We trained them:
The thesis of John Cooley's Unholy Wars is that the tragic attack on the World Trade Center and the Pengaton was "engineered, planned and in some cases carried out by CIA-trained veterans of the 1979-1989 Afghanistan war, or those schooled or influenced by them." No small charge. Of course, Mr. Cooley is not claiming that the CIA intended the result; and he acknowledges that hindsight is an untimely gift. Still, he takes great pains to show that, after the smoke cleared in Afghanistan, the Afghan rebels became a terrorist diaspora -- one that remained highly networked and adequately funded. Mr. Cooley at points admits that other causal factors were involved as well, not least the continued flow of funds needed to finance jihad, but his recurring accusation is that "blowback" was at the heart of September 11th.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/t...e_mmn-20/102-3181223-3512142?v=glance&s=books
We trained OBL (note date of article):
Bin Laden comes home to roost
His CIA ties are only the beginning of a woeful story
By Michael Moran
MSNBC
NEW YORK, Aug. 24, 1998 — At the CIA, it happens often enough to have a code name: Blowback. Simply defined, this is the term that describes an agent, an operative or an operation that has turned on its creators. Osama bin Laden, our new public enemy Number 1, is the personification of blowback. And the fact that he is viewed as a hero by millions in the Islamic world proves again the old adage: Reap what you sow.
...
By no means was Osama bin Laden the leader of Afghanistan’s mujahedeen. His money gave him undue prominence in the Afghan struggle, but the vast majority of those who fought and died for Afghanistan’s freedom - like the Taliban regime that now holds sway over most of that tortured nation - were Afghan nationals.
Yet the CIA, concerned about the factionalism of Afghanistan made famous by Rudyard Kipling, found that Arab zealots who flocked to aid the Afghans were easier to “read” than the rivalry-ridden natives. While the Arab volunteers might well prove troublesome later, the agency reasoned, they at least were one-dimensionally anti-Soviet for now. So bin Laden, along with a small group of Islamic militants from Egypt, Pakistan, Lebanon, Syria and Palestinian refugee camps all over the Middle East, became the “reliable” partners of the CIA in its war against Moscow.
WHAT’S ‘INTELLIGENT’ ABOUT THIS?
Though he has come to represent all that went wrong with the CIA’s reckless strategy there, by the end of the Afghan war in 1989, bin Laden was still viewed by the agency as something of a dilettante - a rich Saudi boy gone to war and welcomed home by the Saudi monarchy he so hated as something of a hero.
In fact, while he returned to his family’s construction business, bin Laden had split from the relatively conventional MAK in 1988 and established a new group, al-Qaida, that included many of the more extreme MAK members he had met in Afghanistan.
http://www.msnbc.com/news/190144.asp