Have you, the reader, ever wondered why the Sudan State and its neighbouring countries in Africa have been murdering each other by the tens of thousands during the past five decades — and are continuing to do so today?
This so far unanswered question is largely due to the strong secret and politically active presence there for some years of Osama bin Laden, the one-time notorious terrorist who was eventually assassinated by United States Marines while in hiding from Western-based authority in Pakistan.
The detailed story of bin Laden and his association with Africa has never been detailed.
When I worked in Africa as a foreign correspondent and journalist, no international spy or journalist would have ever thought that a one-time Number One world terrorist from the Middle East would set in motion, right under their very noses, a long-term clandestine plan to divide a large section of Africa into an eternal war scene and to successfully bomb the West.
With thanks to highly sensitive information heavily hidden under official wraps by top U.S. Government politicians and officials, bin Laden was virtually allowed a free hand to carry out his nefarious terrorist activities from his underground headquarters in the Sudanese city of Khartoum on Africa’s mighty White Nile River.
Had his terrorist plans been openly available to U.S. military agencies, it is very possible that the suicide aerial attacks on New York’s Twin Towers and the Pentagon military headquarters may have well have been prevented, saving a host of innocent peoples’ lives
Josef Bodansky, the director of the U.S. Government’s top anti-terrorist operation in Washington, had already urgently advised the White House that bin Laden and his Al Qaeda fighters were plotting a major African Mudjihadeen take-over in Africa together with major attacks against the U.S. mainland. His heavily researched intelligence was, however, totally ignored until the day the Twin Towers and the Pentagon headquarters were drastically attacked just a matter of over a year later.
Another mystery over the West literally ignoring bin Laden, the terrorist, until he attacked the American mainland concerned the F.B.I. raiding the New Jersey home of one El Sayyia Nosaur, an associate of an al-Qaeda terrorist operative.
There, the F.B.I. discovered vast evidence of terrorist plots to blow up various U.S. centres, including the two New York skyscrapers, and to launch wars from the Sudan across Africa. In doing so, the F.B.I. unknowingly made the first real discoveries of al-Qaeda’s terrorist plans against the West but they were basically ignored and censored.
Even the C.I.A. were slow in tackling the bin Laden threats. At one stage, one lonely C.I.A. officer working undercover and independently in the Sudan attempted to study bin Laden’s activities — not his Mudjihadeen and Jihardi terrorist training facilities but the man for his heavy US$500 million financing of Muslim terrorist groups in the Sudan, Egypt, Algeria, and Afghanistan where he had previously fought against the defeated Russian Army and had become a hero among would-be future terrorists.
The C.I.A. operative had merely run past bin Laden’s secret headquarters, attempting to photograph any activities that may be occurring in the compound. But, once again, the top brass in Washington never lifted a determined finger against the arch terrorist who would later change the course of U.S. anti-terrorist history.
From what one can now see in the U.S.; the advent of the Trump presidency may indeed investigate the U.S. Government’s refusal to place any initial strictures on bin Laden to prevent him from literally creating political disturbances and wars in the Sudan and elsewhere.
Even when the U.S. Government knew that bin Laden was actively stirring up trouble and mayhem in and from Africa, the West allowed him to continue setting up an enormous network of underground Mudjihadeen fighters throughout the Sudan and its neighbouring states.
These arch terrorists were taught how to destabilise Africa against Black Christian interests and British and European colonialists. They were, in effect, the purveyors of all the Sudanese wars which are still currently raging today, even though the mastermind is dead.