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Osama Bin Laden Dead: The Rise, Fall And Legacy Of America's Most Wanted Terrorist


First Posted: 05/02/2011 1:47 am Updated: 05/17/2012 8:40 am

NEW YORK -- Osama bin Laden, for more than a decade the world's most notorious terrorist, was killed in a targeted assault in the Pakistani city of Abbottabad, U.S. President Barack Obama announced late Sunday night.

A series of presidents had hunted the al Qaeda leader, a pursuit that gathered momentum following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, which killed more than 3,000. Bin Laden had already been on the FBI's most wanted list for years by that point in connection with several other attacks, but thereafter his name became synonymous with terrorism.

(SCROLL DOWN TO SEE BIN LADEN'S HISTORY IN PICTURES)

His strike on Sept. 11 sent the United States hurtling into a global "war on terror" that has included a wide range of operations on six continents, most prominently wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and extensive covert campaigns in Pakistan and Yemen.

Afghanistan had served as a staging ground for bin Laden and his forces under the sympathetic Taliban-led state, which the al Qaeda leader had helped bankroll. Following the December 2001 collapse of the Taliban government under the assault by U.S. troops, bin Laden escaped capture in the eastern mountains of Tora Bora. He then remained largely in hiding, only appearing publicly via some 30 written, audio and video statements delivered periodically throughout the past decade.

The extent of bin Laden's role in al Qaeda operations since he went into hiding is unclear, but he remained the most well-known international symbol of the organization that he founded and financed. News of his death prompted widespread celebration in the United States late Sunday night into Monday morning, including at Ground Zero in New York City. But it remains to be seen whether his network, more diffuse than it was 10 years ago, will be significantly weakened or destabilized without him.

Osama bin Laden was born in 1957 in Jiddah, a Saudi Arabian city by the Red Sea. He was one of roughly 50 children fathered by an impoverished Yemeni farmer, Mohammed bin Laden, who later developed a construction company and became one the wealthiest men in Saudi Arabia. When the elder bin Laden died in 1968 with a fortune reportedly in excess of $1 billion, Osama inherited an estimated $300 million.

After graduating from King Abdul Aziz University in Jiddah in 1979, bin Laden traveled to the Afghanistan-Pakistan border during the first weeks of the Soviet Union's invasion of Afghanistan. The war drew Muslims from across the world to fight what became known as a jihad against the invaders. Throughout the 1980s bin Laden helped fund training camps to resist the Soviets -- an aim shared by the United States, which also funded ground-level resistance groups in-country.

From his base in Peshawar, Pakistan, bin Laden established a fighting army numbering more than 2,000, according to some accounts.

As the Soviets lost ground in Afghanistan toward the end of the 1980s, bin Laden formed al Qaeda (Arabic for "the base"), at first principally as an information network that informed family members when a jihadist had died fighting in Afghanistan.

When Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990, the United States stationed troops in Saudi Arabia, a neighboring ally, in order to protect that nation's oil-rich lands from possible encroachment by Saddam Hussein. Bin Laden later said this stationing of U.S. troops on traditionally Muslim land was a primary cause of his jihad against America.

That conflict over U.S. presence in Saudi Arabia led to bin Laden falling out of favor with the Saudi monarchy, and he soon relocated to Sudan, where he spent much of the 1990s.

That decade also saw a rise in international terrorist attacks for which militant Islamic groups were blamed or claimed responsibility.

In 1993, Ramzi Yousef, a terrorist with alleged ties to al Qaeda, bombed the World Trade Center. Two years later, a car bomb exploded outside the U.S.-operated Saudi National Guard Training Center in Riyadh, killing five Americans. Evidence later recovered from a CD-ROM linked Bin Laden to that attack. Al Qaeda members were also blamed for the 1998 bombings of two U.S. embassies in Africa that killed 224 people, as well as for the 2000 attack on the U.S.S. Cole in Yemen, which killed 17 American sailors.

In the summer of 1996, Bin Laden moved to Afghanistan, where he partnered with Taliban leader Mullah Muhammad Omar. On Aug. 23 of that year, bin Laden officially declared jihad against the Americans whom he considered to be occupying Muslim holy lands.

"Muslims burn with anger at America," he said in his declaration of war, linking the statement to the U.S. presence in Saudi Arabia. "For its own good, America should leave [Saudi Arabia.] ... There is no more important duty than pushing the American enemy out of the holy land. ... The presence of the USA Crusader military forces on land, sea and air of the states of the Islamic Gulf is the greatest danger threatening the largest oil reserve in the world."

The following year, in an interview with CNN, bin Laden declared war against the U.S. at large, saying, "We declared jihad against the U.S. government, because the U.S. government is unjust, criminal and tyrannical."

In a videotape found weeks after the Sept. 11 2001, attacks in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania, bin Laden took responsibility for the strikes:

"We calculated in advance the number of casualties from the enemy, who would be killed based on the position of the tower," he said on the tape. "We calculated that the floors that would be hit would be three or four floors. I was the most optimistic of them all."

After the attacks, U.S. President George W. Bush committed U.S. troops to a "war on terror" and began a renewed hunt for bin Laden that would last nearly 10 years.

Bin Laden eluded capture, but continued to act as the leader of al Qaeda. In a speech made public on Jan. 26, 2006, he reaffirmed the organization's war against the United States, saying, "Days and nights will not go by until we take revenge as we did on 11 September, God willing, and until your minds are exhausted and your lives become miserable."

Despite the threat, bin Laden did not live to see another successful attack on U.S. soil. More than five years later, President Obama announced that American soldiers had killed the al Qaeda leader after a firefight in the Pakistani compound where he had been hiding. "Justice has been done," Obama said in a televised address, calling bin Laden's death an "achievement" that was "a testament to the greatness of our country and the determination of the American people."

But his death may further galvanize the U.S. public's growing majority opposition to continued war in Afghanistan. The death also may prompt attempts retribution from bin Laden's like-minded comrades; in a video statement made public months after the Sept. 11 attacks, he urged his supporters to redouble their efforts to eradicate the United States should he be killed.

Yet while once viewed as an "agile chief executive officer issuing orders and soliciting ideas from subordinates," as a February 2010 Congressional Research Service study described him, bin Laden's power has been on the wane. Al Qaeda currently has affiliates in more than 70 countries, but with a dispersed command structure and no clear center of gravity, according to the CRS study.

But, the report cautioned, "While a degraded corporate Al Qaeda may be welcome news to many, a trend has emerged over the past few years that some view as more difficult to detect, if not potentially more lethal."

"Al Qaeda is already diffuse, but it is likely to splinter even more, which creates potential dangers for us and vulnerabilities for them," Philip J. Crowley, a former assistant secretary of State for public affairs, similarly warned in a Twitter message Sunday night, shortly after the announcement of bin Laden's death.

While bin Laden's power may have ebbed in recent years, some say he leaves behind an indelible historical legacy. So reckons Lawrence Wright, whose book on al Qaeda and the events leading up to Sept. 11, "The Looming Tower," is one of the definitive accounts of the organization and the man who led it.

Bin Laden's goal, Wright argued, was to die in pursuit of his dream.

"If you catch him, don't kill him -- that's his goal," Wright told a roomful of former top counterterrorism officials and investigative journalists at an April 9 conference in Berkeley, Calif. "He wants to be a martyr," Wright said of bin Laden. "That way, his legend will last for who knows how long."

Wright cautioned that killing bin Laden would simply play into his fantasies. Instead, Wright suggested, authorities pursuing the world's most famous fugitive should capture him and take him to the sites where his followers had killed innocent civilians -- many of them practicing Muslims -- in pursuit of al Qaeda's dream. There, bin Laden should hear from survivors and the families of the dead, and be forced to explain himself.

"You have to deal with not just the man," Wright said. "You have to deal with the legacy."

For his part, bin Laden said he hoped that the arc of his life would inspire like-minded jihadists to emulate him. "America can't get me alive," he reportedly said in an interview with a Pakistani journalist in the wake of the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan. "I can be eliminated, but not my mission."

Laura Gottesdiener contributed to this report.

1957: Osama Bin Laden Born In Saudi Arabia

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NEW YORK -- Osama bin Laden, for more than a decade the world's most notorious terrorist, was killed in a targeted assault in the Pakistani city of Abbottabad, U.S. President Barack Obama announced la...
NEW YORK -- Osama bin Laden, for more than a decade the world's most notorious terrorist, was killed in a targeted assault in the Pakistani city of Abbottabad, U.S. President Barack Obama announced la...
NEW YORK -- Osama bin Laden, for more than a decade the world's most notorious terrorist, was killed in a targeted assault in the Pakistani city of Abbottabad, U.S. President Barack Obama announced la...
NEW YORK -- Osama bin Laden, for more than a decade the world's most notorious terrorist, was killed in a targeted assault in the Pakistani city of Abbottabad, U.S. President Barack Obama announced la...
 
 
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09:46 AM on 05/03/2011
All of the youth in all of these arabic countries, Egypt, Tunisia, Libya, Yemen thirst for western style democracy, not fatwas or caliphates, which, to have a caliphate you need a caliph.

Imagine your self a secret follower of Osama bin Laden, boxing pizza in Baltimore. Are you enraged at your leader's murder by the (infidel) Americans? Of course you are. So why aren't you walking up to the Capital with the assault rifle you bought from the trunk of someone's car at a weekend gun show, your rifle packaged to look like a pool cue - and then getting it out behind a bush and randomly opening fire.

Why aren't you doing that? You are not doing that because you don't exist. There aren't any terrorist cells in USA so let us have our First Amendment privacy back with the congress voting to end the nationwide telephone tapping.

Sheep! That won't happen in a million years for one reason: You might decide to run for Congress. Then a member of the incumbent's staff calls F be Eye. Then they listen live to your every word and deliver transcripts to the staff member in the congress person's office.

It is time to DUMP the 535 regardless of party and peacefully reestablish our liberties.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Pundit Commentator
http://punditcommentator.blogspot.com
11:13 PM on 05/02/2011
Did you catch the Best of Twitter? http://t.co/sHyTeBa
09:27 PM on 05/02/2011
In the event nothing happens here - no terrorist events in the next few days or weeks it ought to be clear there aren't any foreign born al quaeda connected terrorists in America. Therefore, we need to bring the nationwide telephone tapping to an immediate end becaue we, the American people are entitled to our privacy.

In the event our 535 representatives in Congress, sworn to uphold our constitutional rights, do not agree, then it is time to DUMP the 535 and begin again, start anew. We can find and draft decent people from all of the Parent Teacher Associations to stand for our public offices, which should be an honor.

They need only take an oath not to accept a dime from anyone for any reason, and agree to deliver a live half hour speech once every month on the local PBS station and follow that with a half hour Q. and A. from news people in the studio, and that settles the issue of who is a public servant, honored to serve.

Return our rights, or get out! I say, "don't trust anyone under the age of sixty."
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Stilyagi
Making a board with a bigger nail in it.
08:18 PM on 05/02/2011
Now when Al Qaeda strikes back in retaliation for the death of Bin Laden, the US will likely be hit with a series of terrist disasters that will make 9/11 seem like a firecracker went off. Think "dirty bombs" and "unsecured nuclear waste" as but 2 of a million examples. Apart from the fact that AQ operatives are already in the country, if you think the TSA or Homeland Security can prevent this from happening, then you might as well kiss your a-- goodbye right now.

Remember: this is what u get from Obama's "eye for an eye" approach.
04:14 PM on 05/02/2011
This is just another ploy to take the heat off the fact that the president was born in Africa. I read an article over a year ago that stated OBama was born in Africa and lived there with his Dad herding cows until he was 7 years old. His Dad was not in Harvard at the time of his birth which is stated on the certificate of live birth. Also his Dad is alleged to have left Africa when OBama was 7 years old, attended Harvard, and became a professor. I can't find any record of his father. And to make matters worse Asama Bin Laughin was allegedly killed and buried at sea. If Asama had been killed instead of laughing, his body would have been posted on every media platform in the world. Again show us the proof. THis is just another no brainer to take the public's mind and attention off the issue with the illegal alien immigrant status. You can fool some of the people all of the time and all of the people some of the time, but you can't fool all of the people all of the time. It appears "there is nothing common in commonsense" Asama where are you????
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
trescher
"You play with dirt, it gets in your eyes"
08:05 PM on 05/08/2011
You are lame. Don't you realize that they are making jokes at this very moment about you and those of your ilk? Grow up, or Get a life. One or the other would be great.
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PoliSci2008
Life Long Democrat
04:11 PM on 05/02/2011
The death of Osama bin Laden is the Landmark of President Obama's Presidency. This is what he'll be known for beside being the first President of African ancestry and passage of numerous bills in the first year of his term. His Univeral Healthcare is note-worthy for the history books, however, his compromise on the Put-Option makes it less worthy.
03:12 PM on 05/02/2011
i smell B.S.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ArjenBoatsma
No such thing as too much coffee.
02:11 PM on 05/02/2011
The rise of OBL: aided by the CIA
The fall of OBL: aided by the CIA
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Pundit Commentator
http://punditcommentator.blogspot.com
12:34 PM on 05/02/2011
Check out the latest best tweets. http://t.co/MeLS7ii
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheMuckraker
War is Murder
11:44 AM on 05/02/2011
Article headline uses the term "Most Wanted Terrorist" quite loosely.
OBL was not even wanted for 911 on the FBI "10 Most Wanted" list.
He denied involvement, and they didnt have any "hard evidence" connecting him to those events.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Hansy Peguero
11:37 AM on 05/02/2011
For all the Naysayers:

Osama bin Laden killed - how a live blogger captured the raid

Pakistani IT consultant's tweets about a helicopter in Abbottabad swiftly turned into dramatic account of Bin Laden's final minutes
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/may/02/osama-bin-laden-live-blogger
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PoliSci2008
Life Long Democrat
03:24 PM on 05/02/2011
The Navey Seal Firefight was 4 to 5 minutes per the Twitter, and not 45 minutes per US intelligence. Sounds like they got at OBL when he was least protected by an entonrage of terr or ist troops.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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11:06 AM on 05/02/2011
It is telling that THIS blog is the ONLY one that is not locked down. What are they afraid of?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blogger x
Both parties sold us out a long time ago.
11:25 AM on 05/02/2011
The hate freedom of speech just like the rest of the MSM. Stick to talking points and your comments will get published quick.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Taj Snead
If they dont like obama they sure wont like me
10:51 AM on 05/02/2011
OK tin foil hatters. Do you still hear the radio transmissions in your tooth fillings? Just like the BC this will be deemed as fake
10:51 AM on 05/02/2011
I thought the man was already dead. It is hard for me to believe someone with end stage renal disease is holed up in a cave somewhere with dialysis machine?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Hansy Peguero
11:53 AM on 05/02/2011
Well apparently he was not in a cave.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Alex Croley
One Nation, Indivisible, for Liberty and Justice f
10:50 AM on 05/02/2011
Since the Media, former, and the current President of the United States has made Bin Laden such a focal point of this perpetual war on terror; it should be noted that when the man dies (for whatever reason) its a cause of celebration. Osama Bin Laden has been a dark cloud ever since 9/11/01 and his death is ... for better or worse, a part of the closure of such a deep and festering wound.