[iwar] [fc:Terror.Chief.Has.Global.Cash.Machine]

From: Fred Cohen (fc@all.net)
Date: 2001-09-17 13:45:19


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Subject: [iwar] [fc:Terror.Chief.Has.Global.Cash.Machine]
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London Sunday Telegraph
September 16, 2001
Terror Chief Has Global Cash Machine
By Martin Bentham
Every time a soft drink is sold in the world, there is a chilling
possibility that Osama bin Laden's wealth increases - and with it the power
of his terrorist network to wage war on the West.
Most drinks contain gum arabic, a substance that prevents particles settling
in the bottom of a can or bottle. Much of it is produced in Sudan by the Gum
Arabic Company, in which bin Laden has owned a large slice.
Although it is unclear precisely how much involvement he now has in the gum
arabic trade, he has already earned tens of millions of pounds from the
soft-drinks industry - providing years of finance for his Islamic
terrorists.
"It is possible that every time someone buys an American soft drink, they
are helping to fill Osama bin Laden's coffers," said Simon Reeve, the author
of The New Jackals, a recent book on the Saudi dissident's network.
Bin Laden's earnings from gum arabic, which is also used in other foodstuffs
and cosmetics, comprise only a part of his fortune.
He is thought to have earned £18 million from a building contract for the
expansion of the Islamic shrines at Mecca and Medina. Other revenue has come
from currency trading and various businesses. Drug running in Afghanistan is
now thought to be a principal source of his income. In the past, he has even
been funded by the CIA.
The exact extent of his fortune can only be guessed at. The most
authoritative estimates indicate that he is worth up to £300 million.
"Bin Laden has resources and capabilities greater than many national
governments," said Daniel Benjamin, of the Centre for Strategic and
International Studies, a Washington think-tank.
"Bin Laden started off with a fortune, but that is now irrelevant because of
his ability to garner funds throughout the Islamic world. These come from
rich sheikhs in the Gulf and the charity plate in radical mosques."
He was born in Riyadh, in 1957 - one of more than 50 children of Mohammed
bin Laden, the founder of a construction firm with a vast turnover. When his
father died, he used his share of the wealth to enjoy a playboy life in
Beirut in the early 1970s. Soon, however, he married and trained in
management and civil engineering.
After the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, he funded Islamic resistance
fighters. Money flowed in to help him - notably from the CIA - but also, it
is thought, from other governments.
When the Red Army pulled out in the late 1980s, bin Laden concentrated on
expanding his al'Qaeda organisation - also known as The Base - which had
been set up during the Afghan war. It began supporting the worldwide
"Islamic struggle" through terrorist actions against those deemed to be
oppressing Muslims.
Paul Wilkinson, of the centre for the study of terrorism and political
violence at St Andrews University, in Scotland, said al'Qaeda's various
components were used to move money, information and people around the world.
This allowed bin Laden to act as a "super facilitator" for terrorists - some
linked to other groups such as Islamic Jihad.
"His is a hydra-headed organisation," said Prof Wilkinson. "Its
transnational nature makes it very difficult to stem the flow of funds."
A rare glimpse of al-Qaeda's inner workings came at the New York trial of
four bin Laden-sponsored terrorists, convicted in July for their role in two
US embassy bombings in Africa in 1998 that killed 224 people.
Jamal Ahmed al-Fadl, who says he was once the group's paymaster, told the
court of a global web of bank accounts. One, he claimed, was at Barclays
Bank in London. The terrorist group was highly organised, he said, with its
own finance committee.
Mr al-Fadl fled al-Qaeda in 1996 after he was caught taking illicit
commissions from its international trading business. He turned himself over
to American investigators.
Barclays Bank said yesterday that there was no record of any of its accounts
being linked to bin Laden. A spokesman said: "We have carried out extensive
checks to ensure that we are adhering to the legal guidelines."

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