Informed Comment

Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion

Juan Cole is President of the Global Americana Institute

Saturday, May 18, 2002


Bin Laden's Plan

When I said that "He (OBL) knew what the likely US response would be, and
had thought several steps ahead, as in chess" I was referring to September
and October, when the al-Qaida propaganda machine clearly was way ahead of
the United States. I personally also believe that al-Qaida assassinated
Ahmad Shah Massoud, the leader of the Northern Alliance, on September 9
quite deliberately because Bin Ladin knew that the US would likely use the
Northern Alliance against him and his Taliban colleagues. He probably
figured that without its most experienced, popular and charismatic leader,
the alliance might fall apart and would be harder to mobilize by the U.S.


I did not mean to imply that Bin Ladin expected the US rather easily to
dislodge the Taliban, as they did Nov.-Dec. Even there, however, it seems
obvious that Bin Ladin had carefully planned what he might do if the US
*was* able to reach into Afghanistan, and that he has successfully eluded
them, along with most of his major lieutenants. I mean, it is really
quite extraordinary that he has eluded capture, and it suggests careful
forethought on his part. I do not believe he is dead. I think he has a
very nicely furnished cave somewhere not far from Khost, maybe on the
Pakistani side of the border. And I do not think we have heard the last
of him. It would be foolish of him to come out in the open after Tora
Bora and frontally challenge the US at this point. Bin Ladin does not
work though frontal challenges, anyway. He strikes sideways.


Sincerely,


Juan Cole
U of Michigan

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