#1 World's Most Wanted Terrorist
Osama Bin Laden
fighting his battle of Jihad

see my more comprehensive study of Osama Bin Laden at www.itsCool.com

Osama Bin Laden

Short Biography
Osama Bin Laden

Osama Bin LadenBorn 1957 from a Syrian mother (one of 10 wives his billionaire father had) ... Osama bin Laden was the 17th son among 52 brothers and sisters.

Osama was exposed very early on his age to this experience but he lost his father when he was 13.  He married at the age of 17 to a Syrian girl who was a relative.  He grew up as religiously committed boy and the early marriage was another factor of protecting him from corruption.

Osama had his primary, secondary and even university education in Jeddah.  He had a degree in public administration 1981 from King Abdul-Aziz university in Jeddah.  Countries of the Arabian Peninsula, Syria, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Sudan are the only countries he has been to.  All stories of trips to Switzerland, Philippines, and London are all unfounded.

The elder bin Laden emigrated from a remote area of neighboring Yemen to Saudi Arabia as a young man and built the largest construction company in the Saudi kingdom.  The son of a Saudi Arabian businessman, Osama bin Laden has called for a Muslim jihad, or holy war, against the United States. 

He has encouraged Muslims to kill all the Americans (civilian or military) they can, and is rumored to pay $10,000 for every American his terrorist cells can kill.

Most of his family has disavowed him, after he inherited some $250 million dollars ($USD) from his family's estimated $5 billion fortune, and later instigating terrorist activities. 

In 1979, after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, a 22-year-old bin Laden traveled there to fight the Soviets alongside the Afghan resistance fighters known as the mujahedeen.

He used his family's connections and wealth to raise money for the Afghan resistance and provide the mujahedeen with logistical and humanitarian aid, and participated in several battles in the Afghan war.

As the war with the Soviets drew to a close, bin Laden formed al Qaeda (Arabic for "the base"), an organization of ex-mujahedeen and other supporters channeling fighters and funds to the Afghan resistance.

Once the Soviets pulled out of Afghanistan, bin Laden returned to Saudi Arabia to work for the family construction firm, the Bin Laden Group.  He became involved in Saudi groups opposed to the reigning Saudi monarchy, the Fahd family.

His rage stems from the decision by Saudi Arabia to allow the United States to use the country as a staging area for attacks on Iraqi forces in Kuwait and Iraq.  After the victory, the U.S. military presence became permanent.

To fundamentalists like bin Laden, the U.S. presence is anathema because Saudi Arabia is home to "the two most holy places" in Islam -- Mecca and Medina.  Mecca is the birthplace of Mohammed and the location of the Great Mosque of Mecca, considered by Muslims to be the most sacred spot on Earth.

Mecca also is the destination of the hajj, the pilgrimage that is one of five tenets of Islam.  All Muslims who are physically and financially able are expected to perform the hajj at least once.

One of the rituals of the hajj is to circle the Kaaba, a black-draped, oblong stone building located inside the mosque.  The Koran says the Kaaba is the oldest house of worship in the world and during the hajj pilgrims circle it seven times.  It is toward the Kaaba -- believed to rest on the spot where, in the Bible, Abraham was prepared to sacrifice his son Isaac before God stayed his hand and substituted a ram -- that Muslims face to pray.

In an interview bin Laden gave to CNN in 1997, he said the ongoing U.S. military presence in Saudi Arabia is an "occupation of the land of the holy places."

In February 1998, bin Laden issued a "fatwa," a religious ruling, calling for Muslims to kill Americans and their allies.  Three other groups, including the Islamic Jihad in Egypt, endorse the ruling.

"The ruling to kill the Americans and their allies -- civilians and military -- is an individual duty for every Muslim who can do it in any country in which it is possible to do it, in order to liberate the al-Aqsa Mosque and the holy mosque from their grip, and in order for their armies to move out of all the lands of Islam, defeated and unable to threaten any Muslim," the statement, issued under the "World Islamic Front" name, read.  It was published three months later in the London newspaper "Al-Quds al-'Arabi."

Osama Bin Laden

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The Monumental Struggle Of Good Versus Evil

A jet airliner is lined up on one of the World Trade Center towers in New York Tuesday, Sept 11 2001

Eagle Sharpening Claws, Earth in background

Rogue Warrior - Richard Marcinko, Navy Seal - living legend

Jihad (definition)

Other Commonly Used Spellings: JIHAAD

It is an Arabic word the root of which is Jahada, which means to strive for a better way of life.  The nouns are Juhd, Mujahid, Jihad, and Ijtihad.  The other meanings are:  endeavor, strain, exertion, effort, diligence, fighting to defend one's life, land, and religion.

Jihad should not be confused with Holy War;  the latter does not exist in Islam nor will Islam allow its followers to be involved in a Holy War.  The latter refers to the Holy War of the Crusaders.

Jihad is not a war to force the faith on others, as many people think of it.  It should never be interpreted as a way of compulsion of the belief on others, since there is an explicit verse in the Qur'an that says: "There is no compulsion in religion" Al-Qur'an: Al-Baqarah (2:256).

Jihad is not a defensive war only, but a war against any unjust regime.  If such a regime exists, a war is to be waged against the leaders, but not against the people of that country.  People should be freed from the unjust regimes and influences so that they can freely choose to believe in Allah.

Not only in peace but also in war Islam prohibits terrorism, kidnapping, and hijacking, when carried against civilians.  Whoever commits such violations is considered a murderer in Islam, and is to be punished by the Islamic state.  During wars, Islam prohibits Muslim soldiers from harming civilians, women, children, elderly, and the religious men like priests and rabies.  It also prohibits cutting down trees and destroying civilian constructions.

fat·wa (fät) noun

fatwa:  a legal opinion or ruling issued by an Islamic scholar

This series of photographs shows hijacked United Airlines Flight 175 as it approaches (upper L) and impacts the World Trade Center's south tower (L), bursting into flames and raining a hail of debris on lower Manhattan September 11, 2001. A gaping hole in the north tower (R) can be seen following a similar attack earlier in the day. Three hijacked planes crashed into major U.S. landmarks September 11, destroying both of New York's mighty twin towers and plunging the Pentagon in Washington into flames, in an unprecedented assault on key symbols of U.S. military and financial power. REUTERS/Sean Adair

The Pentagon: 12 Sept 2001. REUTERS

"This will be a monumental struggle of good versus evil, but good will prevail."
[President George W. Bush, September 12, 2001]

"The terrorist act is the action of some American group. I have nothing to do with it.
The United States had invited Allah's wrath because it is trying to control the entire world by force."

[Usama bin Ladin, September 11, 2001]

Amazon.com Book:  The New Jackals - Ramzi Yousef, Osama Bin Laden and the Future of Terrorism     Amazon.com book (currently out of stock):  bin Laden - The Man Who Declared War on America $27.95     Aliases of this Saudi Arabian born in 1957: Usama Bin Muhammad Bin Ladin, Shaykh Usama Bin Ladin, the Prince, the Emir, Abu Abdallah, Mujahid Shaykh, Hajj, the Director
Amazon.com book
Average Customer Rating: 3.8 out of 5 stars hardcover - 256 pages
The New Jackals:  Ramzi Yousef, Osama Bin Laden and the Future of Terrorism

Osama Bin Laden's Vow:  To Kill Americans
Exclusive ABCnews Interview ... June, 1998

 

(Source: Vince Cannistraro, former CIA counter-terrorism chief / Map by Mark Bloch/ABCNEWS.com)



ABCNEWS.com article
His fatwa was clear:  Americans must die, the sooner the better.

EDITORS: NOTE GRAPHIC CONTENT. AP-NY. A person falls headfirst after jumping from the north tower of New York's World Trade Center Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2001. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

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TERRORISM

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Eagle's Head with the seals from the four services in the background with the planet Earth and the american flag

Stealth Bomber:  "if you can read this, you're fucked!"

Who is Osama Bin Laden?
Osama bin Laden
Osama Bin Laden: One of the most wanted men in US

ERRI TERRORIST GROUP PROFILE - SPECIAL REPORT
http://www.emergency.com/bldn0798.htm

ERRI Risk Assessment Services - Tuesday, June 30, 1998

Usamah Bin Mohammad Bin Laden (Osama bin-Laden)
Compiled by Jeremy Zakis, ERRI Asia and Pacific Desk

I. Introduction
Osama Bin Laden

The terrorist group profile aims to inform the reader about the strengths and ideals of modern terrorist organisations. Today's special report is not about any one group, nor is it about just any regular terrorist. This special report is about an individual who is described as the world's most dangerous person.

He fought against the Soviets in Afghanistan, he participated in the battles of the Jalalabad with the Arab mujahedin and now he is fighting a new battle or 'Jihad' with the United States.

In the past three years, he has issued three fatwa's declaring war on the American forces in Saudi Arabia. In these same three years, 24 Americans have died in two vicious bombings at US installations in the cities of Riyadh and Al-Khobar.

Evidence continues to mount against the one individual, who has a worth of more than $US250 million, that he is not only the financier behind the bombings, but also personally ordered them as well. He is Usamah Bin Mohammad Bin Laden, known in the Western world as Osama bin-Laden.


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 II. Profile of Osama bin-Laden
Osama Bin Laden

Osama bin-Laden was born in the city of Riyadh in 1957 and raised in AlMadina, AlMunawwara and Hijaz.  He received his education in the schools of Jedda before studying management and economics in King Abdul Aziz University in Jedda.

Usama bin Ladin during the Jihad in AfghanistanWhile growing up, he developed a strong Muslim belief of Islamic law.  From this belief emerged the necessity for armed struggle preceded by Da'wa and military preparation in order to repel the greater Kufr, and to cooperate with Muslims in order to unite their word under the banner of monotheism, and to set aside divisions and differences. His great struggle began in 1973 when he started interacting with a number of Islamic groups and would continue for several years. During this time he also acquired his personal fortune running the family construction business.

A short time after Jan. 11, 1979, when Soviet troops invaded Afghanistan, bin-Laden left his family's business and set about gathering together his fortune to fund recruitment, transportation and training of a volunteer force of Arab nationals to fight alongside the existing Afghan mujahedin. He felt that it was his sense of duty to do so, since the Soviets actions had deeply offended him as a Muslim. His new volunteer group was named 'The Islamic Salvation Front.'

When the Soviet Union was forced out of Afghanistan in 1989, bin-Laden returned to the family construction business. As for his, Islamic Salvation Front, its aid which had been coming from the United States to fight the Soviets ended, and was unit was disbanded. In recent years, bin-Laden has down-played the U.S. involvement in his victory against the Soviets, to ensure most of the credibility for the success rests with him and his forces.

Bin-Laden was dealt a severe blow from his homeland in 1994 when the Saudi Arabian government seized his passport after Egypt, Algeria and Yemen accused him of financing subversive activities. This forced him to flee for Sudan, where the National Islamic Front (NIF) leader Hassan al-Turabi welcomed him.

While residing in Sudan, bin-Ladin financed and help set up at least three terrorist training camps in cooperation with the NIF, and his construction company worked directly with Sudanese military officials to transport and supply terrorists training in such camps.

But in May 1996, he suffered another blow when Sudanese officials, for "harming the image" of the country, expelled him. Bin-Laden maintained in several interviews that he left out of mere courtesy to Sudanese authorities.

From May 1996 onwards, the exact whereabouts of bin-Laden remain a mystery. Rumours ranged from him living in Yemen, to him living in Saudi Arabia with a false passport, to him being captured in Afghanistan. His exact location has not often been substantiated. He is known to have given interviews at a remote, well-guarded, camp in Afghanistan on at least two occasions. 

His known activities have been established during interviews, mainly with Middle-Eastern reporters and on three occasion of the release of Fatwa's in April 1996, February 1997 and February 1998. Each one threatened a Holy War (Jihad) against the U.S. forces in Saudi Arabia and the Holy Lands, each one called for Muslims to concentrate on "destroying, fighting and killing the enemy."

 III. Crimes that Osama bin-Laden may have been connected to
Osama Bin Laden

Although bin-Laden has made numerous threats against the United States personnel in the 'Holy Land' regions he has not yet been indicted for any such crimes. However, rumours and investigations by the United States government believe that bin-Laden financed, and possibly "encouraged" some of the most devastating terrorist attacks in recent years. These include:

Blupulse.gif (341 bytes) World Trade Center Bombing, February 26th, 1993
Osama Bin Laden

-- When the World Trade Center was bombed in February 1993, the United States was stunned by the ferocity and strength of that blast. Six people died in the explosion and more than 1,000 people were injured. Until then, there hadn't been a major terrorist attack on U.S. soil.

Four people, Mohammad Salameh, Nidal Ayyad, Mahmud Abouhalima and Ahmad Mohammad Ajaj were later arrested and charged. They were convicted and each sentenced to 240 years of imprisonment without the possibility of parole on March 4th, 1994.

On February 8th, 1995, nearly two years after the bombing suspect Ramzi Ahmed Yousef was arrested in a Pakistan guesthouse by local authorities before being turned over to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Yousef had been indicted two years earlier on March 11th, 1993. The owner of the guesthouse was a member of the bin-Laden family, whether it was Osama bin-Laden himself, or as some reports indicate -- his brother-in-law -- remain to be proven.

 Blupulse.gif (341 bytes) Riyadh Bombing, November 13th, 1995
Osama Bin Laden

-- At 11:30am of November 13th, a car bomb exploded at around a Saudi Arabian National Guard training facility in the middle of the Saudi capital Riyadh killing five Americans and two Indians. Sixty people were injured in the blast, 34 of them Americans. Two groups claimed responsibility, including the Tigers of the Gulf who also stated, "If the Americans don't leave the Kingdom as soon as possible we will continue our actions". The other group, the Islamic Movement for Change.

Four Saudi nationals were later arrested, charged and sentenced for the bombing. Abdul Aziz Bin Fahd Bin Nasser Al-Mothem, Khalid Bin Ahmed Bin Ibrahim Al-Sa'eed, Riyadh Bin Suleiman Bin Is'haq Al-Hajeri and Muslih Bin Ayedh Al-Shemrani all pleaded guilty and were executed by beheading on May 30th 1996. They had also been involved in numerous other assassination and kidnapping plots, all of which had failed.

During the ABC interview, bin-Laden expressively praised the four who carried out the Riyadh attack. Bin-Ladin said that they had, "raised the head of the Muslim nation high, and washed away some of the dishonor we had to bear by the Saudi government's collaboration with the American government in the land of Allah," in other words, the murder of Americans made them a martyr. However, once again no firm evidence stands implicating Osama bin-Laden in this crime.

Blupulse.gif (341 bytes) Dhahran, Al-Khobar Bombing, June 25th, 1998
Osama Bin Laden

-- Al-Khobar was the most destructive of the three bombings. A large explosion ripped through a U.S. Air Force housing complex at the King Abdul Aziz Airbase near Dhahran, Saudi Arabia killing 19 servicemen and injuring at least 300 others. Security guards who witnessed the explosion said that a 5,000 gallon diesel truck had backed up to a dormitory that housed U.S. personnel and two people got out. The two proceeded to then escape in a small white car at which time the security ordered an immediate evacuation of the area. Three minutes later an explosion blasted a crater 10 meters (35 feet) deep and 30 meters (85 feet) wide. Buildings as far as 5 kilometers (3 miles) away had been damaged.

Later, explosive experts determined that 4,000 lbs. of TNT had been used. Saudi defense officials at the scene were quoted as saying that it was a terrorist act directed at the foreign presence in the Kingdom. They would also reveal that three groups had claimed responsibility for the bombing, one of them again being the Islamic Movement for Change. Final determination of those responsible for the Khobar attack has been slow in coming.

 Blupulse.gif (341 bytes) Aside from those described, bin-Laden may have had some involvement in the following acts of terrorism:
Osama Bin Laden

- The December 1992 hotel bombings in Yemen that targeted U.S. servicemen on their way to Somalia as part of a U.N. force.

- The attempted assassination in June 1993 of Jordan's Crown Prince Abdullah.

- The attempted assassination in June 1995 of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in Sudan.

- Bombing of Egypt's embassy in Pakistan later in November 1996 that killed 17 people.

 IV. The John Miller Interview of May 1998
Osama Bin Laden

John Miller of ABC television interviewed Osama bin-Laden on May 26th this year in his hideout in the mountains of Afghanistan. The 'Nightline' program aired the interview on June 6th, sending a very explicit threat to the American population, "leave Saudi Arabia or die." Osama bin-Laden is not unaccustomed to making such threats against Americans, he has been doing it for years, this time however, he was more aggressive than ever before.

The interview came after the release of his Fatwa in April, declaring a holy war or 'Jihad', against American Forces in Saudi Arabia. Responding to the threat, the Federal Bureau of Investigation issued cautions suggesting 'increased attention in routine anti-terrorism planing' by security personnel. The Awareness of National Security and Response (ANSIR) program run by the FBI issued a warning about the threat. And later on June 4th following a press conference with bin-Laden in Khorst, The Department of State (DoS) issued a warning advising U.S. citizens to be alert and inconspicuous when travelling in the Middle East and Indian subcontinent.

Two day's later, ABC aired the interview.

"Thanks be to Allah..." bin-Laden begins, demonstrating a strong belief for the Muslim religion. A faith he goes on to say, calls for him to wage the holy war and kill Americans:

"Allah is the one who created us and blessed us with this religion, and orders us to carry out the holy struggle 'Jihad' to raise the word of Allah above the words of the unbelievers."

Osama bin-Laden makes it clear at this point that his actions and the actions of other Muslims will be justified by 'Allah'. He is stirring a sense of duty amongst Muslims. At the same time, he also strongly dispels any western notion that his return to Islam is for financial gain:

"Allah ordered us in this region to purify the Muslim land of all non-believers, and especially in the Arabian Peninsula... We believe that the biggest thieves in the world and the terrorists are the Americans ... We do not differentiate between those dressed in military uniforms and civilians; they are all targets in this Fatwa."

The non-differentiation between civilians and soldiers makes the threat all the more explicit. Past interviews have never been so specific. However, bin-Laden never says anything without justification or a precedent, this time the killing of women and children with Atomic weapons at the end of World War II provides him with an excuse to do the same. An example he has used before when trying to defame American forces.

Although sufficient evidence for conviction isn't available, bin-Laden is thought to be connected with several bombings of recent years, one of them being the World Trade Center. During the interview when Miller asked bin-laden if he knew convicted bomber Ramzi Yousef, who was arrested in a guest house owned by the bin-Laden family, he replied, "Unfortunately I did not know him before the incident. I remember him as a Muslim who defended Islam from American aggression".


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"A Muslim" in bin-Laden's eyes is his equal, there are no leaders in Islam. The Islamic religion forms a strong brotherhood and instances of Muslims helping out strangers to the point of sharing their house are not uncommon. ERRI's Senior Analyst Clark Staten said that, "There is evidence that he was associated with Yousef, including the fact that Yousef was arrested in a property allegedly owned by bin-Laden. We believe that bin-Laden supports a variety of terrorists and terrorist causes, in a number of ways, often at 'arms length'..."

Bin-Laden probably didn't know Yousef personally, before the 'incident', but which incident is bin-Laden referring too? Could he mean the arrest, or could he purposely be speaking ambiguously, inferring that he might have known him after the WTC bombing?

Answering these questions is impossible because bin-Laden, if he did contact and harbour Yousef after the bombing, is not about to implicate himself publicly for fear of retribution if ever he is arrested. Similar questions arise from the answers he gives when pressed about the Riyadh and Al-Khobar bombings. He only says that the perpetrators are heroes amongst Muslims, and did great service to Allah, but is never about his role.

Even though enough evidence does not present itself for his conviction, bin-Laden is undeniably guilty of threatening the United States:

"... Can the America government explain to its people when a SAM missile is launched against a passenger military airplane with 250 soldiers aboard? Can they justify their deaths? What the Saudi Arabian government captured is much less than what was not captured. The American government, if it has anything left to hang on to, has no choice but to pull its sons from the Holy Land..."

It may seem unbelievable that terrorists have weapons such as SAM's at their disposal, but ERRI's senior analyst Clark Staten says the possibility of bin-Laden's mujahedin possessing at least a limited number of ground-to- air missiles is very real. Stinger missiles, for example, were left with the insurgency in Afghanistan by the U.S. for the fight against the Soviets. Equivalent equipment from the former Soviet Union (SA-7, SA-9, etc.) can also be purchased fairly easily on the black-market in a number of Mid-East and S.W Asian countries. Bin-Laden is in effect biting the hand that fed him in the early 1980's.

Staten also believes that bin-Laden is belaboring a myth that he and his insurgents can actually take on the U.S. and win. "Many terrorist leaders are 'meglomanical' in their view of the world. Because they have been successful in small terrorist actions, they somehow believe that they can prevail in larger conflicts with countries like the United States," he said.

Bin-Laden has never directly said that he would stage a direct conflict between Muslims and the United States, but his constant hounding of American low-morale leads one to think that he believes the U.S. would be easy to defeat. He draws upon the example of Somalia:

"The youth [Muslim mujahedin in Somalia] were surprised at the low morale of the American soldier and realized more than before that the American soldiers are paper tigers. After a few blows, they ran in defeat..."

More like a 'sleeping grizzly bear' than a 'paper tiger', ERRI Risk Analyst Steve Macko said during an interview. He points out that the only reason the U.S. pulled out from Somalia was, "If they want to kill themselves, let them. This is not worth spilling American blood over."

"Americans complain and groan ... but if there is an event that angers the American people, there is no stopping them from achieving victory," he added. If bin-Laden had a clear view on the situation, would he be taking on the U.S.? Probably yes.

Throughout his life, bin-Laden held his faith in the religion of Islam high, at whatever cost. In the interview:

"Allah is the one who created us and blessed us with this religion, and orders us to carry out the holy struggle 'Jihad' to raise the word of Allah above the words of the unbelievers."

Even though bin-Laden can't possibly win a conventional war against the U.S., he will forever be compelled to wage a 'Jihad' using whatever means necessary. But some western analysts say that his driving force is less than holy, and is in fact, financial. Staten agrees to a small extent that this may be true, but like most terrorists he says bin-Laden probably has 'mixed motivations', "although most of his actions seem rooted in Muslim religious fanaticism. He is maybe receiving financing from state sponsors or others with an Islamic bent, but that is often not what drives him..."


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Bin-Laden himself was also quick to dispel this judgment of him:

"...to Westerners and secularists in the Arab world who claim the reason for the awakening and the return of to Islam is financial difficulties. This is untrue. In fact, the return of the people to Islam is a blessing from Allah, and their return is a need for Allah."

V. The Latest Fatwa's
Osama Bin Laden

Bin-Laden's 'Jihad' is not without it's supporters from other terrorist leaders. In the much talked about Fatwa's, several known terrorist group leaders signed the decree aligning themselves with him. These included Ayman al-Zawahiri, amir of the Jihad Group in Egypt; Abu- Yasir Rifa'i Ahmad Taha, a leader of the Egyptian Islamic Group and Fazlul Rahman, amir of the Jihad Movement in Bangladesh.

The first one for 1998 was released in February and was published in the Al-Quds al-Arabi newspaper under the title, "Kill Americans Everywhere." Largely unknown to the western world, bin-Laden told Muslims that to, "kill the Americans and their allies - civilians and military - is an individual duty for every Muslim who can do it in any country in which it is possible to do, in order to liberate the al-Aqsa Mosque and the holy mosque (Mecca) from their grip..." This February Fatwa was in comparison small, to the one that followed in April 1998.

Originally sent in 1996 after the bombing of Al-Khobar, bin-Laden re-sent the, "DECLARATION OF WAR AGAINST THE AMERICANS OCCUPYING THE LAND OF THE TWO HOLY PLACES," Fatwa to his "Muslim Brethern" all over the world. The 27-page document was more of a Jihad manifesto than a specific threat towards the United States, filled with quotes from the Islamic Koran relating to Allah's stance on intruders in the holy-land. But again, bin-Laden was threatening to attack U.S. forces. Click here to see EmergencyNet News' previous report on Bin-Laden and "fatwas."

VI. Conclusion
Osama Bin Laden

Osama bin-Laden has threatened to attack the U.S., whether this eventuates remains to be seen. He hasn't formally been connected with the bombings of the World Trade Center in New York, the bombing in Riyadh or the bombing of Al-Khobar, through lack of evidence. Only rumours and hearsay exists. The reason for this is because he is well protected from the western world by his associates (whether they be terrorists or not) in Afghanistan, who are merely protecting the hand that feeds them.

The only indication of where an attack may occur next is in the ABC interview. Somewhere in the Hejaz and Najd regions of Saudi Arabia, the holy lands. Specifically where is not known, but the event will no doubt be horrendous.

Although he taunts the United States by specifically inferring the target may be an American aircraft, this could only be a scare tactic, because the interview was merely for propaganda purposes. Subversive propaganda purposes that are designed to motivate Muslim fanatics around the world into carrying out violent acts against American soldiers and civilians. This unfortunately, is how people like Osama bin-Laden operate.

Reltinfo.gif (823 bytes)  Click on the title to see the related ERRI story:

February 21, 1997 - Vol. 3, No. 052 -- Saudi Dissident and Fundamentalist Supporter Threatens U.S.

July 25, 1997 - Vol. 3, No. 206 -- Osama Bin Laden Bides His Time; To Strike The U.S. Again?

June 16, 1998 - Special Report -- Saudi Arabia: Bin-Ladin, Others Sign Fatwa To 'Kill Americans' Everywhere

 (c) Copyright, EmergencyNet NEWS Service, 1998. All Rights Reserved. Redistribution without prior permission of ERRI is prohibited by law.

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Abu Abdullah Usama bin Ladin

Rogue Warrior - Richard Marcinko, Navy Seal - living legend

The skyline of Manhattan, with and without the World Trade towers, is seen from Brooklyn in these photos taken Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2001, top, and Aug. 14, 2000, bottom. Hijacked commercial aircraft crashed into the towers Tuesday, causing their collapse. The smoke in the top photo is from fires still burning in the rubble of what was once the site of the towers. (AP Photos/Kathy Willens, Fernando Llano)

 
Tuesday, 11 September, 2001, 18:35 GMT 19:35 UK
Osama Bin Laden

Osama Bin Laden is both one of the CIA's most wanted men, and a hero for many young people in the Arab world.

He and his associates are being sought by the US on charges of international terrorism, including in connection with the 1998 bombing of American embassies in Africa and this year's attack on the USS Cole in Yemen.

Shadowy figure
> Born in Saudi Arabia
> Fought against Soviets
   in Afghanistan
> Ploughed inherited
   fortune into armed
   activities
> Rarely seen in public
> Reported to have at
   least three wives

In May this year a US jury convicted four men believed to be linked with Mr. Bin Laden of plotting the embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania.

Mr. Bin Laden, an immensely wealthy and private man, has been granted a safe haven by Afghanistan's ruling Taleban movement.

During his time in hiding, he has called for a holy war against the US, and for the killing of Americans and Jews. He is reported to be able to rally around him up to 3,000 fighters.

He is also suspected of helping to set up Islamic training centres to prepare soldiers to fight in Chechnya and other parts of the former Soviet Union.

Sponsored by US and Pakistan
Osama Bin Laden

His power is founded on a personal fortune earned by his family's construction business in Saudi Arabia.
Attacks linked to Bin Laden
> 1993 World Trade
   Centre bomb
> 1996 Killing of 19 US
   soldiers in Saudi
> Nairobi and Dar es
   Salaam bombs
> 2000 Attack on USS
   Cole in Yemen

Born in Saudi Arabia to a Yemeni family, Mr. Bin Laden left Saudi Arabia in 1979 to fight against the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.

The Afghan Jihad was backed with American dollars and had the blessing of the governments of Saudi Arabia and Pakistan.

He received security training from the CIA itself, according to Middle Eastern analyst Hazhir Teimourian.

While in Afghanistan, he founded the Maktab al-Khidimat (MAK), which recruited fighters from around the world and imported equipment to aid the Afghan resistance against the Soviet army.

Egyptians, Lebanese, Turks and others - numbering thousands in Mr. Bin Laden's estimate - joined their Afghan Muslim brothers in the struggle against an ideology that spurned religion.

Turned against the US
Osama Bin Laden

After the Soviet withdrawal, the "Arab Afghans", as Mr. Bin Laden's faction came to be called, turned their fire against the US and its allies in the Middle East.

Mr. Bin Laden returned to Saudi Arabia to work in the family construction business, but was expelled in 1991 because of his anti-government activities there. watch a video interview with osama bin laden

He spent the next five years in Sudan until US pressure prompted the Sudanese Government to expel him, whereupon Mr. Bin Laden returned to Afghanistan.

Terrorism experts say Mr. Bin Laden has been using his millions to fund attacks against the US.

The US State Department calls him "one of the most significant sponsors of Islamic extremist activities in the world today".

According to the US, Mr. Bin Laden was involved in at least three major attacks - the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, the 1996 killing of 19 US soldiers in Saudi Arabia, and the 1998 bombings in Kenya and Tanzania.

Islamic front
Osama Bin Laden

BBC correspondent James Robbins says Mr. Bin Laden had "all but admitted involvement" in the Saudi Arabia killings.

Some experts say he is part of an international Islamic front, bringing together Saudi, Egyptian and other groups.

Their rallying cry is the liberation of Islam's three holiest places - Mecca, Medina and Jerusalem.

The few outsiders who have met Osama Bin Laden describe him as modest, almost shy. He rarely gives interviews.

He is believed to be in his 40s, and to have at least three wives.

Osama Bin Laden's Vow:  To Kill Americans
Exclusive ABCnews Interview ... June, 1998

The threat, two months ago, was taken seriously: the State Department reinforced U.S. military bases and warned all Americans traveling in the Mideast to be extremely cautious.

U.S. troops will leave Saudi Arabia when Islamic terrorists “send the bodies of American troops and civilians home in wooden boxes and coffins,” Osama bin Laden vowed in an exclusive interview with ABCNEWS Correspondent John Miller.

Rogue Warrior - Richard Marcinko, Navy Seal - living legend

“We don’t differentiate between those dressed in military uniforms and civilians. They are all targets in this fatwa.”  Today, the United States struck at what it said were terrorist bases linked to him.


ABCNEWS' John Miller spoke with Osama bin Laden
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He Organized a Terror Summit
bin Laden recently convened a meeting of fundamentalist extremists and sponsors of terrorism. More than 150 clerics named themselves the “International Islamic Front for the
Jihad against Jews and Crusaders,” and issued a variety of fatwas. But bin Laden’s is the one that most concerns U.S. security analysts.

A multi-millionaire who runs a private terror network of Islamic extremists from a hideaway in the mountains of Afghanistan, bin Laden threatened to attack American women and children as well as soldiers if necessary. He said his people were well-equipped, with an arsenal that includes surface-to-air missiles, and would strike within the next few weeks. One possible date: June 20, the anniversary of the bombing in al Khobar that killed 19 U.S. servicemen.

“Osama bin Laden may be the most dangerous non-state terrorist in the world and we certainly have discussed that with the Saudis, who will take every precaution,” National Security Advisor Sandy Berger told ABCNEWS.

He Has a Global Reach
No idle talk from a man who has become a folk hero—as well as a principal funder of terrorist activity—for a growing number of Muslim extremists. bin Laden has been linked to almost every Muslim extremist movement in the world in the last five years, according to Vince Cannistraro, who tracked extremists around the globe when he was the counter-terrorism chief at the Central Intelligence Agency.

“He is a role model for a lot of Islamic militants in the world today. I mean, his personal story is so compelling to them,” says Cannistraro, an ABCNEWS consultant.

bin Laden, an exiled Saudi national who now enjoys the protection of Afghanistan’s hard-line Taliban regime, says the Saudi royalty has committed a crime against Islam by allowing the U.S. military to occupy bases in Saudi Arabia. bin Laden has committed himself—and his considerable wealth—to expelling all Americans and Jews from Muslim holy lands, and to overthrowing the Saudi royal family along the way.

A Track Record of Terror Usama bin Ladin
Why does the U.S. take bin Laden’s threats so seriously? First, he has money. His family’s construction business is worth $5 billion. Second, he has experienced troops who fought with him on the front lines against the Russians in the Afghan war. Third, he has a track record.

U.S. intelligence officials believe bin Laden supplied the troops and rocket launchers that shot down U.S. helicopters in Mogadishu, Somalia in October 1993, killing 18 servicemen. They also believe he is behind the November 1995 bombing of a Saudi base in Riyadh that killed six Americans.

And he has been linked to Ramzi Yousef, the convicted mastermind of the World Trade Center bombing. Yousef was living in a guest house in Pakistan paid for by bin Laden at the time of his capture—a connection that lead the FBI to investigate whether bin Laden was also the mysterious source of money behind the bombing. Yousef had access to money from several bank accounts that traced from Jersey City to Pakistan, and investigators are trying to tie bin Laden to those accounts.

When asked about the Riyadh bombing and other specific attacks, bin Laden refuses to answer directly. But he does praise the bombers: “We look at these young men as great heroes and martyrs who followed the steps of the prophet, peace be upon him. We called and they answered.”

Training Terror’s Next Generation
It is what bin Laden can do for the Ramzi Yousefs of tomorrow that worries American authorities. The FBI believes that bin Laden has set up what is in essence a foundation, where any terrorist can apply for what amounts to a grant.

“That’s why this is a new phenomenon,” says Cannistraro. “It’s not a state putting unlimited resources at the disposal of a group that only does the state’s bidding…A group can con someone like bin Laden for funds to carry out an operation on an individual basis. And he will do it as long as he thinks it fits in with his religious objectives.”

Meanwhile, ABCNEWS has learned the FBI has been secretly talking with someone who knows a lot about bin Laden’s operations—Wali Khan. Khan, who was convicted with Ramzi Yousef of plotting to blow up U.S. airliners over the Pacific, has told the FBI he was a key organizer for bin Laden’s terrorist operations, including a plot to kill President Clinton and the Pope on their visits to Manila.

Stopping Him Won’t be Easy
Asked if Khan was doing his bidding, bin Laden replied: “Wali Khan is a Muslim youth. In Afghanistan he was nicknamed ‘The Lion.’ He is one of the best youths. We were good friends. We fought together in the same trench against the Russians.”

In recent speeches, President Clinton has taken a tough stance on terrorism, promising swift retaliation for attacks on U.S. citizens. And the State Department has been zeroing in on its search for evidence with which to prosecute bin Laden for his involvement in various plots.

But until the federal grand jury hears enough evidence to indict bin Laden, he won’t have to hide. And if the U.S. does charge him, it will be faced with the challenge of extracting him from his enclave in the remote Afghan mountains, where he is surrounded by as many as 3,000 followers with guns and rocket launchers. The initiative would be the largest of its kind since the U.S. mounted a small war in order to oust Panamanian strongman Manuel Noriega.

In the meantime, the United States is bracing for whatever bin Laden may have planned.

osama bin laden

Yahoo.com links to Osama bin Laden

Press Release Terrorism-International
saudia arabia

Osama bin Laden
August 20, 1998

Osama Bin Laden is a 41 year-old "businessman" and son of one of Saudi Arabia’s wealthiest families, who has been linked to a number of Islamic extremist groups and individuals with vehement anti-American and anti-Israel ideologies. He is a mysterious figure whose exact involvement with terrorists and terrorist incidents remains elusive. Yet his name has surrounded many of the world’s most deadly terrorist operations and he is named by the United States State Department as having financial and operational connections with terrorism. Most recently Bin Laden formed the "International Islamic Front for Jihad against America and Israel."

In 1994 when Bin Laden returned to Saudi Arabia after having spent the two previous years in Khartoum, Sudan allegedly financing such militant Islamic causes as terrorist training camps, he was stripped of his citizenship by Saudi authorities who cited his opposition to the Saudi King and leadership (who enjoy warm relations with the U.S. and the western world). In 1996 it was reported that Bin Laden had relocated to Afghanistan, where he had financed and organized training camps for young Muslim extremists during the Afghan War of the 1980’s.

Rogue Warrior - Richard Marcinko, Navy Seal - living legend
Osama Bin Laden

Bin Laden has been thought to finance, inspire or directly organize various terrorist attacks. In one way or another his name has been linked to the killings of Western tourists by militant Islamic groups in Egypt, bombings in France by Islamic extremist Algerians, the maintenance of a safe-house in Pakistan for Ramzi Ahmed Yousef, the convicted mastermind of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, and sheltering Sheikh Omar Abd Al-Rahman (the Blind Sheikh), who was also convicted in the World Trade Center bombing. He has also been linked to the 1992 bombings of a hotel in Yemen, which killed two Australians, but was supposedly targeted against American soldiers stationed there; the 1995 detonation of a car bomb in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia; the 1995 truck bomb in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia that killed 19 U.S. servicemen; and the 1995 assassination attempt on Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.

Osama Bin Laden has made no secret of his anti-American, anti-Western and anti-Israel sentiments. In fact, he has been outspoken on these topics, issuing theological rulings calling for Muslims to attack Americans and threatening terrorism against related targets:

osama bin laden

Osama Bin Laden’s Threats of Terrorism

bulletAugust 1998  The "International Islamic Front for Jihad against America and Israel," a group sponsored by Bin Laden, issues a warning in the London-based newspaper al-Hayat that, "strikes will continue from everywhere" against the United States. (CNN Interactive, 8/20/98)
bulletMay 1998  Bin Laden announces the formation of an "International Islamic Front for Jihad against America and Israel," according to The News, an Islamabad, Pakistan daily. (The International Policy Institute for Counter-Terrorism web site, www.ict.org.il)
bulletMarch 1998  Bin Laden faxes messages to the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad and U.S. consulates in Peshawar, Lahore, and Karachi threatening to attack U.S. facilities and citizens. (The International Policy Institute for Counter-Terrorism web site, www.ict.org.il)
bulletFebruary 1998  Bin Laden uses a fatwa, religious decree, to call for the liberation of Muslim holy places in Saudi Arabia and Israel, as well as the death of Americans and their allies. The decree says, "These crimes and sins committed by the Americans are a clear declaration of war on God, his messenger and Muslims." (The Washington Post, 2/25/98)
bulletMay 1997  During an interview with CNN, Bin Laden reaffirms his call for a holy war against Americans. "We have focused our declaration of Jihad on the U.S. soldiers inside Arabia…The U.S. government has committed acts that are extremely unjust, hideous and criminal through its support of the Israeli occupation of Palestine." (Reuters, 5/11/97)
bulletFebruary 1997  Bin Laden threatens holy war against the U.S. in an interview on the British documentary program, Dispatches. "This war will not only be between the people of the two sacred mosques and the Americans, but it will be between the Islamic world and the Americans and their allies because this war is a new crusade led by America against the Islamic nations." (Reuters, 2/20/97)
bulletNovember 1996  Bin Laden issues an ultimatum to the U.S. and Western countries with troops stationed in Arab countries and declares a holy war against the "enemy."  "Had we wanted to carry out small operations after our threat statement, we would have been able to… We thought that the two bombings in Riyadh and Dhahran would be enough (sic.) a signal to the wise U.S. decision-makers to avoid the real confrontation with the Islamic nation, but it seems they did not understand it." (The Washington Times, 11/28/96)
bulletNovember 1996  Bin Laden warns U.S. forces in Saudi Arabia to expect more "effective, qualitative" attacks and advises Western forces to speed their "departure" from the Middle East. (UPI, 11/27/96)
bulletAugust 1996  Bin Laden says to the London-based al-Quds al-Arabi newspaper that the Saudis have a "legitimate right" to attack the 5,000 American military personnel stationed in Saudi Arabia. "The presence of the American crusader armed forces in the countries of the Islamic Gulf is the greatest danger and the biggest harm that threatens the world’s largest oil reserves… The infidels must be thrown out of the Arabian Peninsula." (The Washington Post, 8/31/96)
bulletAugust 1996  In an interview with The Independent, a London daily, Bin Laden calls the June 1995 truck bomb in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia" the beginning of war between Muslims and the United States." (New York Daily News, 8/11/96)
bulletJuly 1996  Bin Laden warns that the terrorists who bombed American soldiers in Saudi Arabia will also attack British and French military personnel. He said "[the bomb in Dhahran] was the result of American behavior against Muslims, its support of Jews in Palestine, and the massacre of Muslims in Palestine and Lebanon." (New York Times, 7/11/96)

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Fighting for the Cause of Allah (Jihad)

Smoke from the remains of New York's World Trade Center shrouds lower Manhattan as the Statue of Liberty stands in this image taken across New York Harbor from Jersey City, New Jersey, September 12, 2001. Each of the twin towers were hit by hijacked airliners and collapsed in acts of terrorism directed at the United States September 11, 2001. (Ray Stubblebine/Reuters)

Long Biography
Osama Bin Laden

A Biography of Osama Bin Laden

This document was given to FRONTLINE by a source close to bin Laden who would like to remain anonymous. FRONTLINE found it a very useful source of information, but could not independently verify much of the information contained herein. Some of the information is true. However, some of it runs contrary to accounts given by other reliable sources. That said, this document does provide some important details regarding bin Laden and his family life.

The beginnings
-------------------------------

Born 1957 for Syrian mother, Osama bin Laden was the seventh son among fifty brothers and sisters.


Bin Laden the Father
-------------------------------

Note: This letter is published here exactly as in the original translated document given to FRONTLINE. No changes have been made to grammar or punctuation.

His father Mohammed Awad bin Laden came to the kingdom from Hadramout (South Yemen) sometime around 1930. The father started his life as a very poor laborer (porter in Jeddah port), to end up as owner of the biggest construction company in the kingdom. During the reign of King Saud, bin Laden the father became very close to the royal family when he took the risk of building King Saud's palaces much cheaper than the cheapest bid. He impressed King Saud with his performance but he also built good relations with other members of the royal family, especially Faisal. During the Saud-Faisal conflict in the early sixties, bin Laden the father had a big role in convincing King Saud to step down in favor of Faisal. After Saud's departure the treasury was empty and bin Laden was so supportive to King Faisal that he literally paid the civil servants' wages of the whole kingdom for six months. King Faisal then issued a decree that all construction projects should go to bin Laden. Indeed, he was appointed for a period as the minister of public works.

In 1969 the father took the task of rebuilding Al-Aqsa mosque after the fire incident. Interestingly the bin Laden family say that they have the credit of building all the three mosques, because later on their company took over the task of major extension in Mecca and Medina mosques.

The father was fairly devoted Moslem, very humble and generous. He was so proud of the bag he used when he was a porter that he kept it as a trophy in the main reception room in his palace. The father used to insist on his sons to go and manage some projects themselves.

The father had very dominating personality. He insisted to keep all his children in one premises. He had a tough discipline and observed all the children with strict religious and social code. He maintained a special daily program and obliged his children to follow. At the same time the father was entertaining with trips to the sea and desert. He dealt with his children as big men and demanded them to show confidence at young age. He was very keen not to show any difference in the treatment of his children.

Early Life, School and Marriage
-------------------------------

Osama was exposed very early on his age to this experience but he lost his father when he was 13. He married at the age of 17 to a Syrian girl who was a relative. He grew up as religiously committed boy and the early marriage was another factor of protecting him from corruption.

Osama had his primary, secondary and even university education in Jeddah. He had a degree in public administration 1981 from King Abdul-Aziz university in Jeddah. Countries of the Arabian Peninsula, Syria, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Sudan are the only countries he has been to. All stories of trips to Switzerland, Philippines, and London are all unfounded.

Structuring His Mentality
-------------------------------

In addition to the general Islamic commitment he started forming an Islamic responsibility at early age. His father used to host hundreds of pilgrims during Hajj season from al over the world. Some of those were senior Islamic scholars or leaders of Muslim movements. This habit went on even after his father's death through his elder brothers. He used to make good contacts and relations through those gatherings.

At secondary school and university he adopted the main trend of many educated Muslims at that time, Muslim Brotherhood. There was a collection of Muslim scholars in Jeddah and Mecca at that period. There was nothing extraordinary in his personality and that trend was rather very non-confrontational. Interestingly, the 1980 raid in the Grand Mosque in Mecca was not appealing to him, neither the theology or that group. He had two distinguished teachers in Islamic studies, which was a compulsory subject in the university. First was Abdullah Azzam who became later as one of the big names in Afghanistan and the second was Mohammed Quttub, a famous Islamic writer and philosopher.

Afghanistan, The First Encounter
-------------------------------

The first encounter with Afghanistan was as early as the first two weeks of Soviet invasion. He went to Pakistan and was taken by his hosts Jamaat Islami from Karachi to Peshawar to see the refugees and meet some leaders. Some of those leaders like Rabbani and Sayyaf were common faces to him because he met them during Hajj gatherings That trip which was [a] secret trip lasted for almost a month and was an exploratory rather than action trip. He went back to the kingdom and started lobbying with his brothers, relatives and friends at the school to support the mujahedeen. He succeeded in collecting huge amount of money and material as donations to jihad. He made another trip to take this material. He took with him few Pakistanis and Afghanis who were working in bin Laden company for more than ten years. Again, he did not stay more than a month The trip was to Pakistan and the border only and was not to Afghanistan. He went on collecting money and going in short trips once or twice a year until 1982.

Inside Afghanistan
-------------------------------

In 1982 he decided to go inside Afghanistan. He brought with him plenty of the construction machinery and put them at the disposal of the mujahedeen He started spending more and more time in Afghanistan occasionally joining actual battles but not in an organized manner. His presence was encouraging to more Saudis to come but the numbers were still small at that period.

The Guesthouse
-------------------------------

In 1984 he had one further step in strengthening his presence in Afghanistan by establishing the guesthouse in Peshawar (Baitul'ansar). That house was supposed to be the first station of Arab mujahedeen when they come to Afghanistan before going to the front or start training. At that period Osama did not have his own command or training camps. He used to send the newcomers to one of the Afghan factions.

The guesthouse establishment was coinciding with the formation of Jihad Service Bureau by Abdullah Azzam in Peshawar. The Bureau was very active in terms of media, publications and charity work. The Bureau publications were important in attracting more Saudis and Arabs to Afghanistan.

The Camps
-------------------------------

In 1986 Osama decided to have his own camps inside Afghanistan and within two years he built more than six camps. Some were mobilized more than once. He decided to have his own front and to run his own battles with his own command. Among the Arab fighters he had, there were senior Arab ex-military men from Syria and Egypt with good military experience. The story of the guesthouse and the camps was very attractive for more Arab mujahedeen to come and there was a significant surge in their numbers at that period.

In addition to many exchanges of fire and small operations, the first major battle he had face to face with the Soviet army with pure Arab personnel was the battle of Jaji in the province of Baktia 200 kilometers away from Khost. From then until 1989 he had more than five major battles with hundreds of small operations and exchanges of fire. During the period 1984-1989 he was staying more in Afghanistan than Saudi Arabia. He would spend a total of eight months a year or more in Afghanistan.

Al-Qa'edah
-------------------------------

In 1988 he noticed that he was backward in his documentation and was not able to give answers to some families asking about their loved ones gone missing in Afghanistan. He decided to make the matter much more organized and arranged for proper documentation. He made a tracking record of the visitors, be they mujahedeen or charity or simple visitors. Their movement between the guesthouse and the camps had to be recorded as well as their first arrival and final departure. The whole complex was then termed Al-Qa'edah which is an Arabic word meaning "The Base." Al-Qa'edah was very much public knowledge. It was funny to see some people triumphing because they discovered it!

Back to the Kingdom
-------------------------------

Late 1989 after the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan, he went to the kingdom in an ordinary trip. There he was banned from travel and was trapped in the kingdom. The Soviet withdrawal might have been a factor but the main reason for the travel ban were his intentions to start a new "front" of jihad in South Yemen. In addition, he embarrassed the regime by lectures and speeches warning of impending invasion by Saddam. At that time the regime was at very good terms with Saddam. He was instructed officially to keep low profile and not to give public talks. Despite the travel ban he was not hostile to regime at this stage. Indeed he presented a written advice in the form of a detailed, personal, private and confidential letter to the king few weeks before the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait.

After The Iraqi Invasion
-------------------------------

He reacted swiftly to Iraqi invasion and saw it fulfilling his prophecy. He immediately forwarded another letter to the king suggesting in detail how to protect the country from potentially advancing Iraqi forces. In addition to many military tactics suggested, he volunteered to bring all the Arab mujahedeen to defend the kingdom. That letter was presented in the first few days of the incident, and the regime response was of consideration!

While he was expecting some call to mobilize his men and equipment he heard the news which transferred his life completely. The Americans are coming. He always describes that moment as shocking moment. He felt depressed and thought that maneuvers had to change. Instead of writing to the king or approaching other members of the royal family, he started lobbying through religious scholars and Muslim activists. He succeeded in extracting a fatwah from one of the senior scholars that training and readiness is a religious duty. He immediately circulated that fatwah and convinced people to have their training in Afghanistan. It was estimated that 4000 went to Afghanistan in response to the fatwah. The regime was not happy with his activities so they limited his movement to Jeddah only. He was summoned for questioning twice for some of his speeches and activities and was given warnings. To intimidate him, the regime raided his farm in the suburb of Jeddah by the National Guard. He was not there during the raid and was very angry when told. He wrote a letter of protest to Prince Abdullah. Abdullah apologized and claimed he is not aware and promised to punish who ever were responsible.

Fleeing The Kingdom
-------------------------------

Osama was fed up with this almost house arrest situation and did not imagine himself able to stay in the country with the American forces around. One of his brothers was very close to King Fahad and also close to Prince Ahmed, deputy minister of interior. He convinced his brother that he needed to leave the country to sort out some business matters in Pakistan and come back. There was a difficult obstacle, the stubborn Prince Nayef, minister of interior. His brother waited until Nayef went in a trip outside the kingdom and extracted lifting the ban from prince Ahmed. When he arrived in Pakistan around April 1991 he sent a letter to his brother telling him that he is not coming back and apologized for letting him down with the royal family.

In Afghanistan Again
-------------------------------

After his arrival to Pakistan he went straight to Afghanistan because he knew the Pakistani intelligence would hand him back to the Saudis. There, he attended the collapse of the communist regime and the consequent dispute between the Afghan parties. He spent great effort to arbitrate between them but with no success He ordered his followers to avoid any involvement in the conflict and told them it was a sin to side with any faction. During his stay the Saudis tried more than once to kidnap or kill him in collaboration with the Pakistani intelligence. His friends in the Saudi and Pakistani establishments would always leak the plan and make him ready for it. After his failure in sorting the Afghani dispute, he decided to leave Afghanistan. The only alternative country he had was Sudan. He left Afghanistan disguised in private jet only few months after his arrival. That was late 1991.

In Sudan
-------------------------------

His choice of Sudan had nothing to do with jihad or "terrorism." He was attracted to Sudan because of what was at that time an Islamic banner raised by the new regime in Sudan. He wanted to have good refuge as well as help the government in its construction projects. There was no intention from his side or from the Sudanese regime to have any military activity in Sudan. Indeed the Sudanese government refused even sending some of his followers to the front in the south. He was treated in Sudan as a special guest who wanted to help Sudan when everybody was turning away. In Sudan he mobilized a lot of construction equipment and enrolled himself in busy construction projects. He spent good effort in convincing Saudi businessmen to invest in Sudan and had reasonable success. Many of his brothers and Jeddah merchants had and still have investment in real estate, farming and agricultural industry. In Sudan he had again escaped an assassination attempt which turned out later to be the plan of Saudi intelligence.

Somalia and Yemen
-------------------------------

During his stay in Sudan anti-American incidents happened in Somalia and South Yemen. Neither of the two incidents was performed by his group in the proper sense of chain of command. Both were performed by people who had training in Afghanistan and had enough anti-American drive. He might have given some sanctioning to the operations but one thing was certain, the Sudanese were completely unaware of either.

Saudis go anti-bin Laden
-------------------------------

Between his arrival to Sudan and early 1994 he was not regarded publicly as Saudi opposition and Saudi citizens were visiting him without too much precautions. Only the well-informed people would know that he was classified as enemy to the Saudi regime. His assets were frozen sometime between 1992 and 1994 but that was not published. The Saudis decided to announce their hostility early 1994 when they publicized withdrawing his citizenship.

Bin Laden Goes anti-Saudi
-------------------------------

After long silence and tolerance, bin Laden replied by issuing a communiqué condemning the Saudi decision and saying that he does not need the "Saudi" reference to identify himself and it is not up to Al-Saud to admit or expel people from Arabian Peninsula. He then formed together with activists and scholars from the kingdom a group called "Advice and Reform Committee" (ARC). The ARC was, according to its communiqués and published agenda, a purely political group. The ARC published around 17 communiqués which might have contained harsh criticism of the Saudi regime and plenty of religious rhetoric but never contained reference for violence or incitment of violence.

Riyadh Bombing
-------------------------------

The car bomb in spring 1995 in Riyadh was the first major anti-American action in the kingdom. Bin Laden never claimed responsibility, but the Saudi government tried to link the incident to bin Laden by showing video confessions of four "Arab Afghans" involved in the bombing.

Out of Sudan
-------------------------------

Sudan was exposed to huge international pressure for hosting bin Laden and his followers, and bin Laden felt that he is becoming an embarrassment to the Sudanese. Early in 1996 he started making contacts with his old friends in Afghanistan to prepare for his reception. He fled Sudan in a very well planned trip with many of his followers to go straight to Jalalabad in Eastern Afghanistan.

In Afghanistan Third Time
-------------------------------

When he arrived there, the situation in Afghanistan was very unsettled between the many factions, but he had very good relations with all factions and all would protect him. The area he arrived to was under control of Yunis Khalis, a very influential warlord who later on joined Taliban.

The Khobar Bombing
-------------------------------

June 1996, after his arrival in Afghanistan was the Khobar bombing. Nobody claimed responsibility, but sources from inside the Saudi ministry of interior confirmed involvement of Arab Afghans, with possible link to bin Laden The Saudi government wanted to frame Shi'a, at the beginning but Americans were very suspicious of the Saudi story. Bin Laden himself never claimed responsibility but gave many hints that he might have been involved. The Saudi government has acknowledged recently that bin Laden's men were behind the bombing.

Jihad Against America
-------------------------------

After few months of his arrival he issued his first anti-American message, a Declaration of War. That declaration was limited to expelling American forces outside the Arabian Peninsula. His sense of security and nobody to embarrass must have been the drive to release that 12 page declaration. Interest in him by the Saudis never stopped and they tried very hard to convince Yunis Khalis to hand him over, and he flatly refused despite the luxurious offers.

Under Taliban
-------------------------------

Taliban swept Jalalabad late 1996, almost without war, and bin Laden came under their control. He was optimistic that they will give him sanctuary but he was not sure. He was surprised when a delegation of Taliban came to meet him by order of Mullah Omer, the leader of Taliban, with instructions to reassure him that he will have even better protection under Taliban. The delegation expressed Taliban honor of protecting somebody like him who sacrificed a lot for the sake of jihad.