- 6/24/2025
Bin.Laden.The.Road.To.9.&.11.S01E01
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00:009-11 still haunts us all the events of that day have defined much of the world ever since
00:28the hunt for bin laden drove the west to invade afghanistan now they've left a new reign of terror
00:36begins how much do we really know about the man osama bin laden he may be dead but his legacy
00:47continues to impact us all growing up i worshipped everything about bin laden he was a hero he was an
00:55icon verging on mythical levels that's how hip he was for us
01:04you can't tell your heart who to like and my heart at that time told me to love him
01:13we know bin laden as the terrorist the world's most evil man
01:17for those once closest to him his story is more complex now some are ready to speak for the first
01:26time i felt that he was the reassuring older brotherly figure his charisma was what really
01:52kept us all together as a glue they tell us about the man they knew the choices he made the points
01:58of no return people change and war change people that's what happened to usama
02:10i was appalled by what happened it filled my heart with horror i did not sign up for this we are going
02:17into the path of endless perpetual bloodshed i prayed secretly that he would die i mourned the person i
02:28knew and loved but i didn't mourn the monster he turned out to be
02:42i went to the pirates away from the pirates the people who came from at that time you i should move
02:52to the pirates the world i went to the pirates the world hey
03:00the pirates the world is the story of the pirates the world the world is the desert the world which was the
03:04I grew up in middle-class suburbs of Jeddah City.
03:19It happened that my neighbor was Osama Bin Laden.
03:28We were in our teenage years.
03:31Osama was really a shy boy.
03:34But he has charisma, and somehow, even in his voice, you could see his smile.
03:41Their house, it's like any middle-class house, where we have parties, we have fun, we listen to music, watch TV.
03:52We're all like cowboy movies.
03:54Obviously, we were on the side of the good guys.
03:58Of course, with the cowboys, because they have the guns.
04:05Osama loved football, but he wasn't a good player.
04:10I remember Osama being attacked by one of the opposite team.
04:15You know, I came in and pushed the guy away, but he wasn't happy about it.
04:21And he said, if you give me just a few minutes, Khalid, I would have resolved this issue peacefully.
04:27I'm saying a lot of good things about him.
04:31Now, that's what put me in trouble.
04:34But I have to be honest.
04:36He was good.
04:37I don't know what happened to him.
04:39Special thanks toSamad.
04:42He played for a ministry in the US.
04:45When I worked with Osama, he had a brother.
04:51Muhammad bin Laden was a devout Muslim, responsible for building much of modern Saudi Arabia.
05:21Bin Laden's family was the elitist you could get after royalty. Growing up there, his name was plastered in our heads.
05:34I'm a Alami bin Surya.
05:52I was thinking that Osama bin Laden was the Saudi man who was built in a Saudi economy.
06:00It could not be that anyone of them was born in a different place.
06:07Alia bin Laden's mother came from Syria. Her family were Alawites, an offshoot of Shia Islam, often vilified by conservatives as an unorthodox cult incorporating Christian and pagan elements.
06:25I was thinking that Osama bin Laden was living in Syria. He was born from another age. He was a thief.
06:34He was a thief.
06:35A simple world, a complete특 offen between the children and the boys and the soldiers, and the economic economy.
06:48The economy in Saudi Arabia is more disperseable.
06:53Osama is the result of all these businesses andmes.
06:59The Syrian side was important because he lived with one parent, his mother.
07:06Alia was 14 when she married.
07:09Mohamed divorced her within a year.
07:14They were very close.
07:16She was trying to compensate for not having a father around,
07:21so she was both parents to him.
07:24I loved his mother because she was a mother to us too.
07:28He lost his father.
07:30I know from his mother.
07:32This made him an individual, in reality,
07:37as he didn't want to be able to live from the living room
07:42and that was the same kind of separation.
07:47He was constantly telling his friends about his dreams in the future.
07:52How will he do that and do that and do that?
07:58Bin Laden's childhood, like many across the Arab world,
08:03was overshadowed by two seismic events.
08:09The Israeli defeat of Arab armies in 1967
08:16and its occupation of Palestine.
08:19was overshadowed by two individuals
08:22who fell in his face and thought of the SNS.
08:25And we would have had the time for the Muslims.
08:28First time I saw a Sheikh Mohammed bin Laden,
08:31in the Nachthah 91,
08:34he was talking a lot about his childhood age.
08:37The conflict between us is the fear that we have been in Palestine.
08:53These events have been shared with us.
08:58We have a great deal with the people and the people and the people and the people.
09:04It was a sickening feeling that we were not able to do anything to help our brothers and sisters.
09:23Osama would cry when he saw footage of Israeli soldiers hitting women and children in Palestine.
09:38He would swear that one day we will have revenge.
09:48He was a young man who was in the Islamic movement.
09:52He was born with an Islamist.
09:54He made a good taste for him.
10:02In high school, these emotions were exploited by the Islamist teachers.
10:09He stopped watching movies and TV shows completely.
10:13He moved away from us, his childhood friends.
10:18One day, I was wearing shorts going to a football game.
10:28That was wrong in Islam.
10:31He just looked at my legs and then looked at my eyes and said,
10:36Bye, ma'as-salam.
10:38I could see in his eyes he was thinking that was wrong.
10:42His mother noticed that her son was doing his prayers, was not going with the bad guys who would drink alcohol or go with girls.
10:57And that was okay. It was good for her.
11:00But she didn't expect that he would go all the way.
11:08I decided to drop out of school to achieve my goals and dreams.
11:12I was surprised at the major opposition to this idea, especially from my mother, who cried and begged me to change my mind.
11:20In the end, there was no way out.
11:22I couldn't resist my mother's tears.
11:24I had to go back and finish my education.
11:28I was surprised at all.
11:43...that they have a bicarbonate for the Islamic movement.
11:48We are almost affected by Abdu'l-l-Azzam...
11:51...in terms of being a servant, a servant, a servant...
11:56One of the students who were studying at that church...
12:00...was named Osama Bin Laden.
12:03I met Osama Bin Laden in the 1990s...
12:06...when I became a bomb maker for the palace.
12:13I grew up in Sa'ad al-Rabit in the 1980s...
12:21...where the call for the jihad was in every mosque I attended.
12:24Osama Bin Laden lost his father at a young age...
12:27...who was looking for a place for himself in the world.
12:30And then you have that amazing figure of Abdu'l-l-Azzam...
12:35...who is not an empty suit teaching and preaching in a university.
12:40No, he practiced what he teaches, devoting his time and his effort to the cause.
12:44Osama Bin Laden was not smart. He was repeating...
12:48...whatever people who believed and told him.
12:53So that's his weakness.
12:55And Abdu'l-l-Azzam was the one who believed and told him.
12:58And Abdu'l-l-Azzam was the one who believed and told him.
13:00So that's his weakness.
13:02And Abdu'l-l-Azzam was the one who trusted most.
13:09He became more and more Islamist in his views...
13:14...and more and more intent in changing the world and making a difference.
13:21But he went down a road that only lead to hell.
13:26Jihad is to fight against your own wrong desires.
13:31Jihad is to fight against your own wrong desires.
13:38Jihad is to fight against your own wrong desires.
13:41Jihad is to fight against your own wrong desires.
13:45Jihad is to fight against your own wrong desires.
13:52And it's also Jihad to defend your country if it's attacked.
14:15Jihad is to fight against your own wrong desires.
14:18In 1979, when Bin Laden was 21...
14:36...the communist Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan...
14:39...a Muslim country.
14:40It is a deliberate effort of a powerful atheistic government to subjugate an independent Islamic
14:48people.
14:49Addressing a large number of Afghan refugees near Peshawar this morning, the Saudi
14:54Crown Prince said the entire Islamic world fully supports the courageous struggle and
14:59supreme sacrifice of the people of Afghanistan for the protection of their faith and religion.
15:05I was enraged and went there at once.
15:08I arrived within days before the end of 1979.
15:15Osama, like many Saudi volunteers, went with the help and support of the Saudi government.
15:23He promised his mother that he would go only on humanitarian missions to deliver help to
15:30refugees, Afghanis in Peshawar.
15:33Even that wasn't to her happiness, but she agreed.
15:38Osama, like many Saudi Arabia, is the only place that gave me an infinite life.
15:41The United States of Israel was the only place that lasted for their lives.
15:43The United States of Israel was the only place in the United States of Israel.
15:47I think that's what I was thinking about.
15:52When I was thinking about Osama in Bishawor,
15:56Bishawor had more than 2 million people of the Afghan citizens,
16:01and the citizens of the Afghan citizens.
16:04Bishawor was the last part that was coming to Afghanistan.
16:13This feeling of all Muslims had Osama
16:16and it felt like you could help your brother,
16:19or the person who needed you.
16:21We were all in the 24, 25, 26.
16:25The Jews and the Russians,
16:29the war and the war and the war,
16:31and the war,
16:32and what I knew,
16:33when I was learning about it,
16:35now I became a part of it.
16:43I went to Bishawor,
16:45and it appeared on the food,
16:47a person who didn't see him in three days before.
16:50It was the way to talk about his speech,
16:53and it felt that he was mentally ill.
16:56He was one of his family.
16:58So Sheikh Abdullah said,
17:00this is your son, Osama Bin Laden,
17:03from Saudi Arabia,
17:04from the Saudi family.
17:06He was connected with Sheikh Abdullah
17:08and was his son.
17:09I had a fear of getting involved physically in the war.
17:17People close to me talked me out of it.
17:19They seemed to have good reasons.
17:21I later felt deeply remorseful about that.
17:27Instead of going to the front line,
17:29Bin Laden helped Azzam set up an organisation
17:31to recruit, fund, and train foreign fighters.
17:35They called it the Service Bureau.
17:38The path to the enemy of Afghanistan
17:40is the maids that ended up
17:43between the쟁ers and the enemy,
17:44and the enemy of Afghanistan,
17:45then they arrived from the RIAAF,
17:47or from the Zers in the Zatsang,
17:50or from Paris.
17:51They went to the national airport in Islamabad.
17:54They found a car in a vehicle
17:55and they followed the work.
17:56They followed the military service.
17:57Peshawah in the North West Frontier, the operations base for the Mujahideen, the Freedom Fighters of Afghanistan.
18:05From here, teams are constantly sent across the border.
18:27Then they return to Saudi Arabia for two or three months.
18:31At that time, the Saudi government was not afraid of Osama.
18:35Because this is the son of the family of Bin Laden, and she is a part of the royal family.
18:41It was his way to the workers.
18:44So people would give me to Osama, whether it's shikat or kash or even a horse.
18:52Every time he traveled, he made it a law in his life.
18:56To call his mother every day.
18:58To tell her, I'm fine, I'm okay.
19:00And to ask about her in news.
19:04And he promised not to go to the front line.
19:08He was a kid.
19:22He was a good guy.
19:23Allah!
19:24He's the best!
19:26I'm asking for a job in the gym.
19:28It doesn't mean that it's a physical side.
19:33At this time, you're going to be able to do more things to the job.
19:40You can't do it for example.
19:42You're going to be fighting, you're going to be fighting, you're going to be fighting, you're going to be fighting.
19:49Four years after first arriving in Peshawar, Bin Laden finally crossed into Afghanistan
19:59to the front line. He was 26.
20:08I was surprised by the state of the equipment and everything else, weapons, roads and trenches.
20:15I asked forgiveness from God Almighty, feeling that I had sinned because I listened to those
20:20who advised me not to go. I felt that this four-year delay could not be pardoned unless
20:26I became a martyr.
20:28But if Bin Laden was going to go into battle, he needed someone to train him to fight.
20:35I told him that he was a martyr. I told him that he was a martyr.
20:41The commander and the commander had a great deal.
20:46I didn't care about it.
20:48My brother told me what was going on.
20:51I had to go to the airport, but I couldn't go to the war.
21:03I couldn't go to the war.
21:09I got a camera and took a couple of them.
21:14Some of them took a lot of them and took a lot of them.
21:18We used to fight against the war, but we didn't have to fight against the Arab people.
21:27We were in the Arab world, 12 people.
21:32One person called the name of Sama.
21:35It was not that it was several days.
21:38It was a few months, 6 months, 8 months, what was it?
21:42What was it? It was a very difficult time.
21:45.
21:50.
21:54.
21:56.
22:01.
22:02.
22:08.
22:12.
22:14.
22:15Most of our employees are in the same way.
22:19They are in the same way.
22:21They are in the same way.
22:23They are in the same way.
22:25I think that this is the most important part of Abu Samah.
22:31They are in the same way.
22:33Allah is the Greatest, Muhammad Rahab, Muhammad Rahab.
22:40So I did not serve up to the people, I asked why they were here...
22:45...or to the people like that, or to the people like that, or to the people like that...
22:49This was the event that I showed up.
22:54I was one of our friends to do this, and I looked at the Plaza ofVir, and was there.
22:59After that, I asked myself, why did I have to go home, and I asked them myself...
23:04...and I had to go home and I got home to the people like that.
23:08I was a singer, and I was there.
23:12I said, I will be with you.
23:14I'll never get you.
23:16He didn't have power.
23:18I said, I'll be right back to him.
23:20I said, I'll be right back.
23:22I'll be right back.
23:24I'll be right back.
23:26I went from the water, I got clean.
23:28I am so happy, I am so happy.
23:30I know that there are many people.
23:32I don't think that everything else is going to be.
23:34I am so happy.
23:36The E.E.E. and the E.E.E.
23:44The E.E.E.E.V.O.S.A.M.A.
23:46from the best to the money he gave to the best and the best.
23:51I was thinking that when you do the first challenge
23:55with a different approach,
23:58if you were to get rid of it,
24:01it would be difficult to get out of it.
24:05People don't understand.
24:07They think people once started good,
24:09they had to be good all their life,
24:11or born criminals, or born saints.
24:13It's not.
24:15People change, and war change people.
24:18That's what happened to Osama.
24:34When I was in Osama,
24:49I was a man who was a man who was a man who was a man.
24:59For a year, bin Laden had been fighting the Soviets
25:02of the Afghan Mujahideen, led by Commander Wahidja,
25:06a.k.a. Fearless.
25:32I saw with my own eyes the remains of a Russian.
25:38He came to tear apart the Mujahideen.
25:40But God tore him apart in the worst way.
25:43All we found of him were three fingers and his cheek,
25:46the ear and the hair.
25:48The Afghans came and took his picture as if he was a skinned ram.
25:53I saw him when he was back from one of his trips,
26:01and he still has the same quality of voice and reasoning.
26:07But he went into war. He killed people.
26:11When his mother found out that he was going to the front lines,
26:15she was like any mother, heartbroken and worried,
26:20and couldn't sleep at night.
26:24When he finally called to tell her, I'm fine,
26:27she would cry and ask him to come back.
26:29But he was adamant about it.
26:32I'm fine.
26:33I'm fine.
26:34I'm fine.
26:35I'm fine.
26:36I'm fine.
26:37I'm fine.
26:38I'm fine.
26:39I'm fine.
26:40I'm fine.
26:41I'm fine.
26:42I'm fine.
26:43I'm fine.
26:44I'm fine.
26:45I'm fine.
26:50Throughout the conflict,
26:51the Americans supported and armed the Afghan resistance
26:54in their fight against the Soviet Union.
26:57The Afghan resistance was not in the southern border
27:01in the border of the Iraqis,
27:03but it was very grateful for it.
27:05The Afghan resistance was in Afghanistan
27:07in the world
27:08in the war,
27:10in the war between the eastern and the southern border.
27:13I am honored by these visitors
27:16that we had with us six
27:17from the Afghanistans freedom fighters.
27:20I am the grandson of one of the leaders
27:38of the Mujahideen against the Soviets,
27:41Hikmatyar.
27:42Osama Bin Laden was one of his closest friends.
27:47Bin Laden's money was very vital
27:49to supporting Azzam in his movement.
27:52There are some Afghans,
27:54especially the Afghan resistance,
27:55who are Arabs who walk in the street
27:57as if they walk in the street
27:58as a dollar box.
28:00But the Arabs would like to have
28:02an opportunity for them to protect
28:04some of the wars.
28:08The Afghans treated the Arabs as glorified guests,
28:10not Israel Mujahideen.
28:12We need to take responsibility for ourselves.
28:15I know we can provide more rigorous training.
28:18We need to take responsibility for them.
28:19They are the ones that are not bad.
28:20They are the ones that are not bad.
28:21They are the ones that are not bad.
28:22They are not bad.
28:23They are the ones that are not bad.
28:24They are the ones that are not bad.
28:25Bin Laden had the money and the power
28:27to build his own base to train Arab fighters.
28:30He chose the mountains of Jaji,
28:34a few kilometres from enemy lines.
28:36He called it Al-Masada,
28:37He called it Al Masada, The Lion's Den.
29:07He is also from an ethnic family.
29:11Because the relationship between them is not the relationship between the man and the boss.
29:21When I was young, I was young.
29:26When I was young, I was young.
29:30I was young.
29:32I was young.
29:35He was young.
29:36I was young I was young.
29:41He was young, I had a small land and a small land.
29:48In the same time, he happened last year.
29:50They didn't work the Arab days for "'Arab.'"
29:52There were no servants in the courts.
29:55They were good, and they didn't do much in the sector.
29:59But there were no servants in my area.
30:01When I joined Al-Qaeda, we visited the place.
30:07This was the place where, you know, you go, this is like, you know, the museum of jihad,
30:11if you can call it this way.
30:12This is where all, you know, the famous battles are fought.
30:14You know, the myth was created.
30:17The mountains of Jaji represented an impregnable mountain fortress, as well as a supply line
30:35from Pakistan to the Mujahideen in Afghanistan.
30:38It needed to be smashed.
30:40It was a very Egyptian.
30:43I'm not sure if I really got there.
30:46It was a game of war.
30:49It was a game of war.
30:53I Jaji had a degree of war.
30:56At the level of the Arab world, I'd like to say 30 or 40.
31:00The Hamish is a war.
31:04The Hamish is a war.
31:07The war started.
31:09There were two wars in the war.
31:14The war was the first time.
31:19The bombarded ship was the first time.
31:25The bombarded ship was the first time.
31:37There was a war in the history of the war, and there was a war for 39 days.
31:51There was a war, and there was a war.
31:56There was a war, and there was a war, and there was a war.
32:07First of all, the war was a great war.
32:12The Arabian was a member of Abu Samah.
32:15The member told us that we are the ones who are the ones who are the ones who can help us.
32:21I am not sure.
32:22I am not sure.
32:23I am not sure.
32:24When I was in the group, the group came back, it was the time to think that
32:29one is a war, and the other is a Arabian.
32:33These Arabians were four sides of the other.
32:36I had to sleep in my own group.
32:41I had to sleep in my own routine.
32:43I had to sleep in my own way.
32:45I was in my own way.
32:48I had to sleep in my own group,
32:51my family was in my own way.
32:54I don't want to be my own family.
33:01I asked myself to ask what I was doing.
33:05I said, the first step was to get a gun.
33:08One person would have to give me a gun.
33:10One person would not have to go to the earth.
33:13He would have to give me a gun.
33:15He would have to give me a gun.
33:18I would have to give my life.
33:24I was only 30 meters from the Russians,
33:26and they were trying to capture me.
33:28I was under bombardment, but I was so peaceful in my heart
33:31that I fell asleep.
33:35Welcome.
33:40Welcome.
33:47I said to myself that we would have to drive to the URSS space.
33:50If we look into the military, it was again.
33:53After that, the Russian government got to be continued.
33:56In the last place, the Russian government got to be beyond the base,
33:59there were 20 people on the URSS space.
34:02.
34:24.
34:28.
34:31He was the Karamanika, and he was the Karamanika, and he was the Karamanika, and Abu Saha.
34:46After Jaji, Osama bin Laden became mythologized.
34:53That simple young man from Saudi Arabia without any military training
34:58who stood along the other Mujahideen factions in Afghanistan
35:02against the might of the Soviet Union, and they won.
35:08This was a self-assessment to Osama.
35:14For the first time, Osama's opinion was that Osama would lead to a bunch of his brothers.
35:21I was given to them for the first time that we were able to build a relationship with each other.
35:30It's not necessary to be followed by this or that of the Afghan army.
35:33in the Afghans.
36:03On the basis of a fight
36:05It's like they've removed the defeat of Osama and the ones who were with him
36:09And it's...
36:11And what's wrong?
36:14We're fighting the military and we're fighting a lot of wars
36:33There has been a lot more than nine years ago
36:38and it has been a long time after the war
36:41with his and his and his and his and his and his
36:45I will say, my friends, that they have to defend what they have
37:00and not the reason for the peace of Jihad and the peace of Islam
37:05is the best and the best and the best of the peace of Jihad.
37:09The videos that were being sent to us in Saudi Arabia to watch
37:13shifted from Abdullah Azzam to Osama bin Laden.
37:20When we were growing up in Saudi Arabia, we never had superheroes on TV.
37:23We had early Muslim warriors.
37:26You know, the knights in the shining armor, as you have in the West,
37:29you know, it's similar to that.
37:40The battle of Jaji was the watershed moment when suddenly, somehow,
37:45Osama bin Laden turned into a living Muslim warrior.
37:50He was a hero.
37:53We heard stories of how young Afghan boys with stones will throw it,
37:57you know, at a battalion of Soviet tanks, and they will explode in balls of fire.
38:03All of this was nonsense, but nonetheless, it was such believable nonsense
38:07that there was an explosion in the number of people who would travel from Saudi Arabia,
38:14from Kuwait, from Yemen, from Algeria, from Egypt, from everywhere around the Muslim world,
38:17to go and join the Afghan Jihad with Osama bin Laden.
38:20And Osama bin Laden also hit the enemy of the
38:26This is our son, this is our son of Saudi Arabia, who is a soldier in Afghanistan.
38:31He is a military leader, and he is the king of Afghanistan.
38:35You have that moment shaping the worldview of Osama bin Laden for years to come,
38:48because he started to be seduced about this myth,
38:51the invincible Osama bin Laden, who would become the symbol of enduring Jihad against mighty empires in the future.
39:01This is not about us, the government, or the
39:04You have no idea. We are not afraid of anything.
39:05We are not afraid of anything. We are not afraid of anything.
39:07We are afraid of a river. We are not afraid of anything.
39:13On the agenda and the plan that was explained by Sheikh Abdul Al-Azm,
39:15it means that the boys will kill in Afghanistan for the attack of the Afghan people.
39:21If the Afghan people were in the fight, it is over.
39:23That means that the Jihad will end.
39:24until the soviet withdrawal bin laden had fought under the spiritual leadership of abdullah azam
39:34but once the infidels had left a different philosophy emerged
39:40we are here we are here we are here the real islamic front again is dionism communism and
39:49imperialism the men like the egyptian ayman zawahiri jihad was far from done they wanted
39:57to take their struggle to the rest of the world osama believes in azam's idea of the defensive
40:05jihad of dispelling the infidels from occupying islamic land until he ends up rubbing shoulders
40:13with ayman a member of the muslim brotherhood and they are a group of people that have been
40:20prosecuted by the egyptian government tortured for years so they have a lot of hate we believed in
40:27our religion both had an ideology and practice and hence we tried our best to establish this
40:34Islamic state and the Islamic society no iIlaho illa alaIhOla ILAHO IILAHO FUJERA FUJAAA TAN RECKAZU
40:41OH THRECKAZU AULAA USAAMA WUTHEYLAA NGZAHU
40:56It's possible that we can join him.
40:59And they started to get rid of many people.
41:02They tried to convince him that he could be a big leader, a big leader.
41:09I believe this is the turning point in his life.
41:14He wasn't a scholar, he wasn't smart.
41:16He has the charisma, he has the face, he has the myth.
41:20And that was used by people like Dawaheri and the rest of them.
41:25We started.
41:26The Sheikh Abdullah Azam is afraid of the future of Usama.
41:30We have a relationship with Usama.
41:33It's only a relationship between the beloved and the beloved.
41:38He doesn't want you to go to the future.
41:44There's an interesting change in character
41:47where he goes from being the disciple of Abdullah Azam
41:50to being this person who aligns with Dawaheri
41:54in his thinking.
42:00In May 1988, Bin Laden and other extremists
42:04began to sketch out a new organisation.
42:07Its world view was radically different
42:10to that of his old mentor, Azams.
42:13Their vision began to bring up another rather than the other two students.
42:16They designed these children
42:19to a war from Afghanistan to Afghanistan
42:23to a war between theкая,
42:26to a war against the Khothe,
42:27against the Nile against the Khothe,
42:28against the Israel for Egypt,
42:30against the Arab government
42:33and that was the real,
42:34This is the idea behind the scenes, which began to appear in the other side.
42:41In fact, when I saw the first time, it was a city of Osama,
42:46which was very wide within Pakistan and Afghanistan,
42:52and in the Middle East.
42:54When I saw the city of Osama,
42:56it was really a tool for what he wanted to do.
43:03He said to us today in Afghanistan,
43:06we would have to place an area to help our friends.
43:09He said that there will be another issue in another country from the other countries.
43:13We need to be able to help our friends.
43:18That's when it turned from an Arab movement that was fighting the Soviets within Afghanistan,
43:33into an international organisation that was going to serve as the base for jihad around the world.
43:52A few days after the founding of Al-Qaeda,
43:57the Arab jihadis, backed by the Saudi government,
44:00voted to oust Azam and install bin Laden as their overall leader,
44:04Amir, in Afghanistan.
44:07Most of the donations that were coming from Saudi Arabia,
44:11they wanted to have Saudi control over it,
44:14and they thought Osama bin Laden was our man.
44:16I would imagine Saudi Arabia,
44:19if they were to learn the wrong thing,
44:21they would have been under the influence of the Prophet of the Prophet of the Prophet,
44:23one thousand times more than the influence of their parents.
44:28They would have been under the influence of the Prophet of the Prophet of the Prophet of the Prophet of the Prophet.
44:31The first thing he has done was that the highest of the Prophet of the Prophet was one of the first and last ones.
44:50His presence of his presence was that his first and last one and last one was to be touched on all his relationship.
44:56But in reality, he will be silent about himself and by himself,
44:59and with him, and with him,
45:01in the way he sees him,
45:03and if he left him.
45:29Transcription by CastingWords
45:59CastingWords
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