(CNN)In
his final years hiding in a compound in Pakistan, Osama bin Laden was a
man who at once showed great love and interest in his own family while
he coldly drew up quixotic plans for mass casualty attacks on Americans,
according to documents seized by Navy SEALs the night he was killed.
On Wednesday morning, the U.S. Office of the Director of National Intelligence released an unprecedented number of documents
from what U.S. officials have described as the treasure-trove picked up
by the SEALs at bin Laden's compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, on May 2,
2011.
Totaling
103 documents, they include the largest repository of correspondence
ever released between members of bin Laden's immediate family and
significant communications between bin Laden and other leaders of al
Qaeda as well as al Qaeda's communications with terrorist groups around
the Muslim world.
Also released was a
list of bin Laden's massive digital collection of English-language
books, think tank reports and U.S. government documents, numbering 266
in total.
To the end bin Laden remained
obsessed with attacking Americans. In an undated letter he told
jihadist militants in North Africa that they should stop "insisting on
the formation of an Islamic state" and instead attack U.S. embassies in
Sierra Leone and Togo and American oil companies. Bin Laden offered
similar advice to the al Qaeda affiliate in Yemen, telling it to avoid
targeting Yemeni police and military targets and instead prioritize
attacks on American targets.
Much
of bin Laden's advice either didn't make it to these groups or was
simply ignored because al Qaeda affiliates in Yemen and North Africa
continued to attack local targets.
ISIS,
of course, didn't exist at the time bin Laden was writing. The group,
which now controls a large swath of territory in the Middle East, grew
out of al Qaeda in Iraq and has charted a different path, seeking to
create an Islamic state and not prioritizing attacks on the United
States and its citizens.
Taken
together, these documents and reading materials paint a complex, nuanced
portrait of the world's most wanted man in the years before he was
killed in the raid on his compound.
In
the letters that bin Laden exchanged with his many sons and daughters,
he emerges as a much-loved and admired father who doted on his children.
And in a letter he sent to one of his wives, he even comes off as a
lovelorn swain.
That's in sharp
contrast to the letters bin Laden sent to al Qaeda leaders that demanded
mass casualty attacks against American targets and insisted that al
Qaeda affiliates in the Middle East stop wasting their time on attacks
against local government targets. "The focus should be on killing and
fighting the American people," bin Laden emphasized.
What bin Laden was reading
Bin Laden's digital library is that of an avid reader whose tastes
ran from "Obama's Wars," Bob Woodward's account of how the Obama
administration surged U.S. troops in Afghanistan in 2009 and 2010, to
Noam Chomsky as well as someone who had a pronounced interest in how
Western think tanks and academic institutions were analyzing al Qaeda.
Bin
Laden was a meticulous editor, and some of the memos he wrote were
revised as many as 50 times. Of the thousands of versions of documents
recovered from computers and digital media that the SEALs retrieved at
bin Laden's compound, the final tally numbers several hundred documents.
The new documents show how bin Laden
reacted to the events of the Arab Spring, which was roiling the Middle
East in the months before his death. While bin Laden had nothing to say
publicly about the momentous events in the Middle East, privately he
wrote lengthy memos analyzing what was happening, pointing to the "new
factor" of "the information technology revolution" that had helped spur
the revolutions and characterizing them as "the most important events"
in the Muslim world "in centuries."
Some
of the documents paint an organization that understood it was under
significant pressure from U.S. counterterrorism operations. One undated
document explained that CIA drone attacks "led to the killing of many
jihadi cadres, leaders and others," and noted, "(T)his is something that
is concerning us and exhausting us." Several documents mention the need
to be careful with operational security and to encrypt communications
and also the necessity of making trips around the Afghan-Pakistan border
regions only on "cloudy days" when American drones were less
effective.
Al Qaeda members knew they were short on cash, with one writing to bin Laden, "Also, there is the financial problem."
Some
of the documents have nothing to do with terrorism. One lengthy memo
from bin Laden worried about the baleful effects of climate change on
the Muslim world and advocated not depleting precious groundwater
stocks. Sounding more like a World Bank official than the leader of a
major terrorist organization, bin Laden fretted about "food security."
He also gave elaborate instructions to an aide about the most
efficacious manner to store wheat.
Family concerns
Many
of the documents concern bin Laden's sprawling family, which included
his four wives and 20 children. Bin Laden took a minute interest in the
marriage plans of his son Khalid to the daughter of a "martyred" al
Qaeda commander, and he exchanged a number of letters with the mother of
the bride-to-be. Bin Laden excitedly described the impending nuptials,
"which our hearts have been looking forward to."
Bin
Laden corresponded at length with his son Hamza and also with Hamza's
mother, Khairiah, who had spent around a decade in Iran under a form of
house arrest following the Taliban's fall in neighboring Afghanistan
during the winter of 2001.
Hamza wrote a
heartfelt letter to bin Laden in 2009 in which he recalled how he
hadn't seen his father since he was 13, eight years earlier: "My heart
is sad from the long separation, yearning to meet with you. ... My eyes
still remember the last time I saw you when you were under the olive
tree and you gave each one of us Muslim prayer beads."
In
2010 the Iranians started releasing members of the bin Laden family who
had been living in Iran. Bin Laden spent many hours writing letters to
them and to his associates in al Qaeda about how best he could reunite
with them.
In a letter to his wife Khairiah, he wrote tenderly, "(H)ow long have I waited for your departure from Iran."
Bin
Laden was paranoid that the Iranians -- who he said were "not to be
trusted" -- might insert electronic tracking devices into the belongings
or even the bodies of his family as they departed Iran. He told
Khairiah that if she had recently visited an "official dentist" in Iran
for a filling that she would need to have the filling taken out before
meeting with him as he worried a tracking device might have been
inserted inside.
U.S. intelligence
officials have a theory that bin Laden might have been grooming Hamza
eventually to succeed him at the helm of al Qaeda because the son's
relative youth would energize al Qaeda's base. But Hamza never made it
to his father's hiding place in Abbottabad. When the SEALs raided bin
Laden's compound, they assumed Hamza would likely be one of the adult
males living there, but he wasn't.
U.S. intelligence officials say they don't know where Hamza, now in his late 20s, is today.
'In case you became a martyr'
As
is typical for any bureaucratic organization there was considerable
discussion in the documents about which al Qaeda personnel might be
suitable for promotion and also documentation of cash flows moving in
and out of the organization, in amounts in the tens of thousands of
euros.
There is even an al Qaeda
application form that included standard questions such as what "hobbies"
the applicant might have, but also less standard ones such as, "Who
should we contact in case you became a martyr?"
Under
pressure from bin Laden, leaders of al Qaeda in Yemen noodled with the
idea that they might negotiate some kind of truce with the Yemeni
government so the group could focus exclusively on attacking American
targets. It's not clear if anything came of this.
Similarly,
al Qaeda members reached out to leaders of the Pakistani Taliban who
maintain contacts with Pakistan's military intelligence service, ISI, to
see if they could negotiate a similar truce with the Pakistani
government. The deal would be that the Pakistanis would leave al Qaeda
alone and vice versa and then al Qaeda would be able to focus on
attacking American targets. However, the al Qaeda leader who was leading
this effort told bin Laden, "As you know, this is just talk!" and
nothing came of these discussions.
There
is no evidence in the newly released documents that the Pakistanis had
any idea bin Laden was living in Pakistan or indeed he was even alive.
The new documents also do nothing to substantiate investigative journalist's Seymour Hersh's recent well-publicized claims
that the raid that killed bin Laden was not a firefight in which the
SEALs went into a dangerous and unknown situation, but a setup in which
Pakistan's military had been holding bin Laden prisoner in Abbottabad
for five years and simply made him available to the SEALs when they flew
in helicopters to the compound on the night of the raid.
On the first anniversary of bin Laden's death in May 2012, the Obama administration released a first tranche of 17 documents from
the treasure-trove. Those documents also underlined how much al Qaeda
feared the CIA drone campaign as well as bin Laden's obsessive interest
in attacking the United States.
Hersh
seems to believe that any documents released by the Obama
administration that were discovered during the bin Laden raid have been
faked by the CIA. Readers
can judge for themselves by examining the English-language translations
of the new documents and also the original Arabic documents here.
According
to U.S. intelligence officials, in October seven U.S. intelligence
agencies began the process of clearing for public release the documents
that came out Wednesday.
Digital library
Among
the most interesting windows in to the mind of al Qaeda's leader are
the contents of his massive digital library, which was painstakingly
assembled. Because of security concerns, bin Laden's compound had no
connection to the Internet so any books or reports that bin Laden had an
interest in were assembled painstakingly by making PDFs of each page.
They were then put on to a thumb drive and delivered to bin Laden by one
of his two bodyguards, according to U.S. intelligence officials.
Strangely,
one of the books in bin Laden's digital library was a suicide
prevention manual. Senior U.S. intelligence officials do not believe
that bin Laden was suicidal.
Bin Laden
was interested in books with a conspiratorial bent, and he had tomes
about the Illuminati and the Freemasons and even, somewhat ironically, a
book that asserted 9/11 was an "inside job."
Bin
Laden also collected reports by leading American counterterrorism
exports such as Bruce Hoffman and Paul Pillar as well as papers about al
Qaeda by West Point's Combating Terrorism Center, RAND Corp. and the
Congressional Research Service. (He even possessed congressional
testimony by this author titled, "Reassessing the Evolving al Qaeda
threat to the Homeland.")
Bin Laden collected indictments from American terrorism cases that he found of interest, such as that of David Coleman Headley
from Chicago, who al Qaeda had tasked to plan an attack against a
Danish newspaper that had published cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed.
During
the almost six years bin Laden lived in the Abbottabad compound, he had
a great deal of time on his hands, which was partly consumed by reading
the many holdings in his digital library and also composing the memos
and letters that are now becoming public.
Bin
Laden was deeply aware that as the 10th anniversary of 9/11 approached
his central goal of attacking the United States again had failed. Many
of the documents reference his plans for some kind of major public
statement to mark the anniversary. Bin Laden was killed three months
before he could deliver this statement.
No comments:
Post a Comment