لم تثر شخصية عالمية في أواخر القرن العشرين ومطلع القرن الحالي جدلاً وإثارة بمثل ما أثارته شخصية أسامة بن لادن؛ فإن كان كارلوس قد ملأ الدنيا وشغل الناس في عصره اعتُبر حينها بأنه "إرهابي من نوع فريد"، إلا أن لأسامة بن لادن نكهة أخرى، إذ يعيش ويقوم بنشاطاته التي تعد إرهابية في نظر خصومه، ومقاومية في نظر المعجبين به، في زمن عالم القطب الواحد. لقد كان تحت تصرف كارلوس عشرات الدول والأنظمة التي تسهل له حركته، وسيظل أسامة بن لادن لغزاً للكثيرين، يحوطه الغموض لا بسبب شخصيته إذ أن كل من قابله يجزم ببساطته ودفئه لمحدثه، ولكن لطبيعة تحركاته والأساليب التمويهية التي استطاع من خلالها التعمية على وجوده رغم التنسيق الهائل بين أنظمة مخابرات دولية لديها إمكانيات مالية وبشرية هائلة وضخمة.
مراجعات:
بيروت ـ «الشرق الأوسط»: أصدر احمد زيدان كتابا بعنوان «بن لادن بلا قناع» وفيه لقاءات حظرت طالبان نشرها في حينه. والكتاب صادر عن دار «الشركة العالمية للكتاب» وفيه مقدمة وملاحظات لزيدان حول بن لادن والقاعدة وطالبان، وهو قد عرف عن قرب هذه الجماعات بسبب عمله كمراسل صحافي في باكستان وافغانستان.
وفي الكتاب ايضا مقابلتان مع بن لادن الاولى اجريت اثر انفجار البارجة كول، والثانية اجريت بمناسبة عرس نجل اسامة بن لادن حين قضى زيدان يوماً كاملاً مع زعيم القاعدة. وفي نهاية الكتاب يقدم المؤلف توقعاته المستقبلية بناء على مشاهداته.
ومما جاء في الكتاب: جلس بن لادن وهو يشعر بقليل من البرد، لكنه كان يحاول معالجة ذلك باصلاح الجاكيت «الفيلت» الاميركي المبرقع الذي كان يرتديه، املاً في دفع برد قندهار الصحراوي الجاف. سلم علينا، وافتتح حديثه عن توديعه لأمه وشقيقه، قائلاً: كم تمنيت ان اتمكن من استئجار طائرة خاصة بها (يقصد امه) لأرسلها الى المملكة، ولا اجعلها تتعب بالانتقال الى باكستان، ومن هناك الى السعودية. فأم في مثل هذه السن لا يصلح لها ان تواجه كل هذه المتاعب، ولكن الظروف صعبة، واستئجار طائرة خاصة في ظل الحظر المفروض على طالبان اصعب.
Bin Laden's secrets are revealed by Al Jazeera journalist Intelligence agencies
to study book on al-Qa'ida as suspect stands trial in
By Robert Fisk in Beirut
23 October 2002
Heroic, vain, calculating, a caliph and a ruthless "terrorist" – a word
Osama bin Laden uses of himself – are some of the characteristics of the al-Qa'ida
leader that emerge from a remarkable new book by a journalist who knew him.
So does al-Qa'ida's order of battle in Afghanistan when 19 suicide attackers
flew aircraft into the World Trade Centre and the Pentagon a year ago. At least
62 British citizens, 30 Americans and eight Frenchmen were members of al-Qa'ida
before 11 September, according to this extraordinary account of Mr bin Laden's
war against the West.
Western and Arab intelligence agents will pore over Bin Laden Unmasked by Al
Jazeera television's Islamabad correspondent, Ahmed Zeidan, a Syrian who has met
Mr bin Laden several times, including at the wedding feast of Mr bin Laden's son
Abdullah.
The 215-page treasure trove is being published in Beirut at a moment when the
Americans say they don't know whether the world's most wanted man is alive or
dead. Mr Zeidan believes he is alive; and recounts how Mr bin Laden persuaded
Mullah Omar, the Taliban leader, to allow him to stay in Afghanistan – a move
that provoked America's bombardment of the country.
The book contains a wealth of unpublished material on the Saudi billionaire
blamed for the 11 September crimes against humanity. Mr Zeidan's investigations
reveal there were 2,742 Afghan "Arabs" from al-Qa'ida – in other words, Muslims
who had fought for Mr bin Laden – in Afghanistan during the Taliban era: they
included 62 Britons, 30 Americans, eight Frenchmen, 1,660 north Africans, 680
Saudis, 480 Yemenis, 430 Palestinians, 270 Egyptians, 520 Sudanese, 80 Iraqis,
33 Turks and 180 Filipinos. The Taliban,Mr Zeidan says, provided roughly the
same breakdown.
During the Taliban rule, Arab Afghan fighters were dispersed across Afghanistan
– this is al-Qa'ida's order of battle revealed for the first time – as 260 Arabs
in four bases around Kandahar, 145 Arabs in Orzakan in two bases, 1,870 fighters
in Kabul in seven bases, 404 around Mazar-i-Sharif, 400 in three bases around
Kunduz, 300 in Laghman province, 1,700 in 12 bases in Nangahar province opposite
Pakistan's North-West Frontier province, 160 in Kunar, 600 in Khost and 740 in
Paktia.
Al-Qa'ida now passes its information through the internet, the book claims. Its
messages are spread through a website called al-Nidaa – the Calling. The words
of Mullah Omar are distributed on an Arabic website called the "Islamic Emirate
of Afghanistan".
The book contains an interview recorded in October 2000 in which Mr bin Laden
recalls how Mullah Omar was approached by the Saudi head of intelligence, Prince
Turki al-Faisal, on behalf of the Americans, to hand over Mr bin Laden, not long
after the bombing of two American embassies in Africa. "The Taliban came to me,
requesting that I should stop making statements about the Saudi kingdom and keep
my declarations aimed at the Americans," Mr bin Laden told Mr Zeidan.
"I shed tears, and I told Mullah Omar that we would leave his country and head
towards God's vast domain, but that we would leave our children and wives in his
safekeeping. I said we would seek a land which was a haven for us. Mullah Omar
said that things had not reached that stage. The Taliban then apologised and
left me alone."
Mr bin Laden says it was a "natural state of affairs" there would be spies in
his training camps, because "there were unbelievers among the ranks of the
followers of the Prophet Mohamed, but that this did not mean that the Prophet
ceased his work."
The book suggests Mr bin Laden may have turned to vanity as his campaign against
the Americans continued. When Mr bin Laden's son married an Afghan woman last
year, Mr Zeidan was a guest and spent the day with the al-Qa'ida leader. The
Syrian journalist recalls how Mr bin Laden recited a poem in front of his
fighters and then asked the cameraman to re-film the scene next day in front of
the same men. "To me this showed Osama's vanity," Mr Zeidan writes. "Very few
people, but usually those who understand the importance of public relations ...
ever request re-filming ... He went as far as calling on al-Qa'ida members to
sit facing him, to play the role of eulogisers as had happened at the wedding."
Mr bin Laden's response to the bombing of the USS Cole in Aden port is reported
as follows: "I knelt thanking Allah for this heroic operation that destroyed
American arrogance; it is a sign to the Americans that they must leave the Arab
region and the Arabian peninsula in particular."
Mr bin Laden is quoted as saying that "the accession of a person like King
Abdullah to the Jordanian throne will not change matters so long as Jordan
doesn't have the resources to stand on its own feet. This condition applies to
all Arab and Islamic countries that can't be independent nations on their own.
The only solution is to revert to Arab and Islamic unity, which was the case
before the collapse of the Ottoman Caliphate. Then, we used to live together for
centuries, unlike the so-called [Arab] 'nations' so recently created, whose
borders were imposed on them by the West."
The only question the book does not answer is whether Mr bin Laden is alive. Mr
Zeidan says: "I think he is alive – the last tape he did for Al Jazeera, I think
it was him."