By McClatchy Tribune News Services
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The tall, lean, rich man’s son could have spent his life lounging about Saudi Arabia in luxury. Instead, Osama bin Laden chose to kill.
As a young man, he shot at Soviet invaders in Afghanistan. In middle age, he turned his wrath and far-reaching resources against the United States – the superpower he saw as spoiler of his homeland’s sacred cities.
By the time of his death, his was the face of terrorism.
President Barack Obama announced from the White House late Sunday that bin Laden had been killed by a special operation in Pakistan. His body is in the custody of U.S. officials.
In the mind of the American public, bin Laden was often seen as the person whose sinister creativity resulted in atrocities committed in the name of Islamic fanaticism. In truth, experts said he served more as idol and motivator to militant Muslims who were convinced that America’s support of Israel and its presence in Saudi Arabia – home to the holy places of Medina and Mecca – demanded bloodshed.
Bin Laden’s charismatic ways, his fortune and his ability to extract money from other wealthy Islamic extremists gave sophistication and firepower to a terrorism campaign that had been lurching from one haphazard car bombing to the next.
Without bin Laden, the terrorist hijackers may well have stayed home to wage their protests, never to imagine unleashing attacks in the United States.
“I was the most optimistic” that destruction and death at the World Trade Center would be massive, bin Laden declared with characteristic hubris in a videotape.
Once seen by Washington as a freedom fighter, bin Laden launched the militant organization al-Qaida during the Soviet Union’s invasion of Afghanistan. Over the years, al-Qaida provided training to as many as 11,000 men who passed through its terrorist camps in Afghanistan. Al-Qaida is now thought to have secret soldiers in four dozen countries.
Federal authorities have implicated bin Laden in some of the bloodiest crimes of the past decades: The 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center, the 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Tanzania and Kenya, the 2000 bombing of the USS Cole in Yemen, to name a few.
As for the Sept. 11, 2001, atrocities, the terrorist leader made clear his satisfaction, if not his responsibility.
He boasted with a grin: “We calculated in advance the number of … enemy who would be killed.”
He was born Osama bin Muhammad bin Awad bin Laden in Jiddah, Saudi Arabia. Most accounts placed his birth in 1957, although he suggested different years to different interviewers.
He reportedly was the 17th of Muhammad bin Laden’s 50-plus children. He was also said to be his Syrian mother’s only child, an indication she was among the patriarch’s least-favored wives.
Muhammed bin Laden was illiterate when he emigrated on foot from his homeland of Yemen to Saudi Arabia. Once there, he slowly cobbled together a construction business that, with the eventual help of his sons, grew to a $5 billion enterprise.
Osama bin Laden’s early years were comfortable – a far cry from the angry lives of many young radicals whom his terrorist camps later trained. A devout Sunni Muslim, he attended Saudi Arabian schools and studied economics and management in college.
His family’s business won important contracts to rebuild mosques. But being a younger son, bin Laden did not figure prominently in the family hierarchy or its decision-making.
The 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan upended what could have been a life of ease for the man in his early 20s.
Galvanized by what he saw as an epic battle between Muslims and godless communists, he joined the Afghan resistance. He is thought to have used some of his family’s wealth to import weapons and to recruit Muslims from Egypt, Turkey, Lebanon – in time, even the United States.
His fighters were backed by American and Saudi tax dollars and advised by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency.
By the mid-1980s, the guerrilla commander had bonded with the Egyptian Islamic Jihad, a terrorist group that helped to assassinate President Anwar Sadat. One of its key leaders, Ayman al-Zawahri, would have a strong influence and eventually be a brother-in-arms.
In the late 1980s, bin Laden began to tell followers of a vision that had come to him of a global jihad to be waged by Muslims around the world.
So evolved al-Qaida, Arabic for “the base.”
After the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1989, bin Laden returned to Saudi Arabia a hero, working briefly in the family business. A sought-after speaker, he also released a quarter-million cassette tapes that outlined a new enemy in his sights. “When we buy American goods,” he said in one tape, “we are accomplices in the murder of Palestinians. … The United States uses that money to send a billion (dollars) a year to Israel.”
His anti-Western rhetoric intensified in 1990, when Saudi rulers allowed American military personnel to use the birthplace of Islam as a staging ground for the Gulf War. Bin Laden cast it as a desecration of a holy site. He accused the Saudi royal family of being as vile as the Americans.
His radical reading of Quran scripture called for violence to eradicate from Islam all traces of secular culture – from pop music to modern fashions to U.S. soldiers.
Saudi Arabia expelled bin Laden in 1991 because of his anti-government activities. He wound up in Sudan, which expelled him in 1996 under pressure from American and Saudi diplomats.
By this time, American interests were being targeted by al Qaida, composed largely of Afghan war veterans. Bin Laden personally claimed responsibility for the deaths of 18 American soldiers associated with the 1993 downing of a U.S. Army helicopter in Somalia.
That same year, a truck bomb exploded in an underground garage of the World Trade Center. Investigators linked bin Laden to a loose organization of Islamic extremists recruiting terrorists in the United States.
What ostensibly had begun as a battle to liberate Islam’s three holiest places – Mecca, Medina and Jerusalem – would soon become a holy war, a jihad, against the United States.
“Kill the Americans and plunder their money wherever they find it,” bin Laden wrote in his 1998 fatwa, or holy decree. He accused Americans of waging war on God.
The terrorist leader once compared jihad against the Western world to the Afghans’ successful stand against the Soviets.
“The flag of the Soviet Union was folded once and for all” because of the Muslim resistance, bin Laden said. “It was thrown in the wastebasket.
“We are certain that we shall, with the grace of Allah, prevail over the Americans and over the Jews.”
Analysts concluded bin Laden was less the chief executive of a single organization than an idea man, the coordinator of a diffuse movement.
However scattered, the operation was high-tech and elusive. Al-Qaida embedded coded messages in innocuous-looking Web sites, stored bomb recipes on CD-ROMs. Bin Laden used couriers to communicate with his agents face to face. His plotters rarely gave themselves away.
He became the international poster boy of terror when American authorities accused the gaunt, 150-pound man in the 1998 bombings of two U.S. embassies in Africa, in which more than 250 persons died.
In 2000, a bomb-laden suicide boat bobbing in a Yemeni harbor blew a hole in the USS Cole, killing 17 American sailors. The plot had bin Laden’s fingerprints all over it, authorities said.
The Sept. 11, 2001 onslaught on America came three years after bin Laden warned of a “black day for Americans … when we do not differentiate between the military and civilians.”
With a $25 million bounty on his head and worldwide pressure on Islamic nations to root him out, once-friendly Pakistan, Yemen and Iran turned their backs. Only Afghanistan’s ruling Taliban offered safe haven, as it had since 1996.
Most of the Arab world remained calm amid U.S. military strikes on Afghanistan. Even the most radical Muslim groups backed off their cheerleading for bin Laden, figuring his once-heroic stature was crumbling.
“The vast, vast majority of Muslims in the Middle East find him to be a despicable character,” said Wake Forest University religion department chairman Charles Kimball, shortly after the terrorist strikes.