudan, though, bin
Laden and Al-Qa'edah became symbols of good, running aid programmes and
attracting their wealthy Saudi contacts to invest in the country.

In 1994, the Saudis went public with their hostility and withdrew his
citizenship. His response was to disavow his ties to the modern Saudi Arabia
and to form, with other opponents, the Advice and Reform Committee or ARC.
This was a political lobbying group, issuing plenty of hot air about the
Saudi regime but not openly advocating violence. But terrorism did occur,
and much of it laid at Mr bin Laden's door. A car bomb in Riyadh in 1995 was
blamed on him, with the Saudis producing video "confessions" from four
Afghans for the attack. It was possible they were acting on his orders. But
it is worth remembering that thousands of would-be Muslim fighters went
through his camps. As with the atrocities in the US, making a direct link
with Mr bin Laden was difficult.

The Saudis and their American allies stepped up pressure on Sudan to expel
Mr bin Laden. Seeing the writing on the wall, he went first, back to
Afghanistan. His chief supporter was Yunis Khalis, who later became a key
figure in the Taliban.

Another bomb, in Saudi, pointed to Mr bin Laden and his militia. At ease in
Afghanistan where he was revered, he turned his attention to the source of
what he saw as the harm being done to his homeland. He issued a "declaration
of war" against the US. Twelve pages long, it called for America's removal
from the Arabian peninsula. When the Taliban swept to power in late 1996, Mr
bin Laden was unsure of his position. He need not have worried. The Taliban
embraced him, admiring and thanking him for his struggle. They saw him as a
rich Saudi who gave up everything for the jihad. He was a hero, someone they
were honour bound to save. His protection was guaranteed. They respected him
even more when he advised them against exploitation from Pakistani
businessmen.

Two factors may weigh against Mr bin Laden with the Taliban. One is that the
US does provide clear, irrefutable evidence of his involvement in last
week's attacks. That will lie heavily with the Taliban who find themselves
being persecuted for harbouring someone for starting a war they did not
sanction.

They are men of principle: bombing without proof will not move them. The
other is the thought that Mr bin Laden's power exceeds their own. Otherwise,
and he is adept at keeping good relations with the Taliban, he is safe.
Their attitude towards him was reinforced when his Arab Mujahedin fought to
secure Kabul against Afghan rebels in the north. Towards the end of 1997,
the Americans tried to capture Mr bin Laden, planning a special forces raid
and rehearsing it in Pakistan. The mission was aborted as being too
difficult.

Mr bin Laden's mood hardened. When religious scholars in Afghanistan issued
a fatwa, possibly at his behest, calling for the expulsion of Americans by
any means from the region, he saw it as giving him the licence he needed. To
the worry of Saudi and Western security agencies, he embarked on an
expansion drive. Previously, his followers had been drawn from the Arab
world. Now he went pan-Islamic, seeking and attracting comrades from the
former Soviet republics, Pakistan and India. He saw himself as infallible
and went on a media offensive. For some time, a vicious spiral had been
forming. Muslim terrorists were arrested in the West and said to be bin
Laden followers. Bombs exploded at the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.
Again, they were attributed to Mr bin Laden. They may well have been but the
US vitriol served only to enhance his legend among militant Muslims. That
status was enhanced even further when the US launched its missile strikes
against what it said were his bases in Sudan and Afghanistan, and the Sudan
target turned out to be a harmless factory.

The strike in Sudan was a disaster for the US. In the Arab world, Mr bin
Laden became seen as the one man who could withstand the might of America.
He has three sorts of supporter: those under his direct command who number a
few hundred and are based in Afghanistan; a wider group of militants who are
spread out across the world; and non-active admirers. It is the middle group
that causes most worry. Probably trained in one of his camps, they have
spread out, some to the West, where to all intents and purposes they lead
normal lives. They do not need to be in contact with Mr bin Laden. Their
struggle is his struggle; he has gone from being field commander to
spiritual inspiration.

He is nowhere near as rich as reports suggest; "a few million at most" said
one family member. His assets in Saudi were long frozen. The family firm
still exists but he has cut himself off from his relatives. He was also
forced to liquidate some smaller businesses when one of his followers made a
rare defection to the Saudi side. In the early days, he did receive
donations, especially from Saudi, but these are thought to have dried up.

On the other hand, why does he need a huge amount of money? He lives
abstemiously. Many of his followers had access to their own money before
joining him. He does not fight an expensive, hi-tech war. In the region he
inhabits weapons are cheaper than staple foods. The hijackers last week
carried small knives and boxes they said they were bombs. His finances
would, though, stretch to some flying courses and some flight simulator
software. If he was responsible.

Also from the Middle East section
Stunned into disbelief as their 'normal' son is blamed
New assaults by Israel threaten US coalition bid
Afghans flee Kabul as Taliban warns Pakistan over US support
Sharon calls off truce talks in attempt to isolate Arafat
'Terrorism' charges fly as tanks raid Jericho


Return to top
"If I lose the light of the sun, I will write by candelight,
 moonlight, no light.
 If I lose paper and ink, I will write in blood on forgotten walls
 I will write always
 I will capture nights all over the world and bring them to you."



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