Obit:
Osama bin Laden (1957–2011) - He Has Entered The Realm Of
Martyrdom
05 May 2011
By Eric Walberg
Osama bin Laden was born 10 March 1957 in
Riyad to Mohammed bin Awad bin Laden, a Yemeni-born
Saudi construction billionaire with close ties to the
Saudi royal family, and was killed in Abbottabad,
Pakistan 2 May 2011 in a CIA-directed targeted
assassination. He was the 17th of 52 children, the
only son of
Mohammed bin Laden's tenth wife,
the Syrian beauty Alia Ghanem, who Mohammed divorced
soon after Osama's birth. She remarried and Osama grew
up with his mother, stepfather and their four
children. He studied economics and business
administration at
King
Abdulaziz University and wrote
poetry, inherited an estimated $300m in 1967, and had
four wives and 24 children.
A devout Wahhabi, he rose to fame quickly
following the occupation of
Afghanistan by Soviet troops in
1979, when US president Jimmy Carter authorised
massive funding of mujahideen in Afghanistan and
Pakistan
and
president Ronald Reagan launched
his war against the "evil empire", the ailing
Soviet
Union, in 1981. The charismatic
22-year-old Osama bin Laden joined what he may at
least initially have been unaware was a
US-sponsored
jihad,
following his own agenda to liberate Muslim lands from
foreign occupation, personally recruiting 4,000
volunteers from his own country.
In 1984, bin Laden established Maktab
al-Khadamat, which funneled money (including much
of his own inheritance), arms and Muslim fighters from
around the Arabic world into the Afghan war. The US
channeled funds and arms through Pakistan's
Inter-Services Intelligence, and
the CIA insists "they had no direct link to bin
Laden," despite Reagan's frequent praise for
mujahideen as Afghanistan's "freedom fighters", going
as far as hosting them in the White House in 1983.
Following the Soviet Union's withdrawal
from Afghanistan in February 1989, Osama bin Laden
returned to his homeland in 1990, hailed in the Saudi
media as a hero of jihad, who along with his Arab
legion, "had brought down the mighty superpower" of
the Soviet Union. However, the
Iraqi
invasion of Kuwait in 1990 and
Saddam
Hussein's pan-Arab republicanism
suddenly put the Saudi monarchy at risk, and bin Laden
offered
King Fahd his mujahideen fighters to
protect the kingdom, warning him not to depend on
non-Muslim troops. Bin Laden believed the presence of
foreign troops in the "land of the two mosques" (Mecca
and Medina) profaned sacred soil, and when
King Fahd allowed the US to station 300,000
troops and to launch its
invasion of Iraq from Saudi soil,
bin Laden turned against the monarchy and fled into
exile in Sudan in 1992.
He is credited with founding Al-Qaeda
(foundation) in 1988, initially focused on driving the
Soviets from Afghanistan, but later to rid all Muslim
lands -- including Saudia Arabia -- of imperialist
occupation. As such, he was credited with
masterminding terrorist attacks against Western
targets from the 1990s on, culminating in the
destruction of the World Trade Centre on 11 September
2001 (which bin Laden denied carrying out). At the
time of his death, he was indicted on terrorism
charges by law enforcement agencies in New York City
(1998), Tripoli, Libya (1998) and Madrid (2004).
The relationship between the US
government and bin Laden/ Al-Qaeda is still very much
an enigma, and with bin Laden's assassination at
American hands, will likely remain so. The major
terrorist events in the mid-1990s were not associated
with bin Laden, who decamped to Afghanistan from Sudan
in 1996 after Bill Clinton refused Sudan's offer to
extradite him. Instead, Clinton destroyed a
pharmaceuticals plant in Sudan and, a year later,
dropped a few bombs in a remote Afghan valley where it
was rumored bin Laden was training his jihadis. The US
military's
Khobar
Towers in
Saudi
Arabia were bombed in 1996,
followed in 1997 by the Luxor massacre of 62 local
Egyptians and tourists and the 1998 car bombings of US
embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, all while bin Laden
was incommunicado in a remote Afghan mountain
cave.
After 9/11, US president George W Bush,
like Clinton earlier, refused to negotiate the
Taliban hand-over of bin Laden
(the Taliban offered to extradite him to a third
country to ensure a fair investigation and trial), and
instead launched a full-scale war against an entire
nation. Subsequent videotapes where bin Laden
belatedly acknowledges masterminding 9/11 are
disputed, both their authenticity and to what extent
they prove actual involvement in 9/11. The evidence
against the man-in-a-cave-in-Afghanistan as mastermind
of 9/11 is belied by compelling testimony of public
figures and scientists that the official 9/11
Commission Report is a cover-up.
The use of Osama bin Laden by both the
liberal and neocon factions in US politics and then
their refusal to nip the bin Laden myth in the bud can
only be explained one way: bin Laden was a useful foil
for imperial plans to invade Afghanistan and then
Iraq,
and he was worth more as a spectre -- to fight
anywhere they pleased in a nebulous "war against
terror" -- than as a prisoner with potentially
embarrassing facts to reveal.
This chapter of US policy was finally
brought to a close in the early hours of 2 May, when
US special forces launched a helicopter-borne assault
on a compound in Abbottabad, 50 km northeast of
Islamabad, home to the country's main military
training institution, the
Pakistan Military Academy.
According to WikiLeaks, the CIA had known about bin
Laden's whereabouts since 2005 -- at the very least
since last August, and as was the case under Clinton
and Bush before him, Obama made no attempt to take him
alive, his captors shooting him in the head.
Bin Laden was killed along with his son,
the bodies whisked away by helicopter and dumped 1100
km away at sea, in defiance of Islamic custom. Bin
Laden's second-in-command, Egyptian-born
Ayman Al-Zawahiri, remains at
large and is presumably de facto head of Al-Qaeda.
The assassination, instead of capture, of
what Obama, apparently without irony, called "a mass
murderer of Muslims", ensures the truth behind the
spectre remains a mystery. The delay can only be seen
as a calculated one -- Obama's version of the "October
surprise", a dramatic event
stage-managed to boost the presidential incumbent's
chances in the next election. The decision to put paid
to this spectre at long last also suggests that US
plans for Afghanistan are entering a new stage.
The assassination recalls the operation
to kill Ernesto Che Guevara, captured and immediately
executed by the CIA-backed Bolivian government troops
in 1967. His body was similarly helicoptered away to
an
unmarked grave in a vain attempt
to bury his legacy of hope.
Al-Qaeda's indiscriminate terror against
civilians as part of the effort to liberate Muslim
lands was mistaken, killing both Shia and Sunni in
Iraq, undermining religious rivals such as
Hezbollah, Hamas and secularists
such as Saddam Hussein and Moammar Gaddafi, resulting
in harsh retribution against Muslims in the Balkans
and
Chechnya, curiously leaving
Israel
unharmed. The passing of this tragic period in the
history of Islam will not be mourned.
Nonetheless, like Guevara, bin Laden died
honourably, fighting the invaders. Like Guevara, he
has entered the realm of martyrdom, a symbol of
Islamic resistance to all forms of occupation of the
Muslim
world, both Communist and
imperialist, and will continue to inspire Muslims
enraged by the actions of those intent on imposing a
Western lifestyle in league with their Muslim
collaborators.
Oh Abbottabad we are leaving you now
To your natural beauty do I bow
Perhaps your winds' sound will never
reach my ear
My gift for you is a few sad tears
I bid you farewell with a heavy heart
Never from my mind will your memories
thwart.
Major James Abbott (1861)
Eric Walberg writes for Al-Ahram Weekly http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/ You
can reach him at http://ericwalberg.com