http://www.cornellsun.com/section/news/content/2010/03/09/pulitzer-prize-winner-steve-coll-recalls-experiences-international-j

Pulitzer Prize Winner Steve Coll Recalls Experiences in International Journalism
By Laura Shepard
Created Mar 9 2010 - 2:16am

Students looking for a lively master of modern journalism were given a
treat yesterday, as Steve Coll, president of the New America
Foundation and winner of two Pulitzer Prizes, lectured about Osama Bin
Laden’s influence and his rise to power as part of the Einaudi
Center’s Foreign Policy Distinguished Speaker Series.

Coll is also a staff writer for The New Yorker.  [1]Analyzin’ Osama:
Steve Coll discusses the rise to power of Osama bin Laden and his
family. - By: Simon TarantoHe has written six books, including Ghost
Wars: The Secret History of the CIA, for which he won one of his two
Pulitzer Prizes.

“Ghost Wars is an absolutely indispensable book,” Fredrik Logevall,
director of the Einaudi Center, said. “It shows how valuable it can be
to write contemporary history, and it is standing the test of time
well.”

Coll also spent 20 years at the Washington Post, where he worked as a
foreign correspondent and managing editor. His specialty is South
Asia, where he was originally sent, and he still writes extensively
about the region.

“I love South Asia because it’s a great place to work,” Coll said.
“It’s so open since they have a free press so people aren’t afraid to
talk. It’s a huge advantage to work in a society with other
journalists because it means that you can get translators who
understand what you do.”

Coll is particularly interested in the radicalization narrative of the region.

“I’ve been writing about bin Laden since 1993, when I wrote my first
newspaper article about Islamist radical groups in North Africa. Bin
Laden was in Sudan at the time,” Coll said.

According to Coll, the image of bin Laden as a bearded, backwards man
in a cave is misleading and his biography is not especially
well-known.

“My purpose is to take him out of his cave and place him in the
modern, globalized setting he belongs in,” Coll said.

Most of the lecture focused on bin Laden’s background, particularly
his family, and the context of his upbringing.

“His father was a successful businessman with extraordinary intuition
for civil engineering,” Coll said. “The company built roads, bridges,
barracks and infrastructure. The royal family even turned to him for
sensitive projects.”

As bin Laden’s construction company grew in world renown and esteem,
it soon became the only authorized renovator of Mecca and Medina, two
of the Islamic world’s most hallowed grounds. Bin Laden grew up in an
environment where there was a sense of mobility and possibility.
Workers in the company came from all over the Islamic world,
introducing the young bin Laden to the diversity of his own religion.

According to Coll, bin Laden was radicalized as a teenager, at a prep
school where he was taught by ex-members of the Muslim brotherhood
movement, an often controversial idealist group that aims to
positively influence the lives of modern Muslims.

In 1967, his father died in a plane crash on the way to a construction
site. Bin Laden’s oldest brother Solomon took control of the family.
An eclectic character, Solomon was known for playing in a rock band,
collecting jet planes, and forcing prominent figures to engage in
sing-a-longs during business negotiations. In fact, the only American
citizens bin Laden ever met were part of Solomon’s entourage of pilots
and musicians.

While attending a wedding in San Antonio, Solomon was flying a jet
plane until he hit some power lines and crashed. Shortly after, Osama
gave up his fortune and inheritance and formed Al Qaeda.

“I don’t think that it would have succeeded without Osama,” Coll said.
He cited the notion of a worldwide movement, composed of all kinds of
Muslims, as something that was only made possible by bin Laden, due to
his experience with the construction company. Bin Laden was also
comfortable with technological global integration, enabling him to
successfully network through the media.

“Seeing airplanes as cruise missiles is something that springs from
his experience,” Coll said.

“Osama sees himself as the narrator of a movement. It is an unfinished
narrative as long as he’s around.” The narrative will end with bin
Laden’s capture or death, according to Coll. Without bin Laden, the
movement will splinter and it will be the end of an era, he said.

In Coll’s opinion, “bin Laden does not have the talent or vision to
develop a political movement larger than himself, although he talks
about it.”

The lecture concluded with some remarks about the U.S. problem of
finding a sustainable response to terrorism. “Every choice is a
learning experience, not for individual leaders, but for democratic
governments in general,” Coll said.

After the lecture, there was a question and answer session and copies
of Coll’s books were for sale. The lecture seemed to be well-received.

“It was fun and interesting,” Allie Mouche, ’11 said. “I like how he
framed the character. It was nice to get more background.”

Prof. Nicolas van de Walle, government, agreed. “I learned stuff I
didn’t know. The link between the business world and bin Laden’s
tactics was interesting,” van de Walle said.

“It wasn’t what I was expecting, but he told great stories,” Liz
Johnson ’12 said.

Coll was also eager to share stories from his experiences working
abroad and in the changing field of journalism. He talked about riding
his bike around Kashmir in the early ’90’s, visiting kidnap victims,
and interviewing people in the hospital after Benazir Bhutto’s
procession was bombed a few years ago. He also answered many questions
about a range of issues pertaining to South Asia, including the
relationship between India and Pakistan.

Since 2006, the Distinguished Speaker Series has brought a colorful
string of scholars, political analysts, and journalists to the
University, a tradition the Einaudi Center hopes to maintain.

“We’re trying to bring outside speakers to campus to talk about
important issues and maximize the intellectual impact of Cornell’s
existing resources,” Prof. Fredrik Logevall, history, said.


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