Usama Bin Laden was born in Saudi Arabia around 1957 to a father
of Yemeni origins and a Syrian mother. His father, Mohammed bin Laden,
founded a construction company and with royal patronage became a
billionaire. The company's connections won it such important commissions
as rebuilding mosques in the holy cities of Mecca and Medina.
Mohammed bin Laden took numerous wives and fathered about 50 children.
Osama was the 17th son, the only born to a later wife. In a society where
status within a family is highly important, bin Laden would therefore have
been of relatively low rank.
Bin Laden studied management and economics at King Abdul Aziz University
in Jedda, Saudi Arabia, coming under the influence of religious teachers
who introduced him to the wider world of Islamic politics.
The
1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan galvanized bin Laden. He supported the
Afghan resistance, which became a jihad, or holy war. Ironically, the U.S.
became a major supporter of the Afghan resistance, or mujahideen, working with Saudi Arabia and Pakistan to
set up Islamic schools in Pakistan for Afghan refugees. These schools later
evolved into virtual training centers for Islamic radicals.

By the mid-1980s, bin Laden had moved to Afghanistan, where he established
an organization, Maktab al-Khidimat (MAK), to recruit Islamic soldiers from
around the world who later form the basis of an international network. The MAK maintained recruiting offices in Detroit and Brooklyn in the 1980s.
The Taliban, the former rulers of Afghanistan, arose from the religious
schools set up during the mujahideen's war against the Soviet invasion.
After the Soviet army withdrew in 1989, fighting erupted among mujahideen
factions. In response to the chaos, the fundamentalist Taliban was formed
and within two years it captured most of the country. The Taliban gave bin
Laden sanctuary in 1996.
After the Soviet withdrawal in 1989, bin Laden returned to Saudi Arabia and
worked in his family's construction business. He founded an organization to
help veterans of the Afghan war, many of whom went on to fight in Bosnia,
Chechnya, Somalia, and the Philippines. Scholars have suggested these
loosely connected bands of seasoned soldiers, ready to fight for Islamic
causes, form the basis of bin Laden's current support.
In 1990, in response to the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, the Saudi government
allowed American troops to be stationed in Saudi Arabia. Bin Laden was
incensed that non-believers (American soldiers) were stationed in the
birthplace of Islam. He also charged the Saudi regime with deviating from
true Islam.
Bin Laden was expelled from Saudi Arabia in 1991 because of his
anti-government activities. He eventually wound up in Sudan, where he worked
with Egyptian radical groups in exile.
Anti-U.S. Attacks
In 1992 bin Laden claimed responsibility for attempting to bomb U.S.
soldiers in Yemen and for attacking U.S. troops in Somalia the following
year. In 1994 pressure from the U.S. and Saudi Arabia prompted Sudan to
expel bin Laden, and he returned to Afghanistan.
In 1998 bin Laden called for all Americans and Jews, including children, to
be killed. He has since been accused of increasing his terrorist activities,
such as the 1998 bombings at the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. The
date, Aug. 7, was the anniversary of the deployment of U.S. troops to Saudi
Arabia.
U.S. cruise missile attacks against targets in the Sudan and Afghanistan in
Aug. 1998 are not believed to have seriously hampered bin Laden's network.
Bin Laden continues to call for the destruction of the U.S., Israel, and the
Saudi monarchy, stating that with these obstacles removed, Islam's three
holiest sites, Mecca, Medina, and Jerusalem, would then be liberated.
International Terrorist Network
Yet, even as he is reviled in the West, bin Laden is a hero in parts of the
Islamic world, according to intelligence reports. His organization is called
al-Qaeda, "the Base," and has approximately 3,000 followers, which he funds
with his estimated $250 million fortune. Experts have said that bin Laden
could represent a new trend in terrorism—privatization. Until his emergence,
most large-scale terrorist organizations are believed to have been connected
to governments. With his money and disciplined followers, however, bin Laden
is believed to have the ability to launch even more devastating terrorist
attacks. He has not denied that he is seeking nuclear or chemical weapons,
saying that it is a religious duty to defend Islam.
Bin Laden has been disowned by most of his family, including a brother,
Sheik Bakr Mohammed bin Laden, who has established scholarship funds at
Harvard Law School, and the Harvard School of Design. In 1991 his Saudi
citizenship was revoked.
Wanted: Dead or Alive
After the Sept. 11 attacks, the U.S. issued an ultimatum to Taliban-ruled
Afghanistan to turn over bin Laden—this was just the last of several such
demands made by the U.S. and the UN after bin Laden was implicated in the
1998 U.S. embassy bombings in East Africa (the U.S. also responded then by
launching retaliatory missile attacks on Sudan and an al-Qaeda training camp
in Afghanistan). Binding their fate to bin Laden's, the Taliban became the
target of air strikes by the U.S. and Britain beginning in October 2002 that
swiftly toppled the regime within two months. But Bin Laden, the object of
the military campaign in Afghanistan, remained at large. He was believed to
have fled to the mountainous region of Tora Bora, but the heavy U.S. bombing
campaign that followed failed to vanquish him.
Since the attacks, Bin Laden has released several video tapes broadcast on
Qatar's Al Jazeera network, the first of which praised the Sept. 11
hijackers, but stopped just short of claiming responsibility for them. In
subsequent tapes, he threatened that more attacks against "the infidel" will
occur and warned that "America will not live in peace." Bin Laden's
whereabouts remain elusive, but he is thought to be somewhere in Afghanistan
or Pakistan. The FBI has placed a $25 million bounty upon his head.
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The End. Dec 26 2004 |