Osama bin Laden: Difference between revisions

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==First trip to Afghanistan==
==First trip to Afghanistan==
[[Afghanistan]] was invaded by the [[Soviet Union]] in 1979.  Foreigners traveled to Afghanistan, to help oust the Soviets in a manner similar to the foreign fighters who had traveled to Spain to fight during the [[Spanish Civil War]] during the late 1930s.  Afghanistan was often described as the Soviet Union's [[Vietnam]]. The [[United States]], through the [[Central Intelligence Agency]] (CIA), aided the Afghans opposing the Soviets. The CIA provided funds, training, material. The USA is reported to have encouraged middle eastern governments to provide amnesty to their own extremists, providing they traveled to Afghanistan, to enlist in the anti-Soviet forces.  
{{seealso|Afghanistan War (1979-1992)}}
[[Afghanistan]] was invaded by the [[Soviet Union]] in 1979.  Foreigners traveled to Afghanistan, to help oust the Soviets in a manner similar to the foreign fighters who had traveled to Spain to fight during the [[Spanish Civil War]] during the late 1930s.  Afghanistan was often described as the Soviet Union's [[Vietnam]].  
 
The [[United States]], through the [[Central Intelligence Agency]] (CIA), aided the Afghans opposing the Soviets. Their aid, however, was channeled through Pakistan's [[Inter-Service Intelligence]] was the CIA proxy and Pakistan was intensely opposed to direct U.S. operations in Afghanistan.


It has been suggested that he was recruited by the CIA, <ref>{{citation
It has been suggested that he was recruited by the CIA, <ref>{{citation
Line 42: Line 45:
  | author = Tim Weiner
  | author = Tim Weiner
  | title = Legacy of Ashes: the History of the CIA | publisher = Doubleday | year = 2008
  | title = Legacy of Ashes: the History of the CIA | publisher = Doubleday | year = 2008
  }}, p. 461</ref>  Those that make the suggestion tend to regard the CIA as an all-powerful manipulator of the world, where those that argue against the position come from both the positions that the CIA is incompetent, or that there was very little direct contact between the CIA and the Afghan resistance; Pakistan's [[Inter-Service Intelligence]] was the CIA proxy and Pakistan was intensely opposed to direct U.S. operations in Afghanistan.
  }}, p. 461</ref>  Those that make the suggestion tend to regard the CIA as an all-powerful manipulator of the world, where those that argue against the position come from both the positions that the CIA is incompetent, or that there was very little direct contact between the CIA and the Afghan resistance.


==Pakistan==
==Pakistan==

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Osama (sometimes spelled Usama) bin Laden is one of the most famous terrorists in history, who began his activism in the Afghanistan War (1978-92), supported terrorist activities, and co-founded al-Qaeda. one of the founders of as al Qaeda, that is credited with a series of terrorist attacks.

It is not always clear when "bin Laden's involvement" in an incident was a matter of his involvement or financing as an individual, of the Services Office (run by bin Laden and Abdullah Azzam) and other support groups, of "al-Qaeda central", of groups allied with Al Qaeda, or of local cells of individuals that either simply are motivated by al-Qaeda principles or perhaps obtained seed money but no operational diection.

Michael Scheuer, a former senior Central Intelligence Agency officer whose responsibilities included both tracking bin Laden, as well as recommending that he be captured or killed, aso observed that understanding him is best illustrated by comparison to seminal Western figures, especially the abolitionist John Brown, but also John Bunyan, Thomas Jefferson, Patrick Henry, and Thomas Paine.

According to his closest Muslim associates and many of the Westerers who have interviewed him, Osama bin Laden appears to be a genuinely pious Muslim; a devoted family man; a telented, focused and patient insurgent commander; a frank and eloquent speaker; a successful businessman; and an individual of conviction, intellectual honesty, compassion, humility and physical bravery. It is ironic that this man today leads an ideological and military force with more lethal potential than any other nonstate threat faced by the United States.[1]

Early life

Osama bin Laden's father, Mohammed, had multiple wives, and he grew up with dozens of half-siblings. It was a wealthy family; his father had founded an extremely successful construction business. In a 1999 interview with al-Jazeera, while he spoke highly of his father, he did not mention his mother, who was Syrian.[2]

The young Osama was described as being religiously conservative, even when growing up. He and his siblings were exposed to the West. They went on group tours of Europe. Osama bin Laden worked in the family construction business as a young adult.

Khalid Batarfi, who was his neighbor when bin Laden was sixteeen, said "he was a natural leader. He just sets an example and expects you to follow, and sometimes you follow even if you are not 100 percent convinced." Batarfi said that his mother was not as religiously conservative as her son.[3]

He studied at King Abdul Aziz University in Jedda, Saudi Arabia. Among his teachers were Abdullah Azzam and Mohammed Qutb, the brother of Sayyid Qutb. Some reports indicate he first went to Afghanistan shortly after the 1979 invasion, while others indicate he went there after he graduated in 1981. His degree was in economics and public administration. [4]

First trip to Afghanistan

See also: Afghanistan War (1979-1992)

Afghanistan was invaded by the Soviet Union in 1979. Foreigners traveled to Afghanistan, to help oust the Soviets in a manner similar to the foreign fighters who had traveled to Spain to fight during the Spanish Civil War during the late 1930s. Afghanistan was often described as the Soviet Union's Vietnam.

The United States, through the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), aided the Afghans opposing the Soviets. Their aid, however, was channeled through Pakistan's Inter-Service Intelligence was the CIA proxy and Pakistan was intensely opposed to direct U.S. operations in Afghanistan.

It has been suggested that he was recruited by the CIA, [5] but there is little evidence, however, that the CIA directly funded the young bin Laden, or, at first, was even aware of his existence other than as a wealthi Saudi who "supported the same Afghan rebels that the Agency armed in their fight against the Soviet aggressors."[6] Those that make the suggestion tend to regard the CIA as an all-powerful manipulator of the world, where those that argue against the position come from both the positions that the CIA is incompetent, or that there was very little direct contact between the CIA and the Afghan resistance.

Pakistan

He moved from Saudi Arabia to Pakistan in 1986, and was active in the Muslim Brotherhood there.[7]

Stay in Sudan

Following the ouster of the Soviet Union, and the collapse of the puppet Communist regime it left behind, the relative unity of the anti-communist militias dissolved into civil war. Some of the foreign fighters engaged in the civil war, with one Afghan militia, against rival Afghan militias. Some of the foreign fighters returned to their home countries. Some of the foreign fighters sought out other conflicts to engage in, where they perceived Muslims being oppressed by non-Muslims, such as Bosnia, Chechnya and Palestine. Some of the foreign fighters claim they were able to retire from hostilities, refrain from taking sides, and make a home in Afghanistan.

Osama bin Laden left Afghanistan after the ouster of the Soviets, and lived in Sudan. United States President Bill Clinton authorized an American air strike against a Sudanese pharmaceutical plant that Osama bin Laden had helped finance. Clinton asserted that American intelligence analysts had determined that the plant was being used to manufacture chemical weapons and biological weapons.

Return to Afghanistan

After the American government put pressure on the Sudanese government Osama bin Laden left Sudan and returned to Afghanistan. At the time of his return a new group, the Taliban, had established authority over most of Afghanistan. He put himself and his followers under the protection of the Taliban, led by Mullah Muhammad Omar, and provided them with major funding.

Osama bin Laden was also courted by Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, leader of the rival militia Hezb-i-Islam Gulbuddin, and invited him to return to the areas of Afghanistan under his control.

In Afghanistan Osama bin Laden's Al Qaeda organization set up dozens of training camps, where trainees received religious indoctrination and training to prepare them to engage in jihad.

He held a press conference, on February 23, 1998, at a camp in Khost, and announced the International Islamic Front for Jihad against Jews and Crusaders. Ayman al-Zawahiri was among the signers of the declaration. While the two had worked together in Sudan, al-Zawahiri initially went to Chechnya, attempting to start a branch of Islamic Jihad; he escaped custody and went to Afghanistan. The two complemented one another, bin Laden's inspirational abilities and al-Zawahiri's operational skills.[8].

From Afghanistan, he authorized and funded the 1998 bombings of U.S. Embassies in Africa.

Capture or killing

By 1998, there was U.S. interest in capturing or killing him, but the practical problems were immense. The U.S. had no paramilitary personnel of its own in Afghanistan; the Afghan allies were not considered capable of attacking the known bases.

The attacks of 9-11

Osama bin Laden is credited with planning the September 9th, 2001 assassination of Ahmed Shah Massoud, the leader of the Northern Alliance.

Osama bin Laden sponsored, and later claimed credit for the hijacking of four passenger jets, on September 11th, 2001. Two of the jets were crashed into the World Trade Center in New York City. One jet was crashed into the .Pentagon Building. The last jet was crashed into a field in Pennsylvania, when the passengers rose up to retake it.

Afghanistan War (2001-)

In response to the attacks of 9-11 the United States attacked Afghanistan. The United States called on anti-Taliban elements within Afghanistan to rise up to overthrow the Taliban. The United States commenced a wide-scale suppression of enemy air defense operation, and then intensive air support to the Northern Alliance. Preceded by CIA paramilitary officers who established contact with the anti-Taliban forces, a small number of United States Army Special Forces soldiers served as liaisons with the anti-Taliban forces. They controlled air attacks both in close air support of Northern Alliance forces, and also strikes against more distant target.

The United States offered large bounties for the capture of Osama bin Laden, Mullah Mohammed Omar, the Taliban's leader, and Ayman al-Zawahiri, Osama bin Laden's deputy. Smaller bounties were offered for less senior Al Qaida and Taliban leaders. The United States offered bounties of $5,000 for the apprehension of anyone the captors claimed was a member of the Taliban. A bounty of $5,000 or $10,000 was offered for any foreigner in Afghanistan, on the theory that any foreigner could have been a member of al Qaeda.

Afghan militia leaders collected bounties for the capture of thousands of individuals they claimed were Taliban or al Qaeda members. But very few senior members of the Taliban or al Qaeda were captured.

Bin Laden and the senior members of the Taliban escaped into Pakistan's Federally Associated Tribal Areas, which border Afghanistan and are inhabited by the same Pashtun tribes who formed the core strength of the Taliban.

References

  1. Michael Scheuer (2006), Through Our Enemies' Eyes: Osama bin Laden, Radical Islam, and the Future of America (Revised edition ed.), Potomac Books, ISBN 1574889672, pp. 5-6
  2. Youssef H. Aboul-Enein (Sept-Oct, 2004), "Osama bin-Laden interview, June 1999: entering the mind of an adversary", Military Review
  3. Peter L. Bergen (2006), The Osama bin Laden I Know: An Oral History of al Qaeda's Leader, Free Press, ISBN 0743278917, pp. 13-15
  4. Steve Coll (2004), Ghost Wars: the Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan and bin Laden, from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001, Penguin,pp. 85-85
  5. Michel Chossudovsky (January 8, 2008), "Pakistan and the "Global War on Terrorism"", Global Research
  6. Tim Weiner (2008), Legacy of Ashes: the History of the CIA, Doubleday, p. 461
  7. Coll, pp. 153-154
  8. Coll, pp. 380-383