The Myth, the Reality, The Mission and Method of Osama
bin Laden

(CNN) -- Within a mere 18 minutes, two hijacked airliners slammed
into the World Trade Center towers, drastically altering the New
York skyline, the United States and the world.
After a hijacked plane hit the Pentagon and another crashed in
rural Pennsylvania shortly afterward, intelligence experts worldwide
thought of one name: Osama bin Laden.
"There is only one group that has ever indicated that it
has this kind of ability, and that's Osama bin Laden's" al
Qaeda organization, former NATO Supreme Cmdr. Wesley Clark said
September 11 on CNN.
The exiled Saudi millionaire has been on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted
Fugitives list since 1999. The United States' ongoing hunt for
bin Laden intensified after officials identified him as the mastermind
behind last fall's terrorist attacks.
U.S. forces dropped leaflets in Afghanistan last November offering
a $25 million bounty for bin Laden. But through the U.S. war in
Afghanistan to root out al Qaeda and its sympathizers, he eluded
U.S. and allied authorities.
Some in the Arab world have disputed bin Laden's role in the
September 11 strikes. That said, he has voiced his contempt for
the United States on several occasions, declaring a holy war "against
the United States government because it is unjust, criminal and
tyrannical."
U.S. and allied intelligence and law enforcement have implicated
bin Laden in several strikes and strike attempts on U.S. targets
since the early 1990s. These include the millennium-bombing plot
targeting the Los Angeles airport, the 2000 attack on the USS
Cole while it was in port in Aden, Yemen, and the nearly simultaneous
bombings of the U.S. embassies in Tanzania and Kenya in 1998.
While rarely explicitly admitting his role, bin Laden has publicly
celebrated such strikes. In a video released October 7, he said
that America's "greatest buildings were destroyed. Thank
God for that. There is America, full of fear from its north to
its south, from its west to its east. Thank God for that."
Another video, released last December by the Bush administration,
goes even further. On the tape, apparently recorded a month earlier
in Kandahar, Afghanistan, bin Laden said: "We calculated
in advance the number of casualties from the enemy, who would
be killed based on the position of the tower . . . I was the most
optimistic of them all."
"This is all that we had hoped for."
'The myth of the superpower destroyed'
Bin Laden was born the 17th of an estimated 52 children of a well-connected
multimillionaire Saudi construction magnate. He studied at a Saudi
university and took part in the family business, the bin Laden
Group, inheriting millions when his father died in 1968.
In 1979, bin Laden went to Afghanistan 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 battles in the Afghan
war.
The United States, via the CIA, poured $3 billion into the Afghan
resistance during the 1980s, providing weapons and other resources
for bin Laden and thousands of others who would become his most
loyal, fierce supporters.
The war, which ended with the Soviets' humiliating withdrawal
from Afghanistan, had a profound effect on bin Laden, he later
said.
"In this jihad, the biggest benefit was the myth of the
superpower was destroyed, not only in my mind, but in the minds
of all Muslims," bin Laden said. Jihad, the word for struggle,
is used by bin Laden to mean holy war.
As the war drew to a close, the increasingly radical bin Laden
formed al Qaeda, or "the Base" in Arabic, an organization
of ex-mujahedeen and other supporters channeling fighters and
funds to the Afghan resistance.
Declaring U.S. civilians the targets
Bin Laden himself returned to Saudi Arabia to work for the family
construction firm. He aligned Saudi groups opposed to the reigning
Saudi monarchy, the Fahd family, expressing anger at them and
the United States for allowing U.S. and allied forces to invade
Iraq from Saudi bases in the Gulf War.
He left Saudi Arabia for Sudan in 1991, taking assets that had
grown to an estimated $250 million, according to some officials.
(Others estimate a much lower value.) The Saudi government officially
stripped bin Laden of his citizenship three years later, freezing
all remaining assets he had in the country.
In 1996, bin Laden issued a "fatwah," a religious ruling,
urging Muslims to kill U.S. troops in Saudi Arabia -- a declaration
he repeated to then-CNN producer Peter Bergen the following year.
"The U.S. government has committed acts that are extremely
unjust, hideous and criminal," bin Laden told CNN. "We
believe the United States is directly responsible for those killed
in Palestine, Lebanon and Iraq."
He made these remarks in a remote section of eastern Afghanistan
-- home to the Taliban, a radical Islamic religious, military
and political unit -- where he moved in 1997 after being expelled
from Sudan. In 1998, bin Laden issued a second fatwah, this one
calling for attacks on U.S. civilians.
Al Qaeda takes action
Bin Laden heads al Qaeda, which has forged alliances with like-minded
fundamentalist groups such as Egypt's Al Jihad, Iran's Hezbollah,
Sudan's National Islamic Front, and jihad groups in Yemen, Saudi
Arabia and Somalia, according to the U.S. government.
Al Qaeda also has ties to the "Islamic Group," led
at one time by Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman, the Egyptian cleric serving
a life sentence since his 1995 conviction for a thwarted plot
to blow up various New York landmarks. Two of Sheik Rahman's sons
joined forces with bin Laden in the late 1990s.
The United States alleges that from 1992 on, bin Laden and other
al Qaeda members targeted U.S. military forces in Saudi Arabia
and Yemen and those stationed in the Horn of Africa.
Bin Laden told CNN in 1997 that "Arab holy warriors"
trained in Afghanistan had banded with Somali Muslims in October
1993 to kill 18 U.S. soldiers in a bloody battle on the streets
of Mogadishu, Somalia. U.S. authorities indicted bin Laden in
1996 for training those involved in the attack.
On August 7, 1998, eight years after U.S. forces deployed in
Saudi Arabia, a pair of truck bombs exploded, within nine minutes
of each other, outside the U.S. embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and
Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, killing over 224 people, among them 12
Americans.
U.S. authorities quickly blamed al Qaeda, ordering cruise missile
attacks on August 20, 1998, on suspected terrorist training camps
in Afghanistan and a pharmaceutical plant in Khartoum, Sudan.
A U.S. judge gave life sentences to four men, one a longtime bin
Laden aide, last October for their role in the bombings.
At the center of the storm
The man who pleaded guilty to a failed plot to bomb Los Angeles
International Airport during the millennium celebrations leading
up to New Year's Day 2000 claimed he was trained at an Afghanistan
camp run by bin Laden.
Ahmed Ressam said he learned how to handle handguns, machine
guns and rocket-propelled grenade launchers and how to assemble
bombs made from the explosives TNT and C4.
Authorities foiled this and other planned attacks on Seattle
revelers, a U.S. warship in the Middle East and tourist sites
in U.S. ally Jordan.
But on October 12, 2000, a small boat containing two suicide
bombers exploded near the USS Cole, then on port call off Aden,
Yemen. Seventeen U.S. sailors died in the blast and U.S. authorities,
yet again, accused bin Laden of masterminding the attack.
Bin Laden, apparently living in cave complexes in Afghanistan,
did not admit his role, but he did continue recruiting for al
Qaeda and publicly calling for a jihad against the United States.
He raised his public profile with a series of videotapes, most
released to the Arabic-language TV network Al-Jazeera, in the
weeks immediately after September 11. But as the videos stopped
coming in spring and summer 2002, speculation was that he may
have died in U.S. operations in Afghanistan.
But German intelligence officials and the editor of an Arabic-language
magazine said in July that he is in good health.
Meranwhile, al Qaeda continued to issue threats, pledging that
bin Laden's jihad is far from over. An al Qaeda spokesman said
in June that the group would soon "launch attacks against
America."
"Our martyrs are ready for operations against American and
Jewish targets inside and outside," the spokesman said. "America
should be prepared. It should be ready. They should fasten the
seat belts. We are coming to them where they never expected."
CNN Executive Producer Nancy Peckenham, Producer Phil Hirschkorn,
CNN Terrorism Analyst Peter Bergen and CNN.com Writer/Editor Douglas
Wood contributed to this report.