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[CIA Fact Sheet on Osama bin Laden] [Osama's Fatwah against the USA] [Who is Osama Bin-Laden?]
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Who is Osama Bin-Laden? Osama (also "Usama") bin Laden was born in 1957 to a wealthy Yemeni family in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. His father operated one of the major construction companies in the area and believed to have left over $300 million to his son after he died. When in 1979 the former Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan, bin Laden is reported to have said that it was his duty as a Muslim to fight against the invasion. Using his family's fortune, bin Laden provided support and training for the fighters, forming Maktab al-Khidimat (MAK) group composed of Muslims from all over the world. For them, this was jihad, an Islamic crusade, to get rid of the evil Soviets. Ironically, a major part of the entire operation, including training was financed with American money. Even more ironic is the fact that bin Laden most likely received some training from the CIA during this time. (Who is Osama Bin Laden? - BBC) By 1989 the Soviets were pushed out of the Afghan territory and the Americans terminated their aid. Left alone with his growing Afghan resistance organization al Qaeda, bin Laden switched the focus of his organization from fighting Soviets to fighting all non-Muslims in the neighboring regions. Bin Laden's new enemies were now the American forces that were left behind in the Afghanistan as well as their Middle Eastern allies. Shortly after the end of war with the Soviets, bin Laden moved back to Saudi Arabia. In 1991 he was expelled from Saudi Arabia and moved to Sudan. In 1996, succumbing to pressure from the U.S. bin Laden was expelled again. He moved to Afghanistan and was welcomed by Taliban as their "guest". |
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Inside the mind of Osama bin Laden Long preparation, powerful message aimed at regions dispossessed By Michael
Dobbs For
more than seven years the United States is occupying the lands of Islam
in the holiest of its territories, Arabia, plundering its riches, overwhelming
its rulers, humiliating its people, threatening its neighbors, and using
its bases in the peninsula as a spearhead to fight against the neighboring
Islamic peoples.
Elements of the attacks in New York and Washington were clearly foreshadowed by bin Ladens explanations of his vision and methods. One of his themes, for example, is the importance of guerrilla warfare, as opposed to frontal combat with a more powerful enemy. Another is the need for lengthy preparation. Meticulous planning sometimes for as long as three or four years has been a hallmark of terrorist operations associated with bin Laden, including the 1998 bomb attacks on U.S. embassies in East Africa and the destruction of the USS Cole in Aden, Yemen, last year. At the heart of the bin Laden opus are two declarations of holy war jihad against America. The first, issued in 1996, was directed specifically at Americans occupying the land of the two holy places, as bin Laden refers to his native Saudi Arabia, where 5,000 U.S. troops have been stationed since the 1991 Persian Gulf War. The two holy places are Muslim shrines at Mecca and Medina. In 1998,
he broadened the edict to include the killing of Americans and
their allies, civilians and military ... in any country in which it
is possible to do it. |
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AGAINST U.S. PRESENCE
In the American view, U.S. troops were in Saudi Arabia to liberate the neighboring state of Kuwait, which had been invaded by the armies of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein. After the Gulf War ended, U.S. forces, which had not been stationed in Saudi Arabia before the war, remained on a semi-permanent basis to train the Saudi air force and police forces and protect the kingdom from further Iraqi mischief. Bin Laden,
along with an increasingly vocal Saudi opposition, saw the matter quite
differently. In their view, the presence of foreign forces was an intolerable
affront to 1,400 years of Islamic tradition, dating back to an injunction
from the prophet Muhammad that there not be two religions in Arabia.
They argued that responsibility for defending the kingdom should fall
on the Saudi government, which had poured billions of dollars into the
military, rather than on Western crusader forces. Two years later, in the 1998 decree, described by the Islamic scholar Bernard Lewis of Princeton University as a magnificent piece of eloquent, at times even poetic Arabic prose, bin Laden charged that Americans had declared war on Muslims. For more than seven years the United States is occupying the lands of Islam in the holiest of its territories, Arabia, plundering its riches, overwhelming its rulers, humiliating its people, threatening its neighbors, and using its bases in the peninsula as a spearhead to fight against the neighboring Islamic peoples. In bin Ladens war, the goal of expelling the Judeo-Christian enemy from the holy lands of Islam should be met first on the Arabian peninsula. His next priority is Iraq, which for 500 years was the seat of the most powerful Islamic state, or caliphate. A distant third on this agenda is Palestine, site of the Al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem, which Muslims believe was the place from where Muhammad ascended to heaven. Bin Ladens view of America is almost the mirror opposite of Americas view of him. In his opinion, he and his supporters are waging a just war against American terrorism. Terrorist acts committed by Americans, according to bin Laden, include the occupation of Saudi Arabia, the starving of up to a million Iraqi children because of U.N. sanctions, the withholding of arms to Bosnian Muslims in their war against Christian Serbs, and the dropping of atomic bombs on Japan at the end of World War II. Terrorism,
bin Laden told ABC News in 1998, can be both reprehensible
and commendable.
Traditionally, responsibility for declaring a jihad rested with a community of scholars and theologians known as the ulema. But according to Khaled Abou el Fadl, an Islamic law expert at UCLA, the collapse of centralized authority in the Islamic world has led to a moral and political vacuum in which virtually any Muslim can declare a jihad. He added, however, that according to Islamic tradition, a religious decree, or fatwa, of the kind issued by bin Laden is nonbinding on other believers. |
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MYTH OF THE SUPERPOWER
Bin Ladens contempt for America seems even greater than his contempt for the Soviet Union. The Russian soldier is more courageous and patient than the U.S. soldier, he told the London-based Arab newspaper, al-Quds al-Arabi, in 1996. Our battle with the United States is easy compared with the battles in which we engaged in Afghanistan. As examples of alleged American cowardice, bin Laden frequently cites the case of the withdrawal from Lebanon after the 1983 truck bombing of the Marine barracks in Beirut and the withdrawal from Somalia after the 1993 killings of U.S. servicemen in Mogadishu. Bin Laden also has paid a great deal of attention to the symbolism of his targets. In a video that circulated widely in the Arab world earlier this year, he bragged of the attack on the USS Cole by a boat filled with explosives in Aden harbor in October 2000. The destroyer had the illusion she could destroy anything, but was itself destroyed by a tiny boat, bin Laden said. The destroyer represented the West, and the small boat represented Muhammad, he boasted, according to a transcript of the videotape supplied by Peter Bergen, author of Holy War Inc., a forthcoming book about bin Laden. |