Death of Hamza bin Laden seen as blow to Al Qaeda’s future

Hamza bin Laden is believed to have been born in 1989 and was one of 23 children of the Al Qaeda leader, according to Western intelligence agencies. He vowed to seek vengeance for his father’s death and was placed on a US terrorist watch list in 2017.

Above: Afghan interpreters remain in Australian visa limbo.

In the year before his death, Osama bin Laden spent his days behind the walls of his compound in Pakistan, fretting about his son living thousands of miles away.

He penned letter after letter, describing the curriculum that the son, Hamza bin Laden, then 23, should study, the qualities he should cultivate and the safety measures he should follow. In one, he advised his son, who was just 13 when he saw his father for the last time, not to leave his house.

In another, he discussed whether the young man could rejoin him in Pakistan, advising him to travel on a cloudy day when it would be harder for a drone to track him. He devised a complicated security protocol, calling for the son to switch cars inside a tunnel in order to fool overhead surveillance.

The care he showed was not just that of a father for a son. It appears to have also been an attempt by the world’s most hunted terrorist to secure his legacy.

Analysts believe that since at least 2010, al-Qaida was secretly grooming Hamza bin Laden to take over the organization, a move that appears to have been foiled. According to three US officials, the younger bin Laden was killed during the first two years of the Trump administration, though many questions remain, including when, how and where he was killed, and by whom.

If confirmed, his death represents another blow to al-Qaida, whose ranks were hollowed out by relentless American attacks and by the rise of the Islamic State, also known as ISIS. The older terrorist network has struggled to appeal to a younger generation of recruits, who were lured to ISIS by slick videos shot on drones and GoPros when al-Qaida was still issuing hour-long lectures by aging leaders staring at camcorders.

The younger bin Laden was supposed to solve several of al-Qaida’s most pressing management issues: No older than 30, he was almost four decades younger than Ayman al-Zawahri, the group’s current leader, who has been vilified by ISIS as an old-fashioned and out-of-touch manager.
Osama bin laden news on cover pages of Time and Newsweek magasines
US magazines after the death of Osama Bin Laden. Source: Corbis Historical
Because he carries the most famous name in terrorism, the younger bin Laden is able to draw on the devotion that jihadis around the world continue to feel for his father. For these reasons, al-Qaida hoped that Hamza bin Laden could act as a unifier, appealing not just to the group’s base but also to the recruits it lost to ISIS, many of whom are at a crossroads after the loss of ISIS’ territory in Iraq and Syria.

“If it’s true that he is dead, then al-Qaida has lost its future because Hamza was the future of al-Qaida,” said the former FBI agent and counterterrorism expert Ali Soufan, who sounded a note of caution because it is unusual for al-Qaida not to announce such a death.

“He was being prepared to lead the organization, and it’s very obvious from his statements that his focus was to bring back his dad’s message,” said Soufan, who is the author of a profile of Hamza bin Laden calling him “al-Qaida’s leader in waiting.”

But the circumstances of his death, like much of his life, remain murky.

Hazma bin Laden had been mistakenly pronounced dead before, when officials thought he had died in the SEAL raid to kill his father. Two years ago, there was also a failed attempt to kill him, according to three Iraqi officials.

He was thought to have been living along the Afghan-Pakistani border, but intelligence officials in both countries reached Thursday had no comment on the report of his death. He spent several years in Iran, but officials there had no information on his presumed death.

The United States government played a role in the operation to kill him, the US officials said, but they refused to provide any further information. Asked about the operation on Wednesday, President Donald Trump had no comment.

As for bin Laden’s whereabouts, there were only vague reports about possible sightings.

“Our intelligence reports showed there was a Hamza here, but we didn’t know for sure,” said Mohammad Ismail, the governor of Want Waigal, a mountainous district in eastern Afghanistan near the Pakistani border. “Some would say he was a Pakistani and some would say he was an Arab.”
Letters to and from his father — found by the Navy SEAL team that killed the elder bin Laden and later declassified — indicate that he was living in Iran in 2009 and 2010. One Iranian official said Wednesday that he thought Hamza bin Laden had been living in an upscale villa in Tehran with two wives and a sister. Another official said he came and went but never lived in Iran.

Hamza bin Laden was only 13 when his father walked him and his brothers to the base of a mountain in Afghanistan and said goodbye for the last time. It was 2001 and planes piloted by operatives had just slammed into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, and another hijacked plane had been foiled on its way to Washington.

The terrorist leader knew that retaliation was not far behind and made arrangements to send his boys away. He handed each of them a set of Muslim prayer beads, reminding them to seek strength in their faith.

“You bid us farewell and we left, and it was as if we pulled out our livers and left them there,” Hamza bin Laden wrote in a letter addressed to “my beloved father” years later.

The identical gifts to his sons suggest that the senior bin Laden intended to be equal in his affection. But chroniclers of the family say that it was not long before it became clear that he had a special relationship with Hamza, the only son of Khairia Sabar, a highly educated Saudi woman who became Osama bin Laden’s favourite wife.

When Hamza was 2, his father moved from Afghanistan to Sudan. He was there until the age of 7, when the Sudanese government gave in to international pressure and expelled the family. Osama bin Laden and his followers returned to Afghanistan where they sought refuge with the Taliban and lived in a complex of concrete huts, lacking plumbing, electricity and even doors.

After the 2001 attacks, Hazma bin Laden was spirited over the mountains into Pakistan, before seeking refuge in Iran, where he initially lived in a safe house, according to Soufan. He and his mother were eventually arrested by the Iranian authorities and incarcerated in a military camp.

As Hamza bin Laden grew older, he sought no special treatment within the group as Osama bin Laden’s son.

“He does not want to be treated with favouritism because he is the son of ‘someone,’” according to a 2010 letter from an aide to the elder bin Laden. “I promised him to plan some safe training for him: firing arms and with various weapons.”
Hamza Bin Laden
Hamza Bin Laden was reported dead twice previously. Source: AAP
Hamza bin Laden married a daughter of a senior al-Qaida leader, Abdullah Ahmed Abdullah, a wedding that was recorded on video found in the Abbottabad compound.

Thomas Joscelyn, a senior fellow with the Foundation for Defense of Democracies who has been studying al-Qaida for years, said that the younger bin Laden’s role in the organization was opaque.

“We don’t actually know what his real role was within al-Qaida,” he said. “We know al-Qaida was marketing him as a voice for a younger generation. You could see that when they would put out these audio messages from him.”

Joscelyn cited evidence in the older bin Laden’s personal files that Hamza bin Laden had received elite training but that Osama bin Laden preferred that his son not take on a military role.

The younger bin Laden’s own ambitions, based on his audio recordings and letters to his father, indicated a desire to take an active role in al-Qaida.

“My beloved father, I was separated from you when I was a small child, not yet 13, but I am older now, and have attained manhood,” he wrote in a 2009 letter.

“But what truly makes me sad,” he added, “is the mujahedeen legions have marched and I have not joined them.”

In 2017, the United States officially listed him as a global terrorist. In a letter published by al-Qaida the same year, Hamza bin Laden said his 12-year-old son had been killed, according to the SITE Intelligence Group. The circumstances were unclear.

Three Iraqi intelligence officials said there was a failed attempt to kill Hamza bin Laden that year.

In February, the State Department announced a $1 million reward for information about his whereabouts, and Saudi Arabia revoked his citizenship. According to the US officials, he was already dead by then.


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Source: The New York Times


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