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This article first appeared
in the 10 September 2006 edition of The Sunday Business Post
and is reproduced here with their kind permission.
Osama
bin Laden is one of the few people alive who has fundamentally
changed the course of world history. Few people had heard
of him before the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center
and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001.
Now he is linked to every new terror threat, even if al-Qaeda
is best viewed as an informal network of ‘believers’,
rather than an organisation directed by him.
The extent of bin
Laden’s influence is unquestionable.
He has changed the way people live in the United States, and
he has divided western diplomacy. He will see his biggest success
as being the radicalisation of large numbers of Muslims.
The
occupation of Iraq has given thousands of Muslims a laboratory
to test their skills in urban warfare - skills which may yet
be used in Europe.
September 11 opened a new era of suspicion
between Muslims and the west.
A recent Pew Global Attitudes survey
showed that one in seven Muslims in France, Spain and Britain
would support the use of
terror in certain circumstances.
While eschewing the western
lifestyle, bin Laden has brilliantly used the mass media. One
senior member of al-Qaeda who broke
ranks with bin Laden, Abu al-Walid al-Masri, describes in his
memoirs bin Laden’s ‘‘extreme infatuation’’ with
the international media. His focus on his media campaign, which
he has always seen as more important than jihad (holy war), is
such that he was prepared to sacrifice Afghanistan and the Taliban.
Why? Bin Laden is attempting to disseminate a perception of
himself, to Muslims in particular, as a virtuous, humble man
venerated
by his followers.
This is in contrast to most Arab leaders, broadly
seen as corrupt, proud and hated.
He deliberately uses words,
dress and images that model the Prophet Muhammad. The objective
is to convince Muslims to follow his
example, so that he can lead them to his promised land, removing
most traces of modernity, and returning to the pure Islam of
the seventh century.
But behind this pious mask, who is the real
bin Laden?
He was born in 1958 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. He was
given the name Osama - the lion - after one of the companions
of the Prophet
Muhammad. His mother was a 16-year-old Syrian, who appears to
have initially been a concubine to his father, Muhammad bin Laden, ‘‘acquired’’ by
him when she was 14.
Muhammad bin Laden was an illiterate Yemeni
who emigrated to Saudi Arabia and worked for Aramco, the US/Saudi
oil company.
They helped him set up his own business which he grew to one
of the biggest construction groups in the Middle East and Gulf.
He was the favourite builder to the Saudi royal family and his
business made him a billionaire. By the time he died in 1967,
he had officially fathered 54 children from 22 wives and many
concubines.
When Muhammad bin Laden no longer wanted a wife,
he would divorce her and marry her off to one of his employees.
When he decided
to divorce Osama’s mother, he ‘‘awarded’’ her
to one of his executives. Osama was four-years-old at the time
and it is said that he met his real father on just three or four
occasions.
Osama’s childhood coincided with a time of transformation
for Saudi Arabia, because of the discovery of oil. The country
changed from an almost feudal tribal community to one of the
wealthiest countries in the world.
It is impossible to overstate
the extent of the social upheaval and dislocation caused by this
transformation. It produced a
profound shock in many Saudis, particularly young males, with
no outlet for their energies.
Living in a modest part of Jeddah,
bin Laden was undistinguished in school until the age of 14 when
he went through a profound
spiritual change, probably through the influence of an Islamic
society, the Muslim Brothers. He took to fasting twice a week,
refused to wear western dress, and started to model himself on
the Prophet.
He opposed the playing of musical instruments and
behaved in a very austere fashion, clearly sexually repressed.
In this,
he shared a key trait of one of his heroes, Sayyid Qutb, an Egyptian
writer and educator who died in 1966, and whose views eventually
formed his core beliefs.
These were a belief that a tiny vanguard
of true believers should lead the Muslim community back to the
pure Islam of the seventh
century; that all governments in the world, including Muslim
governments, were illegitimate; that military Jihad was necessary
and desirable - a kind of blood purification - to achieve their
aims; and that suicide - ‘martyrdom’ - was legitimate
to that end.
While still at school, bin Laden at the age of 17
married his first wife, aged 14. He attended King Abdul Aziz
University in
Jeddah. There he spent more time studying religion and Jihad
than his chosen field of economics.
By then - 1976/77 - it was
becoming socially unacceptable in Saudi Arabia to practice polygamy.
However, bin Laden and a friend
made a vow to practice polygamy and he eventually took four wives.
He is quoted as saying: ‘‘One is okay, like walking.
Two is like riding a bicycle: it is fast but a little unstable.
"Three is a tricycle, stable but slow. And when it comes to four.
. . ah, this is the ideal.
"
Now you can pass everyone!"
At university, he was seen by
many of his peers as calm, shy, a good speaker and slightly girlish.
He lived a varied life,
with his own farm outside the city where he stabled 20 horses,
and holidayed abroad, game hunting and climbing.
He seems to
have been driven by the need to equal or surpass his father’s
achievements. He also picked up one of his father’s key
traits - an abiding interest in, and a desire to be seen as an
expert on, the minutiae of Islamic doctrine
and religious interpretations.
Osama has issued many religious
rulings (fatwas) including one in 1998 when he created the International
Islamic Front against
Jews and ‘‘Crusaders’’. This stipulated
that ‘‘every Muslim who is capable of doing so has
a personal duty to kill Americans and their allies, whether civilians
or military personnel, in every country where this is possible’’.
Bin Laden has been described as being just over six feet tall,
handsome with fair skin and a beard. He is remembered as being
very thin from fasting and physical work, and as confident and
magnetic.
From an early age, he was prepared to act as an equal
to religious scholars and to be individualistic in a society
which frowned
on such. His interests were religion, poetry, horses and adventure.
Without any major external shocks, he probably would have become
a very successful businessman in Saudi Arabia.
What brought him
to international notoriety was the communist coup d’etat
in Afghanistan in 1978, followed by the Soviet invasion. This
galvanised Muslims worldwide in opposition to
the control of a Muslim country by communists.
Despite his own
propaganda, it is clear that bin Laden did not join that war
until four or five years after the invasion.
However, he leveraged
one successful battle against the retreating Soviets into a myth
of combat success.
When he returned to Saudi Arabia, he expected
to be treated like royalty, but was quickly disabused of this
idea. Following the
invasion of Kuwait by Iraq on August 2,1990,bin Laden offered
to help defend Saudi Arabia, but the ruling family did not see
him and his small group of Afghan militants as capable of stopping
an invasion by the million-strong Iraqi army.
Instead, under
a UN mandate, the US and its allies were granted access to Saudi
Arabian territory to expel the Iraqi invaders
from Kuwait. Such access by non-Muslim armies required high level
clearance by the religious authorities in Saudi Arabia.
This
was opposed by almost all militants and significant elements
of the population in the Middle East and Gulf, and crucially
by bin Laden. He then broke with Saudi Arabia’s rulers
and left the country for the Sudan.
There he was joined by many
veterans of the conflict in Afghanistan. They were attracted
by bin Laden’s views, his religious
certainties, and his money - they got good pay and benefits.
The international terror campaign started soon after from the
Sudan and subsequently from Afghanistan, culminating in the September
11 attacks.
Today, he is reputedly in hiding in the Pashtun tribal
area of Pakistan, an area which has had no government presence
in over
a century. While the core al-Qaeda group he heads has been decimated,
it’s influence is much stronger today than it was in September
2001.
Many of the other terror groups who adhere to his beliefs
have also been destroyed or disrupted, but the number of Muslims
who
share his beliefs has grown dramatically.
The invasion and occupation
of Iraq has convinced many Muslims that the West is, as bin Laden
says, involved in a conspiracy
to destroy Islam, and so must be confronted with Jihad.
Today
al-Qaeda is best thought of as a belief system, which is shared
by the original core group, numerous terror groups and
millions of individual Muslims. Bin Laden and his deputy, Al-Zawahiri,
provide mainly ideological and propaganda direction, with complete
operational control left to the local group or individual.
Many
of the terror groups have been severely weakened, with the most
active and dangerous militants remaining in Afghanistan,
Pakistan, Iraq, the Philippines and Thailand. Although a minority,
a significant number of radicalist Muslims now live in Europe.
Most Muslim governments have successfully clamped down on these
militants. The US is ‘‘protected’’ by
homeland security and by better integration of its Muslim immigrants.
Most experts therefore see Europe as the easiest and most likely
target, especially for Europe-based battle-hardened veterans
of Iraq.
Bin Laden’s disregard for casualties and a dangerous
combination of nihilism, idealism, and religious certitude, has
led many
of his close supporters to break from him.
His desire to reverse
modernity and return Islam to the purity of the seventh century
is a threat to most Muslims. Only they
can stop him.
Richard Whelan is the author of Al-Qaedaism:
The Threat to Islam, The Threat to the World.
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