Throughout the eighties, when the United States assisted the Saudis in a giant 
military buildup of airfields, ports, and bases throughout the kingdom, many of 
the contracts were awarded to the largest construction company in Saudi Arabia, 
the Saudi Binladen Group, founded by Osama bin Ladens father.

At the same time, the United States trained and armed troops in Afghanistan to 
fight the Soviets. The United States and Saudi Arabia spent about $40 billion 
on the war in Afghanistan, recruiting, supplying, and training nearly 100,000 
radical mujahideen from forty Muslim countries, including Pakistan, Saudi 
Arabia, Iran, Algeria, and Afghanistan itself. Among the recruits were Osama 
bin Laden and his followers. (2)

With C.I.A. funding, Osama bin Laden imported engineers and equipment from his 
fathers Saudi construction company to build tunnels for guerrilla training 
centers and hospitals, and for arms dumps near the Pakistan border. After the 
Soviets withdrew from Afghanistan, the C.I.A. and the Pakistani intelligence 
agency sponsored the Taliban organization, a government composed of the fanatic 
Wahhabi Islamic sect, the same sect that is the state religion in Saudi Arabia. 
Although followers of the Wahhabi sect do not refer to themselves as Wahhabis, 
the label is useful because it applies to a single Muslim group with a set of 
beliefs peculiar to them alone: Wahhabis maintain that Shi'ites and Sufis are 
not Muslims, and that Muslims should not visit shrines or celebrate Mohammeds 
birthday. (3)



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