BIOGRAPHY OF Osama Bin Laden

                                                              
                                             BIOGRAPHY OF Osama Bin Laden

Osama bin Laden He was the world’s most wanted internationalterrorist – the Svengali like leader at the helm of a violent political movement thatbrought havoc and destruction the world over. His name became instantly familiar – Osamabin Laden. We all recognized his image; the long, drawnface, the scraggly beard, the turban. Yet, discovering the man behind the imagehas never been easy, causing him to be referred to as a ‘fact-checker’s nightmare.’ Only now, 6 years after his death, are weable to piece together a complete profile of the life and death of the man at the fore-frontof a violent political movement that significantly impacted our world. In this week’s Biographix, we discover thetruth about Osama bin Laden. * * *

 Formative YearsOsama bin Laden was born into a wealthy indisutrialist family in the city of Riyadah in 1957. His father, Mohammed bin Laden, was a builderand contractor, who, during his lifetime had eleven wives and at least fifty-two children. His mother was a petite Syria woman. Mohammed was an ambitious businessman whohad brought his family from Yemen to Saudi Arabia in the hopes of both advancing hisown professional opportunities and providing opportunities for his sons. Things went well, and the elder bin Ladenbuilt importanat social relatoonships and forged enduring bonds with notable membersof Saudi society, including members of the House of Saud – Saudi Arabia’s rulingfamily. Mohammed built the bin Laden ConstructionCorporation into one of the largest and most profitable construction businesses in theMiddle East. As he became more successful, Mohammad furtherstrengthened his bond with the Saudi Royal family. He used his money and influence to bolsterthe image of the House of Saud. In return, King Faisal decreed that all thenation’s construction contracts would be awarded to the bin Laden Corporation. Mohammad bin Laden died in a plane crash in1967. 

The ten-year-old Osama was told at the funeralby King Faisal that ‘today I have lost my right hand.’ The Construction Corporation was taken overby Osama’s older brothers. By the mid-1990’s it was worth around $36billion. Osama was groomed to enter the family business. After successfully completing high school,he furthered his education at King Abdul Aziz University. There he studied economics and managementwith an eye to a future in business. He also learned the behind-the-scenes dynamicsof the family enterprise.

 Unlike Osama, most of his brothers chose toattend Western Universities where they were not constricted by Islamic tradition. This was particularly true of Osama’s half-brotherSalim. Known for his good looks and charm, Salimwas educated in London and flew his own private plane. In the early 1970’s, Osama, now in his mid-teens,began to enjoy the excesses of wealth. He would regularly make the trip to Beirut,Lebanon to take in the excitement of the city’s fast-paced nightlife. He spent hours frequenting bars, nightclubsand casinos and often drank more than he should have. He also began enjoying the company of beautifulyoung women. Spiritual AwakeningAround 1975, however, Osama bin Laden had a spiritual rebirth, causing him to returnto Islam with a fervent devotion that altered his goals and lifestyle dramatically. 

It began when he decided to help with restorationwork on two mosques. At the same time, he began meeting with Islamicfundamentalists and reading more about the teachings of Islam. Within weeks he had disowned his former looseway of life and become a devout Muslim. At the age of twenty, Osama entered an arrangedmarriage with a devout Syrian woman who was a distant cousin. Together they immersed themselves in IslamicFundamentalism, rejecting Western values and priorities and condemning its greatest proponent,the United States. When Saudi Arabia’s King Faisal was killedby his deranged nephew, bin Laden’s anti-American sentiments were reinforced. The king’s nephew had been educated in theUnited States and had become completely westernized. Bin Laden was thrilled when, in 1979, a fundamentalistreligious leader known as Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini overthrew the Shah of Iran, who wasseen as a puppet of the United States. For the first time, Islamic fundamentalistshad seized a Muslim country and established an Islamic state. It gave undeniable proof that radical Islamicforces could prevail over Western decadency. Then, towards the end of 1979, the SovietUnion invaded the largely Muslim nation of Afghanistan. Soviet forces were ruthless, pouring overwhelmingfire power on the Afghanistan resistance. 

They killed the Afghanistan president, andput their own government in place. Middle Eastern Arab nations were alarmed. They were all sympathetic to the Afghani cause,but knew that none of them had the ability to take on the Soviet war machine. Yet, Islamic fundamentalist militants weredetermined to do something. Ousting the Soviets and restoring Islam inits purest sense fit their definition of jihad, or Holy War. Thousands of young men, united by Islam ratherthan national boundaries, travelled to Afghanistan to risk their lives for their beliefs. Among them was Osama bin Laden. Afghanistan The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan was theimpetus that took Osama bin Laden out of his comfortable life of privilege and into hisreincarnation as a freedom fighter. Yet, unlike many others, he did not unthinkinglygrab an AK-47 and rush off to the desert to join the guerrilla army. 

His first stop was Pakistan, where he setup a recruitment station to bring Muslims from surrounding Arab nations to the causeof jihad. It soon became clear that his business backgroundand money were going to be a huge asset. He organized training camps where the recruitslearned the art of strategic warfare. Bin Laden knew that the thousands of eageryoung men he was gathering together needed a support network. So, he also began recruiting doctors, bombexperts, military strategists and engineers from all over the Arab world. His family’s building background impelledhim to build the infrastructure that would be needed to defeat the Soviets. Men who had come to fight soon found themselvesdigging trenches, paving roads and building hospitals and depots. During the 1980’s, bin Laden was instrumentalin bringing together in Afghanistan and nearby areas of Pakistan more than twenty-five thousandMuslim fighters from at least thirty-five countries across the Muslim world. Yet, support also came from the most unlikelyof places – the United States. 

The U.S. was fixated on stopping Soviet expansionand so were willing to support Islamic efforts to remove the Communist invaders from Afghanistan. Despite their hatred of the United States,the jihadists gladly accepted their backing – after all, it meant money, weapons andsupplies. Still, they made sure that the Americans stayedwell clear of their operations. One Islamic intelligence officer noted that‘no American instructor was ever involved in giving training on any kind of weapon orequipment to the mujahideen,’ or holy fighters. Bin Laden was instrumental in securing fromthe United States ‘stingers’, which were heat seeking ground-to-air missiles with theability to bring down a Soviet fighter plane. With the aid of American stingers, bin Laden’smen could bring down at least 270 Soviet aircraft. Through their fixation on defeating the Sovietsby whatever means necessary, the U.S, was creating a monster. As well as bringing money, resources and organizationalskill to the jihadist cause, bin Laden fought alongside his fellow jihadists. 

One of his troops recalled . . . He was a hero to us because he was on thefront line, always moving ahead of everybody else. He not only gave us money, but he also gavehimself. He came down from his palace to live withthe Afghan peasants and the Arab fighters. He cooked with them, ate with them, dug trencheswith them. That was bin Laden’s way. Bin Laden was not afraid of death, convincedthat there was a special place in the hereafter for those who participated in jihad. He often stated that one day of fighting inAfghanistan was like a thousand days of praying in an ordinary mosque. As a result, he was more than willing to becomea martyr for the cause. Conquering HeroIn 1989, after a painful decade, the Soviets finally withdrew from Afghanistan. Osama bin Laden returned to Saudi Arabia withthe reputation of a jihadist hero. He was hugely popular amongst the common people,and the ruling family saw friendship with him as a way to quell criticism from Islamicfundamentalists, who saw them as too western. 

Bin Laden milked his hero status for all itwas worth. He spoke at mosques and other places, oftendrawing large crowds of young men who were inspired to help create an Islamic fundamentalistworld. His speeches, filled with venom against theUnited States, were often taped, with over a million copies circulating around the Mulsimworld. Despite returning to the rich embrace of hisfamily, Osama did not avail himself of the lavish lifestyle that was available to him. He moved into a modest apartment with hiswife and children and did his best to live according to strict Islamic teachings. 

Yet, a fire was smouldering inside him. That fire was inflamed in August 1990 whenIraqi leader Saddam Hussein invaded the neighbouring nation of Kuwait, with Saudi Arabia lookingto be his next target. Panic arose in the House of Saudi. Bin Laden stepped up to offer his assistance,his experience in Afghanistan allowed him to map out a battle strategy to save his country. 

He was determined that any Iraqi aggressionwould be met my Muslim forces alone. To call on the West for help would be, heargued, contrary to Islamic teachings and demoralizing to the nation. Bin Laden warned the Saudi government thatassistance from the U.S. would mean that Islamic fundamentalists would withdraw their support. But Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Défense,Prince Sultan knew that even bin Laden’s forces could not defend his country from theair, naval or chemical and biological weapons attacks that Saddam Hussein had at his disposal. One one occasion, bin Laden burst in the Prince’soffice and yelled, There is no need for American troops! Yet, when the prince asked him how he wouldsave the people from an Iraqi chemical weapon attack, he could only reply . . . We will defeat them with our faith. The Saudi Government did turn to the UnitedStates for help. The result was the Gulf War – a U.S. ledWestern assault on Iraq. Saddam was pushed back and his threat negated. However, to the outrage of bin Laden and hisfundamentalist followers, U.S. military forces remained in the region in case Saddam madeany further aggressive moves. The House of Saudi, who had not long beforeseen association with bin Laden as an asset, now got nervous at Osama’s hero status andhuge popularity. 

They warned him to restrain from making negativepublic comment about their reliance on the West, threatening to remove the lucrativepublic contracts that had been given to the family business. Exile The relationship between bin Laden and theHouse of Saud quickly deteriorated to the point that, in 1991, he was expelled fromthe country. Three years later his citizenship was revoked. He fled to Sudan with his immediate family,which now included three wives and fifteen children. They moved into a brick and stucco home inKhartoum where he lived a simple and deeply religious life. In Sudan, bin Laden quickly found supportfor his ideology, which was fiercely opposed to any collaboration with the West. His goal was to overthrow regimes that werefriendly to the U.S. and establish in their place true Islamic states. The first step towards that end would be tostrike at U.S. targets throughout the world. By doing so, it was believed that the UnitedStates would be forced to withdraw from the Middle East. Then, the governments that been propped upby America could easily be toppled. The nucleus of the terrorist organizationthat would bring about these changes was a group that bin Laden helped develop. It was called al-Qaeda. 

From their base in Sudan, experienced al-Qaedaleaders were sent to various parts of the world where there were large Muslim populations. Their mission was to incite an Islamic revolutionand carry out acts of terrorism. In his first year in Sudan, bin Laden becamea disciple of Hassan Abdallah al-Turabi, the Islamic spiritual leader of Sudan. While Turabi helped Osama to deepen his spiritualdevelopment, bin Laden, in turn, built up Turabi’s jihdist group, the Popular InternationalOrganization or PIO. He also built connectiions with various internationalfinancial institutions to channel money towards his growing terror networks. At the same time, he could smuggle terroristsinto the United States by arranging for them to be employees of companies owned by wealthypro-Islamic Middle eastern businessmen. Meanwhile, within Sudan, bin Laden establisheda building company known as the al-Hirjah for Construction and Development Ltd. Its sole purpose was to build an infrastructurein Sudan to move the equipment, vehicles, and weaponry needed to expedite terroristacts. International TerroristBy the mid-1990’s bin Laden had established a world-wide reputation as a revolutionary,with thousands of young jihaidts idolizing him and dreaming of being just like him. The first bombing attack that was creditedto bin Laden was the December 29, 1992 attack on two hotels in Aden, Yemen. Both hotels were frequently used by U.S. militarypersonnel in the area. Three people were killed and five more werewounded in the attack. This was part of a concerted effort to oustthe Americans from the Horn of Africa and assert fundamentalist Islamic power in theregion.

 The focus of the action was Somalia, wherebin Laden organized fierce figting against U.S. forces who were there for humanitarianpurposes. Bin Laden counted the withdrawal of U.S, troopsfrom Mogadishu as among his most significant victories against the U.S. Following his actions in Somalia, bin Ladenturned his attention to Europe. His first step was to bolster the Islamicfundamentalist movement in the Balkans, before setting his sights on western Europe and theUnited States. Muslim communities in these places were saturatedwith pro-Islamic, anti-Western propaganda. Bin Laden also relied heavily on e-mail andthe internet to get the word out. In 1995, al-Qaeda turned its attention backto the Middle Eastern nations that it belived were roadblocks to the establishment of Islamicfundamentalist regimes throughout the Muslim world. Bin Laden saw Egypt and Saudi Arabia as thetwo biggest local obstacles to his cause.

 In Saudi Arabia he became obsessed with overthrowingthe House of Saud. In November 1995, he orchestrated the bombingof a U.S. Militartry training center in Riyadh, killing seven people. The House of Saud were outraged at the attack,convinced that bin Laden was behind it. A few days after the attack, four mercenariesfrom Yemen opened fire with AK-47’s outside of his residence in Sudan. Bin Laden’s bodyguards returned fire and,within minutes, three of the assailants and two bodygusrds were dead. From that day on, Osama bin Laden’s houseand street were transformed into an armed camp. It wasn’t just the House of Saud that wereafter him. In 1996, a U.S. Special Forces operation waslaunched to capture bin Laden, with the aid of America friendly Mulsim nations. From now on, he refused to venture out ofSudan.But then both Saudi Arabia and the U.S. turned up the screws, threatening economicsanctions on Sudan unless they handed bin Laden over. 

He was quietly asked to leave and he and hiswife and children headed for Afghanistan in May 1996. Safely ensconced in Afghanistan, bin Ladennow fully embraced the role of internatiional leader of the Islamic extremist movement. To stay alive, though, he had to surroundhimself with many bodyguards. He established a three-room opertions basein a cave that had been carved out of the mountainside, that was equipped with basicfurnishings. His only connections to the outside worldwere his satellite phone and two laptops. In 1998, bin Laden turned his destrucitiveattention back to Africa. His plan was to bomb two U.S. Embassies indifferent African countries. On August 7th, simultaneous attacks in Kenyaand Tanzania killed hundreds of people. Although he denied responsibility, the internationalcommunity were unanimous that bin Laden was behind the attacks. As a result, the U.S. stepped up its attemptsto take him out, with an air strike on October 20th known as Operation Infinite Reach. It destroyed three terrorist training campsin the Afghani mountains, but bin Laden remained at large. Target: USA A year later, he was connected to an attackon the U.S. Navy destroyer USS Cole. The ship had stopped to refuel in the portof Aden, Yemen, when terrorists blasted it, killing seventeen sailors. 

Less than a month after that, two planes smashedinto the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York City, striking a devastating blowat the very symbol of American business and achievement. Within moments it had been transformed intoa full-blown war zone. About 45 minutes later, the terror struckagain. A hijacked airliner that had departed fromVirginnia was spearheaded into the Pentagon – the natiion’s military headquarters. The horrific, shocking attack, the deadliestsince Peral Harbor, was a major wake up call for the United States. A $25 million reward was offered for bin Ladenand antiterrorist task forces were set up. Despite a full-on effort to bring hm to justice,bin Laden was able to remain at large, plotting further attacks for another decade. Sometime in the mid 2000’s he slipped intoPakistan. For a while he stayed in rural mountain villagesprotected by local tribal leaders. Then he moved to the Abbottabad compound withthree of his wives (he now had five) and thirteen of his children. It was there that the Americans finally gottheir man. The EndIn the early morning hours of May 2nd,2011, about twenty-five Navy SEAL commandos descendedon the Abbottabad compound. They quickly breached the 18-foot walls andthen stormed the house, using explosives to gain entry. Two men encountered on the first floor werekilled, and then the commandos rushed upstairs where they identified and killed bin Laden. He was shot in the chest and the forehead. One of his wives was also shot in the legwhen she lunged at a SEAL. To make sure that they had gotten their man,one of the SEAL’s took a photo and then quickly put it through facial recognitionsoftware. The result showed a 95 percent likelihoodthat this was Osama bin Laden. Later DNA testing put it beyond a shadow ofdoubt – the world’s number one terrorist was dead. Osama bin Laden was buried at sea shortlyafter the raid. Unfortunately, the terror organization thathe created remains. 

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