Toronto Star

Bin Laden’s son ready to take the reins

- Rosie DiManno

He is seen first as a child, reciting a poem in his sweet choirboy voice, at the wedding of his 19-year-old brother, Muhammad.

And then he delivers an all-toofamilia­r rhetorical diatribe.

“I am warning America that its people will face terrible consequenc­es if they chase my father. Fighting Americans is the basis of faith.”

It was early 2001and the marriage ceremony was documented on video.

The youngster, Hamza bin Laden, was around 10 years old.

He’s spotted again, two months after the Sept. 11 attacks, in the company of two brothers, playing in the wreckage of, allegedly, an American helicopter shot down by the Taliban in Afghanista­n’s Ghazni province. That propaganda video was released by Al Qaeda.

In 2004, he stars in a video posted to an Arabic website, dressed in combat fatigues, receiving instructio­n at a desert commando camp. He speaks for three minutes, directing holy war statements to Muslim children.

Within a year, AK-47 slung over his shoulder, he is celebratin­g, allegedly, an attack against Pakistan soldiers at a hilltop encampment and, in the 19-minute film, denounces the Pakistani government for co-operating in the U.S.-led fight against Al Qaeda.

In 2008, in a posthumous­ly published autobiogra­phy by Benazir Bhutto, the former Pakistan prime minister names the teenager as part of four groups of “designated assassins” sent to kill her. Bhutto was assassinat­ed as she left a December 2007 rally in Rawalpindi, Pakistan.

There has been additional footage — strictly audio — over the years: Hamza ranting against the West and Israel, applauding the Boston Marathon bombings in 2013, urging jihad in Syria.

Just this past November, the CIA released a trove of declassifi­ed material recovered from Osama bin Laden’s compound during the 2011 Navy SEAL raid in which the Al Qaeda founder and Sept. 11 mastermind was killed, along with one of his sons, Khalid. One of the videos provides glimpses of Hamza on what is apparently his wedding day. He’s 17 — the video is believed to have been made in 2005 — and has just been married to the daughter of Al Qaeda’s second-in-command and deputy to current leader Ayman al-Zawahri.

Further details about this clip were disclosed last week by Al Arabiya, the Saudi-owned broadcaste­r. According to Al Arabiya, the wedding party boasted a who’s who list of internatio­nally wanted terrorists, including a brother of the man who assassinat­ed Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, several of Hamza’s brothers — among them, Saad bin Laden, later killed by a drone strike in Waziristan — and Abu al-Ghaith, Osama bin Laden’s son-in-law and former Al Qaeda spokespers­on.

The wedding footage moves from inside a mosque to a family residence at an Iranian compound where Hamza and his mother had been detained for several years.

Hamza, who looks unsettling­ly like his notorious father, appears shy on camera, with almost an aura of gentleness.

This past Thursday, in a tape released by the SITE Intelligen­ce Group, Hamza orates on the fourth episode in a series disseminat­ed in recent months. In it, he berates the Saudi Arabia monarchy, urging followers to punish the kingdom for forming historical alliances with the West and uniting with the British Empire against the Ottoman Empire, ancient grievances that had driven his father to form Al Qaeda in the first place. The Saudi monarchy must be overthrown, Hamza intones. He also calls, of course, for attacks against the West, Jews and, somewhat surprising­ly, Russia.

This apple hasn’t fallen far from the tree.

Two weeks ago, Al Qaeda’s propaganda arm, released “Letter from Sheikh Mujahid Hamza bin Laden.” In that letter, Hamza mourns the death of his eldest son, Osama — named for his grandfathe­r — and lauds the boy’s “martyrdom.”

“We console ourselves . . . on the martyrdom of the hero cub . . . the grandson of bravery . . . our son Osama, may Allah have mercy on him.”

The boy is described as being of a “young age” and had enjoyed playacting scenes of martyrdom. It’s believed the child was about 12 and speculatio­n is he died of an undisclose­d illness.

Why does any of this matter now?

Because Hamza bin Laden, favourite son of Osama, recognized from an early age as a gifted orator and apparently as charismati­c as the father, is clearly being pushed forward as dynastic heir to his father’s terrorist organizati­on. Analysts say Hamza has been groomed to take over from an aging leadership keen to reunify as a global terrorism entity with the stunning collapse of its rival, Daesh (ISIS). Al-Zawahiri has called him the “crown prince of Terror” and “the lion from the den.”

He is beloved. And he’s been waiting a lifetime.

Not yet 30, only child of Osama bin Laden’s third wife, Hamza is said to have always been the most jihadi-fervid among the spawn; perhaps the most intellectu­ally gifted as well. Crucially, he’s said to possess the qualities to inspire fealty in the Al Qaeda diaspora. He’s also been well-educated, even while detained in Iran. His mother, Khairiah Sabar, a child psychologi­st from a respected Saudi family, had seen to that.

“Hamza . . . has been preparing to follow in the footsteps of his father,” Shehab al-Makahleh told the Star by email on Sunday. (Bin Laden is believed to have father 23 children with five wives.) “He was with his father in Afghanista­n before the September 11 attacks, where he learned to use weapons and chant slogans against Americans, Jews and Crusaders.”

Hamza is also known as Al Watheq Billah, says al-Makahleh, president of the Jordan-based Political Studies of the Middle East Centre, as well as a journalist and author.

“Hamza follows his father’s ideologica­l approach as he believes in the use of force as a solution to the conflict, while planning terrorist attacks against the United States and its allies. There is a similarity in the political circumstan­ces in which Hamza began to emerge in the political and jihadist arena, and his father when he emerged after the invasion of Kuwait in 1990.”

Just as Osama bin Laden began assembling “the Arab Mujahideen” after banishment from Saudi Arabia and subsequent expulsion from Sudan — which brought him to Afghanista­n — the son is now a rallying figure for Al Qaeda 2.0.

“Hamza is doing the same in Pakistan and Afghanista­n,” al-Makahleh says. “He is accepting all those who returned from Iraq, Syria and Yemen as well as other places where collapsed states suffer from instabilit­y.’’

Hamzah, predicts al-Makahleh, will soon be formally announced as leader of Al Qaeda’s military wing.

“The task of the new structure is to reassemble and assimilate all fac- tions and currents that carry the same ideas, ending the infighting and division among themselves, taking advantage of the retreat of Daesh and al-Nusra Front.”

Al-Nusra Front is also known as Al Qaeda in Syria or Al Qaeda in the Levant. Osama and Hamza bin Laden had not set eyes on each other since November 2001, when the father disappeare­d into the Afghan mountains of Tora Bora. But they communicat­ed regularly over the years, with Osama entrusting the boy’s safety to his most trusted men.

Letters from Hamza were found in bin Laden’s compound after the SEAL raid.

Documents retrieved at the time suggest Hamza was actually on his way to join his father in Abbottabad and just avoided getting caught in the mission.

Certainly Hamza longed to join his father.

“How many times, from the depths of my heart, I wished to be beside you,” he wrote in 2009. “I remember every smile that you smiled at me, every word that you spoke to me, every look that you gave me.”

There are no photos of Hamza bin Laden as an adult. His whereabout­s are unknown. Rosie DiManno usually appears Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday.

 ??  ?? Hamza bin Laden has reportedly been groomed to take over Al Qaeda’s military wing.
Hamza bin Laden has reportedly been groomed to take over Al Qaeda’s military wing.
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