CIA armed Bin Laden's terrorists to fight Soviets

Rory McCarthy In Islamabad
Friday, 14th September 2001
The Scotsman
http://www.thescotsman.co.uk/world.cfm?id=107791

OSAMA bin Laden may now be the United States' most wanted terrorist
suspect, but once he was "their man", supported by the CIA and used in
the war of resistance against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan.

Born in Saudi Arabia, he first arrived in Afghanistan after the Soviet
invasion in 1979 to co-ordinate the Mujahideen resistance. He used his
�200 million fortune, inherited from his father's construction business,
to funnel weapons and recruits into Afghanistan through his Services
Office based across the Pakistani border in Peshawar.

Just 14 days after the invasion the first CIA-funded weapons, mainly
ancient .303 Lee Enfield rifles, began arriving. Funds were delivered to
Pakistan which were handed on to the Mujahideen commanders, Bin Laden
among them.

The Saudi soon commanded Arab fighters funded by the Americans and who
for the next decade fought alongside Afghanis in the guerrilla war.

As the war progressed, the CIA assistance came to include extensive
satellite reconnaissance findings on Soviet targets in Afghanistan and
information on Soviet military plans based on satellite intelligence and
intercepts.

Sophisticated communications equipment, long-range sniper rifles, and
wire-guided tank missiles also followed.

By February 1986, the US had approved the supply of Stinger missiles to
counter the growing use of Soviet assault helicopters. In total, some
250 launchers and 1,000 missiles were given.

In 1992, the CIA tried to start a buy-back programme as concern grew
that the weapons were being diverted into terrorist organisations, but
several hundred of them remain unaccounted for.

The United States believed it was supporting a national liberation
struggle against a communist oppressor. In total, $6 billion dollars was
siphoned into the resistance movement. The Americans were always
distanced from the Islamic fighters, who received their money and
refused CIA requests to train the fighters themselves.

Few among the US officials involved realised they were helping to
develop a new international terrorist movement that would one day come
back to haunt them.

                                   Serbian News Network - SNN

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                                    http://www.antic.org/

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