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Word: binning (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...right to expect all the help it can get. It is clear that some Saudis give financial support to terrorist groups and that others join them. Of the 19 hijackers, 15 are thought to have been Saudis. The house of Saud has no reason to pussyfoot with terrorists. Osama bin Laden has made plain that the Saudi regime is his ultimate target. Saudi rulers know all about Islamic militancy. They have been dealing with it--rather effectively and rarely with kid gloves--since Ibn Saud's forces slaughtered the religious zealots of the Ikhwan in the 1920s...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time For An Honest Talk | 11/19/2001 | See Source »

Prince Turki al Faisal knew Osama bin Laden was bad. For the last 10 of Turki's 24 years as Saudi Arabia's intelligence chief, neutralizing bin Laden was one of his primary responsibilities. But the Saudi radical kept slipping through his fingers. Then came Sept. 11 and the awful realization that bin Laden was far worse than he had imagined. "Who would expect it?" Turki asks. "I think we should have been more aware. When you look back on it, you say, 'My God, they have been telling us they are going to do something like that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hunt for bin Laden: The Near Misses | 11/19/2001 | See Source »

Sept. 11 will haunt Turki and others in the spy trade for years to come. Having left his post, Turki, 56, is at least free to talk about his torments. In a three-hour interview with TIME last week, he described two failed attempts by the Saudis to have bin Laden handed over to them, and he discussed the inability of intelligence services to "take out" the fugitive once it became clear how dangerous...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hunt for bin Laden: The Near Misses | 11/19/2001 | See Source »

...organizer of the joint Saudi-American-Pakistani support for Afghan rebels fighting the Soviet Union in the 1980s, Turki met bin Laden, a prominent volunteer in that war, five times and remembers him from those days as enthusiastic but gentle and shy. The Saudis first began to be worried about bin Laden in 1990, after he returned home from Afghanistan still hungry for more jihad. Soon after, according to Turki, bin Laden began taking veterans of the Afghan war to North Yemen to fight the Marxist regime in the Republic of South Yemen. "North Yemen is an arms market...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hunt for bin Laden: The Near Misses | 11/19/2001 | See Source »

...Bin Laden grew angrier later that year when the government invited U.S. troops to the kingdom to defend against the menace of Iraq's Saddam Hussein. When bin Laden grew confrontational, the Saudis withdrew his passport. Nevertheless, he made his way to Sudan, where he began to organize for global Islamic revolution...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hunt for bin Laden: The Near Misses | 11/19/2001 | See Source »

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