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Bin Laden Profiled

AP


  Bin Laden Speaks: Exclusive 1999 TIME interview

  Profile: Who is Osama Bin Laden?



Wednesday, Sep. 12, 2001
Who is Osama Bin Laden?

He is a Saudi financier who recruited and led Arab volunteers for the 'jihad'
against the Soviet invaders in Afghanistan. Since that war, he has sent his
"Arab Afghans" to fight in Bosnia, Chechnya, Kashmir and other conflicts
involving Muslims. But he also declared a 'jihad' against the United States,
declaring it the duty of all Muslims to kill American soldiers and civilians.
Bin Laden, of course, has no religous standing, and his religious
rationalization of terrorism is fiercely rejected by mainstream Islam. The
fugitive Saudi has been accused of authoring a number of attacks on
Americans, most notably the 1998 embassy bombings in east Africa. He's also a
prime suspect in the attack on the U.S.S. Cole.

What does Bin Laden Want?

Bin Laden believes Muslim countries should be ruled according to Islamic
sharia law, thus pitting him against the pro-Western regimes all over the
Middle East. U.S. support for these regimes and for Israel, as well as the
presence of "infidel" American forces in Saudi Arabia are the reasons he
offers for his 'jihad' against the U.S. Bin Laden wants to drive the U.S. out
of Arab lands, overthrow the governments of Egypt and Saudi Arabia, and
destroy Israel.

Who are Bin Laden's operatives and how does his network function?

Bin Laden's own organization, Al Qaida, is based primarily on Arab volunteers
who had fought the Russians in Afghanistan with the support of the CIA and
Arab intelligence agencies, and were either unwilling or unable to return
home. They maintained training camps in Afghanistan, the Sudan, Yemen and
elsewhere, where they trained fighters for Islamist armies as far afield as
Chechnya and western China. Many of these operatives were also trained and
deployed to create the infrastructure for and execute terrorist actions
against targets associated with the U.S. all over the world.

The Afghan 'jihad' also established links between volunteers from Islamist
opposition groups in countries ranging from Algeria to South Africa and the
Philippines, and Bin Laden has moved — together with key leaders of Egypt's
influential Islamist movement — to establish himself at the center of a kind
of Islamist International. Their goal has been to link organizations spawned
by local grievances all around the world into a global 'jihad' against the
U.S. and to foster cooperation among these groups.

Security experts believe Bin Laden's networks are not tightly or vertically
linked. Instead, any number of smaller cells and loosely affiliated
organizations receive support from and carry out operations on behalf of the
Saudi financier and his immediate lieutenants.

Where are they based?

Bin Laden remains holed up in Afghanistan, where he enjoys the protection of
its ruling Taliban militia. But structures linked with Bin Laden have been
identified in Yemen, Bosnia, the Philippines, even New Jersey — pockets of
support have been unearthed in most places where foreign veterans of the
Afghan war are to be found. Earlier this year, a New York court convicted a
former Egyptian army major of doing intelligence work for Bin Laden's
networks — Ali Mohammed had also been a sergeant in the U.S. Army. And the
Algerians arrested last December for allegedly smuggling explosives into the
U.S. are suspected of working with Bin Laden, even though they had been
linked with Algeria's Islamic Salvation Front — a group that has not
traditionally targeted the U.S. That suggests a growing tendency towards
cooperation between distinct local groups, which considerably widens the base
of potential threats against the U.S.

How do Bin Laden's networks differ from other terrorist groupings in the
Middle East?

Before the Bin Laden group emerged, terrorist organizations in the Mideast
depended on states to sponsor their activities. The notorious PLO dissident
Abu Nidal, for example, might carry out attacks on behalf of Syria, Libya or
other sponsors, as would the notorious Venezuelan "Carlos the Jackal,"
currently in prison in France. Similarly, the Lebanese Hezbollah militia has
depended on backing from Iran and a nod and a wink from Syria. Hezbollah, of
course, has primarily waged a guerrilla war against Israel in southern
Lebanon, but it has also been a suspect in terrorist attacks both inside
Lebanon and abroad. But unlike Bin Laden's group — and the equally
cosmopolitan Abu Nidal — Hezbollah tends to remain focus on home ground, and
on lending its support and expertise to Palestinian militants in the West
Bank and Gaza.

The most notorious Palestinian terrorist group of the past decade has been
Hamas, which has killed scores of Israeli civilians in suicide bombing
attacks inside Israel. Based in the West Bank and Gaza, Hamas opposes Yasser
Arafat and the peace process, but it is not known to have mounted attacks
outside of Israel and the Palestinian territories. Thus far, Israeli security
officials believe that despite their animosity to the Jewish State, Osama Bin
Laden's forces have not for the most part directly targeted Israel.




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