-Caveat Lector-

http://www.greenleft.org.au/back/2001/465/465p15.htm


How the CIA created Osama bin Laden
BY NORM DIXON


Throughout the world ... its agents, client states and satellites are on the
defensive on the moral defensive, the intellectual defensive, and the
political and economic defensive. Freedom movements arise and assert
themselves. They're doing so on almost every continent populated by man in
the hills of Afghanistan, in Angola, in Kampuchea, in Central America ...
[They are] freedom fighters.


Is this a call to jihad (holy war) taken from one of Islamic fundamentalist
Osama bin Laden's notorious fatwas? Or perhaps a communique issued by the
repressive Taliban regime in Kabul?


In fact, this glowing praise of the murderous exploits of today's supporters
of arch-terrorist bin Laden and his Taliban collaborators, and their holy
war against the evil empire , was issued by US President Ronald Reagan on
March 8, 1985. The evil empire was the Soviet Union, as well as Third World
movements fighting US-backed colonialism, apartheid and dictatorship.


How things change. In the aftermath of a series of terrorist atrocities the
most despicable being the mass murder of more than 6000 working people in
New York and Washington on September 11 bin Laden the freedom fighter is now
lambasted by US leaders and the Western mass media as a terrorist mastermind
and an evil-doer .


Yet the US government refuses to admit its central role in creating the
vicious movement that spawned bin Laden, the Taliban and Islamic
fundamentalist terrorists that plague Algeria and Egypt and perhaps the
disaster that befell New York.


The mass media has also downplayed the origins of bin Laden and his toxic
brand of Islamic fundamentalism.


Mujaheddin
In April 1978, the People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA) seized
power in Afghanistan in reaction to a crackdown against the party by that
country's repressive government.


The PDPA was committed to a radical land reform that favoured the peasants,
trade union rights, an expansion of education and social services, equality
for women and the separation of church and state. The PDPA also supported
strengthening Afghanistan's relationship with the Soviet Union.


Such policies enraged the wealthy semi-feudal landlords, the Muslim
religious establishment (many mullahs were also big landlords) and the
tribal chiefs. They immediately began organising resistance to the
government's progressive policies, under the guise of defending Islam.


Washington, fearing the spread of Soviet influence (and worse the new
government's radical example) to its allies in Pakistan, Iran and the Gulf
states, immediately offered support to the Afghan mujaheddin, as the contra
force was known.


Following an internal PDPA power struggle in December 1979 which toppled
Afghanistan's leader, thousands of Soviet troops entered the country to
prevent the new government's fall. This only galvanised the disparate
fundamentalist factions. Their reactionary jihad now gained legitimacy as a
national liberation struggle in the eyes of many Afghans.


The Soviet Union was eventually to withdraw from Afghanistan in 1989 and the
mujaheddin captured the capital, Kabul, in 1992.


Between 1978 and 1992, the US government poured at least US$6 billion (some
estimates range as high as $20 billion) worth of arms, training and funds to
prop up the mujaheddin factions. Other Western governments, as well as
oil-rich Saudi Arabia, kicked in as much again. Wealthy Arab fanatics, like
Osama bin Laden, provided millions more.


Washington's policy in Afghanistan was shaped by US President Jimmy Carter's
national security advisor, Zbigniew Brzezinski, and was continued by his
successors. His plan went far beyond simply forcing Soviet troops to
withdraw; rather it aimed to foster an international movement to spread
Islamic fanaticism into the Muslim Central Asian Soviet republics to
destabilise the Soviet Union.


Brzezinski's grand plan coincided with Pakistan military dictator General
Zia ul-Haq's own ambitions to dominate the region. US-run Radio Liberty and
Radio Free Europe beamed Islamic fundamentalist tirades across Central Asia
(while paradoxically denouncing the Islamic revolution that toppled the
pro-US Shah of Iran in 1979).


Washington's favoured mujaheddin faction was one of the most extreme, led by
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. The West's distaste for terrorism did not apply to this
unsavoury freedom fighter . Hekmatyar was notorious in the 1970s for
throwing acid in the faces of women who refused to wear the veil.


After the mujaheddin took Kabul in 1992, Hekmatyar's forces rained
US-supplied missiles and rockets on that city killing at least 2000
civilians until the new government agreed to give him the post of prime
minister. Osama bin Laden was a close associate of Hekmatyar and his
faction.


Hekmatyar was also infamous for his side trade in the cultivation and
trafficking in opium. Backing of the mujaheddin from the CIA coincided with
a boom in the drug business. Within two years, the Afghanistan-Pakistan
border was the world's single largest source of heroin, supplying 60% of US
drug users.


In 1995, the former director of the CIA's operation in Afghanistan was
unrepentant about the explosion in the flow of drugs: Our main mission was
to do as much damage as possible to the Soviets... There was a fallout in
terms of drugs, yes. But the main objective was accomplished. The Soviets
left Afghanistan.


Made in the USA
According to Ahmed Rashid, a correspondent for the Far Eastern Economic
Review, in 1986 CIA chief William Casey committed CIA support to a
long-standing ISI proposal to recruit from around the world to join the
Afghan jihad. At least 100,000 Islamic militants flocked to Pakistan between
1982 and 1992 (some 60,000 attended fundamentalist schools in Pakistan
without necessarily taking part in the fighting).


John Cooley, a former journalist with the US ABC television network and
author of Unholy Wars: Afghanistan, America and International Terrorism, has
revealed that Muslims recruited in the US for the mujaheddin were sent to
Camp Peary, the CIA's spy training camp in Virginia, where young Afghans,
Arabs from Egypt and Jordan, and even some African-American black Muslims
were taught sabotage skills .


The November 1, 1998, British Independent reported that one of those charged
with the 1998 bombings of US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, Ali Mohammed,
had trained bin Laden's operatives in 1989.


These operatives were recruited at the al Kifah Refugee Centre in Brooklyn,
New York, given paramilitary training in the New York area and then sent to
Afghanistan with US assistance to join Hekmatyar's forces. Mohammed was a
member of the US army's elite Green Berets.


The program, reported the Independent, was part of a Washington-approved
plan called Operation Cyclone .


In Pakistan, recruits, money and equipment were distributed to the
mujaheddin factions by an organisation known as Maktab al Khidamar (Office
of Services MAK).


MAK was a front for Pakistan's CIA, the Inter-Service Intelligence
Directorate. The ISI was the first recipient of the vast bulk of CIA and
Saudi Arabian covert assistance for the Afghan contras. Bin Laden was one of
three people who ran MAK. In 1989, he took overall charge of MAK.


Among those trained by Mohammed were El Sayyid Nosair, who was jailed in
1995 for killing Israeli rightist Rabbi Meir Kahane and plotting with others
to bomb New York landmarks, including the World Trade Center in 1993.


The Independent also suggested that Shiekh Omar Abdel-Rahman, an Egyptian
religious leader also jailed for the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center,
was also part of Operation Cyclone. He entered the US in 1990 with the CIA's
approval. A confidential CIA report concluded that the agency was partly
culpable for the 1993 World Trade Center blast, the Independent reported.


Bin Laden
Osama bin Laden, one of 20 sons of a billionaire construction magnate,
arrived in Afghanistan to join the jihad in 1980. An austere religious
fanatic and business tycoon, bin Laden specialised in recruiting, financing
and training the estimated 35,000 non-Afghan mercenaries who joined the
mujaheddin.


The bin Laden family is a prominent pillar of the Saudi Arabian ruling
class, with close personal, financial and political ties to that country's
pro-US royal family.


Bin Laden senior was appointed Saudi Arabia's minister of public works as a
favour by King Faisal. The new minister awarded his own construction
companies lucrative contracts to rebuild Islam's holiest mosques in Mecca
and Medina. In the process, the bin Laden family company in 1966 became the
world's largest private construction company.


Osama bin Laden's father died in 1968. Until 1994, he had access to the
dividends from this ill-gotten business empire.


(Bin Laden junior's oft-quoted personal fortune of US$200-300 million has
been arrived at by the US State Department by dividing today's value of the
bin Laden family net worth estimated to be US$5 billion by the number of bin
Laden senior's sons. A fact rarely mentioned is that in 1994 the bin Laden
family disowned Osama and took control of his share.)


Osama's military and business adventures in Afghanistan had the blessing of
the bin Laden dynasty and the reactionary Saudi Arabian regime. His close
working relationship with MAK also meant that the CIA was fully aware of his
activities.


Milt Bearden, the CIA's station chief in Pakistan from 1986 to 1989,
admitted to the January 24, 2000, New Yorker that while he never personally
met bin Laden, Did I know that he was out there? Yes, I did ... [Guys like]
bin Laden were bringing $20-$25 million a month from other Saudis and Gulf
Arabs to underwrite the war. And that is a lot of money. It's an extra
$200-$300 million a year. And this is what bin Laden did.


In 1986, bin Laden brought heavy construction equipment from Saudi Arabia to
Afghanistan. Using his extensive knowledge of construction techniques (he
has a degree in civil engineering), he built training camps , some dug deep
into the sides of mountains, and built roads to reach them.


These camps, now dubbed terrorist universities by Washington, were built in
collaboration with the ISI and the CIA. The Afghan contra fighters,
including the tens of thousands of mercenaries recruited and paid for by bin
Laden, were armed by the CIA. Pakistan, the US and Britain provided military
trainers.


Tom Carew, a former British SAS soldier who secretly fought for the
mujaheddin told the August 13, 2000, British Observer, The Americans were
keen to teach the Afghans the techniques of urban terrorism car bombing and
so on so that they could strike at the Russians in major towns ... Many of
them are now using their knowledge and expertise to wage war on everything
they hate.


Al Qaeda (the Base), bin Laden's organisation, was established in 1987-88 to
run the camps and other business enterprises. It is a tightly-run capitalist
holding company albeit one that integrates the operations of a mercenary
force and related logistical services with legitimate business operations.


Bin Laden has simply continued to do the job he was asked to do in
Afghanistan during the 1980s fund, feed and train mercenaries. All that has
changed is his primary customer. Then it was the ISI and, behind the scenes,
the CIA. Today, his services are utilised primarily by the reactionary
Taliban regime.


Bin Laden only became a terrorist in US eyes when he fell out with the Saudi
royal family over its decision to allow more than 540,000 US troops to be
stationed on Saudi soil following Iraq's invasion of Kuwait.


When thousands of US troops remained in Saudi Arabia after the end of the
Gulf War, bin Laden's anger turned to outright opposition. He declared that
Saudi Arabia and other regimes such as Egypt in the Middle East were puppets
of the US, just as the PDPA government of Afghanistan had been a puppet of
the Soviet Union.


He called for the overthrow of these client regimes and declared it the duty
of all Muslims to drive the US out of the Gulf states. In 1994, he was
stripped of his Saudi citizenship and forced to leave the country. His
assets there were frozen.


After a period in Sudan, he returned to Afghanistan in May 1996. He
refurbished the camps he had helped build during the Afghan war and offered
the facilities and services and thousands of his mercenaries to the Taliban,
which took power that September.


Today, bin Laden's private army of non-Afghan religious fanatics is a key
prop of the Taliban regime.


Prior to the devastating September 11 attack on the twin towers of World
Trade Center, US ruling-class figures remained unrepentant about the
consequences of their dirty deals with the likes of bin Laden, Hekmatyar and
the Taliban. Since the awful attack, they have been downright hypocritical.


In an August 28, 1998, report posted on MSNBC, Michael Moran quotes Senator
Orrin Hatch, who was a senior member of the Senate Intelligence Committee
which approved US dealings with the mujaheddin, as saying he would make the
same call again , even knowing what bin Laden would become.


It was worth it. Those were very important, pivotal matters that played an
important role in the downfall of the Soviet Union.


Hatch today is one of the most gung-ho voices demanding military
retaliation.


Another face that has appeared repeatedly on television screens since the
attack has been Vincent Cannistrano, described as a former CIA chief of
counter-terrorism operations .


Cannistrano is certainly an expert on terrorists like bin Laden, because he
directed their work . He was in charge of the CIA-backed Nicaraguan contras
during the early 1980s. In 1984, he became the supervisor of covert aid to
the Afghan mujaheddin for the US National Security Council.


The last word goes to Zbigniew Brzezinski: What was more important in the
world view of history? The Taliban or the fall of the Soviet Empire? A few
stirred up Muslims or the liberation of Central Europe and the end of the
Cold War?

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