The Rest Is Classified - 53. Bin Laden vs the CIA: The Great Escape (Ep 3)
Episode Date: June 8, 2025"The walls of oppression and humiliation cannot be demolished except in a rain of bullets." These chilling words from Osama bin Laden's 1996 fatwa declared war on the United States. How did this Saudi... Arabian millionaire transform into a global terrorist leader, openly inviting media attention even as he plotted attacks against America? And what were the critical missed opportunities for the CIA to capture or kill him before 9/11? Today we’re exploring bin Laden's return to Afghanistan in 1996, a permissive sanctuary where he solidified Al Qaeda as a global force. Despite dwindling personal funds, he used propaganda and media appearances to generate cash and build his image as a puritanical jihadist leader. Discover his strange lifestyle at Tarnak Farms, a decrepit former Soviet agricultural station, and the shift in his ideology that led him to declare all Americans, civilian or military, as legitimate targets. Join Gordon and David as they dissect the events leading up to the devastating 1998 embassy bombings in East Africa, the controversial "Trod Pints" plan to kidnap bin Laden, and the mounting frustration within the CIA over a series of missed chances. ------------------- To sign up to The Declassified Club, go to www.therestisclassified.com or click this link. To sign up to the free newsletter, go to: https://mailchi.mp/goalhanger.com/tric-free-newsletter-sign-up ------------------- Get our exclusive NordVPN deal here ➼ nordvpn.com/restisclassified It's risk-free with Nord's 30 day money back guarantee Exclusive INCOGNI Deal: To get an exclusive 60% off an annual Incogni plan, go to https://incogni.com/restisclassified ------------------- Pre-order a signed edition of Gordon's latest book, The Spy in the Archive, via this link. Order a signed edition of David's latest book, The Seventh Floor, via this link. ------------------- Email: classified@goalhanger.com Twitter: @triclassified Assistant Producer: Becki Hills Producer: Callum Hill Senior Producer: Dom Johnson Exec Producer: Tony Pastor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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It should not be hidden from you that the people of Islam had suffered from aggression, iniquity and injustice imposed on them by the Zionist Crusaders Alliance and their collaborators,
to the extent that the Muslims' blood became the cheapest and their wealth as loot in the hands of the
enemies. The presence of the USA Crusader military forces on land, sea and air in
the states of the Islamic Gulf is the greatest danger threatening the largest
oil reserve in the world. The walls of oppression and humiliation cannot be
demolished except in a rain of bullets.
The free man does not surrender leadership to infidels and sinners.
My Muslim brothers of the world, your brothers in Palestine and in the land of the two holy
places are calling upon your help and asking you to take part in fighting against the enemy,
your enemy and their enemy, the Americans and the Israelis.
Well, welcome to The Rest is Classified.
I'm Gordon Carrera.
And I'm David McCloskey.
And thank you, David, for making me read those slightly chilling words from Osama bin Laden
and his factois declaring war on the US.
I should definitely say those were his words and not mine.
Is anyone, is just tuning in.
Not the way I normally start the day.
It's not career in prose for those squirrels listening to the podcast.
I also think Gordon, it's not his poetry.
So it's a step above that.
But we'll get there.
You didn't inflict that on me, which you've threatened to do many times.
I have.
But in case anyone's wondering why we're talking about Osama bin Laden,
we are in the middle now of this remarkable story,
which looks at how Osama bin Laden, we are in the middle now of this remarkable story, which looks at how Osama bin Laden made the move from being a kind of rich kid helping out fighting the
Soviets in Afghanistan in the 80s into a kind of terrorist cult leader.
And we've seen how he's created a group called Al Qaeda or the base with a compound in Sudan
and how he'd begun to set his sights on the US.
We left last time with him forced out of Sudan and how he'd begun to set his sights on the US, we left last time with him forced
out of Sudan and returning to Afghanistan.
And this time David, we are on the road to 9-11, aren't we?
And I think we're also looking at the crucial question of whether the US could have got
to him beforehand.
Yeah, this is, I think, going to be an episode of missed opportunities, Gordon, on the part
of the Central Intelligence Agency to find and to stop Osama bin Laden.
But it is May of 1996,
shortly after Gordon Carrera's 50th birthday,
and Osama bin Laden has been booted from Sudan.
He is on a plane to Afghanistan.
He has his 15-year-old son,
he has two top al-Qaeda military commanders with him. He is returning
Gordon in many respects to a place that made him and
Really built up the image of the terrorist leader that he is becoming in the mid-90s
He has not been in Afghanistan in five years
He is returning there looking back on this period of his life
It all seems to make so much sense that he would return to Afghanistan but he's going there under an arrangement started the Taliban, but fighters who after the civil war, after the Soviet Union left Afghanistan,
they've been the movement which has swept to power and a very puritanical group who have
something but not everything in common with Bin Laden, I guess.
Yeah, they're on a similar no fun bus to Osama Bin Laden. I think I would say, as you said, it's a religiously zealous,
puritanical, very kind of law and order group that has risen to
some measure of popularity with the Pashtun population in
particular in Afghanistan, because they are seen as an
answer to a lot of the chaos and deprivation of the civil war
that has wracked the country really since Osama bin Laden left in the early nineties.
So in some respects, the Taliban, they ban things like, you know, you cannot have pork.
They don't allow chess.
They don't allow VCRs.
They don't allow kite flying famously.
So in some respects are sort of a perfect match with Osama bin Laden.
And I think the second journey into Afghanistan is really going to be the apogeeama bin Laden. And I think the second journey into Afghanistan
is really going to be the apogee
of bin Laden's personal power and influence
because he is going to take some of that playbook
from Sudan of kind of running this pretty independent
jihadist group, almost a camp, right?
A big camp for his followers.
He's gonna turn Afghanistan into that. It's gonna be a very permissive sanctuary hottest group, almost a camp, right? A big camp for his followers.
He's gonna turn Afghanistan into that.
It's gonna be a very permissive sanctuary for him
and al-Qaeda for the next few years.
But Gordon, unlike in Sudan or unlike his first stint
in Afghanistan during the Soviet jihad,
Bin Laden doesn't have as much money as he used to.
And critically for this phase of the story, which is going to take us from 1996 right up to 9-11,
propaganda is going to be really, really important for Osama Bin Laden and al-Qaeda's fundraising.
Really important.
So the family cash has dried up, basically, all the shares and investments.
He's no longer able to do any kind of day trading with his shares and pull in extra
money.
All the day trading from the Sudan stint is gone.
Those days are over.
The penny stock trading is done.
So now he is presenting himself as this kind of figure, this jihadist leader in order to
get the money in from supporters.
In a sense, it's going back to his idea of being a link person, as he was in the 80s between the people in the Gulf who've got money and people who are interested in supporting this notion of jihad. Is that right?
to keep the organization going. And so in August of 1996,
he issues his now infamous declaration of war
against the Americans occupying the land
of the two holy places, which is Saudi Arabia.
And that is of course the fatwa that you read from
at the start of this episode.
And it is a watershed moment for Bin Laden and al-Qaeda
because he really publicly formalizes
the war that I think he believes he's been fighting now for several years throughout
the 1990s and goes public with it, basically telling the CIA, telling the United States
that he and al-Qaeda are coming for them.
And so in that declaration of war, he celebrates the American withdrawal from Beirut
in the 1980s during the civil war,
withdrawals from Somalia and Yemen,
which I think bin Laden feels some measure
of responsibility for himself.
He hits the sort of oldie, but the goodie
of castigating the presence of US troops
on the soil of Saudi Arabia.
He attacks Israel for seizing Palestinian territory
in the 1967 war.
And he demands that all Muslims help to forcibly expel
Americans and Jews from Islamic lands.
And the publication of this declaration of war
really starts to drive a tremendous amount
of media exposure for Osama bin Laden and for al-Qaeda,
who I think it's fair to say, for much of the
early to mid 1990s, were really off the radar of the Central
Intelligence Agency and most Americans. That's changing in
1996.
Yeah, because he had a few tiny bits of media exposure, I think
when he was in Sudan. But suddenly you get this sense of
someone who is reaching out to the international media
and trying to build his reputation very deliberately.
I mean, I find it fascinating
because he is drawing attention to himself
as a terrorist leader.
He's basically saying to everyone, come look at me.
I'm the guy who's declaring war on America.
I'm the one who's doing it.
There is no sense of someone who is hiding
or looking to be covert in what he's doing or focusing on the action. It's about the
rhetoric and about presenting himself in that way, which I guess goes back to his self-image.
It goes back to the fundraising. But it's really interesting, I think, as someone who's
also understanding how to use the media. I mean, he invites, I think, newspaper editors,
I think Abdul Bariat won from an Arabic newspaper who I know a bit, who's based in London a lot.
You know, he goes out to see him, doesn't he, around this time.
And it's, he's inviting people.
Oh, absolutely.
And that editor of the Arab language newspaper that you just mentioned, he goes and visits
Bin Laden out in this cave complex at Toribora, which by the way, listeners, that is going
to be a cave complex you will want to note down in your bingo cards for this series.
And Osama Bin Laden gives an interview.
And interestingly enough, I mean, to give you a sense of what Bin Laden's
day-to-day or what's the nitty gritty of being with Bin Laden like at this time.
That editor says that when he visited Bin Laden in Toribora, he was served a
meal of rotten cheese, potatoes soaked in cottonseed oil, half a dozen fried
eggs and bread caked with sand.
The editor got diarrhea, boarding school food, insect bites.
But he said that he found Osama bin Laden to be likable, to be a good listener, even
if he went on a murderous tirade against the Americans and said that Osama bin Laden's
war was so comprehensive that Osama told this editor that he wanted to defeat America even
when it came to agriculture.
And he boasted that he had managed to produce sunflowers bigger than any American sunflower.
And listeners who have joined us for the first two episodes of the series will remember that
in Sudan Bin Laden also owned a sunflower farm.
So sunflowers, also a theme of the Osama Bin Laden years in the 1990s.
And Bin Laden gives some other big interviews as well.
So he gives an interview to CNN, also in Tora Bora, which airs in
May of 1997. He gives another one to ABC.
Yeah, John Miller from ABC famously, that's right, who goes
on to be a senior kind of NYPD and FBI official, amongst other
things, and goes to meet him and there's people firing guns.
There's a lot of drama to these interviews as well, which I
find fascinating. They're deliberately people who are
around Bin Laden, who are kind of creating this image of the terrorist mastermind firing
guns and, but also as the kind of ascetic who is, as you said, eating rotten cheese
in the desert despite his rich background. It's all very carefully constructed this
image. I mean, what amusing aside is that my friend and former colleague, Frank Gardner,
actually met with Bin Laden's representative in London to discuss going out there to do I mean, what amusing aside is that my friend and former colleague, Frank Gardner, actually
met with Bin Laden's representative in London to discuss going out there to do an interview.
Bin Laden had this office, we mentioned it last time, a kind of media office in London,
where journalists could go and negotiate an interview and then they'd be told you have
to go through this kind of complicated route through Pakistan to get there and get rid
of your phone on the way so you're not tracked.
But it was something you could kind of arrange as an interview, although Frank, as I think he's
written and said about, wasn't allowed to go in the end for various reasons. So he was slightly
disappointed to have met the chance to meet Bin Laden. But yeah, quite a few people do from the
West. And I think they don't know quite what to make of him, do they? Because here's this guy saying,
I am declaring war on America. And he's sitting in a kind of cave. It's a bit of a bizarre statement.
It's a bizarre statement, isn't it? Guy in of cave. It's a bit of a bizarre statement.
It's a bizarre statement, isn't it?
Guy in a cave.
Hard to put it in context, yeah.
Yeah, strange.
No, I mean, it is interesting though,
because he has already attacked America a few times.
And so he's demonstrated a willingness
and an ability to do this, right?
At least American interests in Africa or the Middle East.
And he is hitting, I think in these interviews,
a track of sort of greatest hits, right?
And we should note here that later on,
especially post 9-11,
there will be a line of thinking
that says Bin Laden sort of hates us
because we have freedoms
and he hates us for our Western morals.
And interestingly, I mean,
Bin Laden is very consistent on this.
He famously, when he visited Britain,
found your society, Gordon, to be morally degenerate.
But he's not mentioning any of that here
as justification for this war.
It is all about the American presence in the Middle East
and its support for Israel and other regimes
in the Middle East that he considers
to be sort of apostates, right?
And really in this time though,
and I think this is why a lot of the media coverage
maybe sales over everybody's heads
is he's still really seen as a financier of terror groups.
He's not seen as the kind of big wig
or operational commander or the inspiration for attacks.
He's seen as a money man, right?
But in 1997, now we should note Afghanistan is
in the tail end of its civil war here,
but when he arrives, the Taliban don't even control Kabul.
But by 1997, that changes.
The Taliban have taken the capital
and there are only three governments in the world
that recognize the Taliban at this point in time.
One of them is Saudi Arabia.
And so we see here again, similar to Sudan,
that Osama bin Laden's forays into the media,
open declaration of war against
Saudi's principal security ally
and the guarantor of the royal family's security.
He's threatening that again.
And the Saudis don't like this clearly and start to apply some pressure on the Taliban to get this guy to shut up.
So the Taliban move some of them line to Kandahar, ostensibly for his safety,
but also to have more control.
There's maybe 250 or so people with him at this point in time, this roving band of al-Qaeda
members, his massive family.
He has offered the use of a cluster of well-equipped buildings in Kandahar city or a very rustic
rundown facility outside called Tarnak Farms, which was a former Soviet agricultural station
that had been destroyed in the war and did not have plumbing.
And which option do you think Osama bin Laden took for his headquarters, his villain's lair?
I'm going to buy the farms.
The decrepit farms.
That's right.
We should say that bin Laden, you do have to appreciate the consistency of the man amid
all of the evil because he's not living like a king in private and giving this rustic kind
of, you know,
man of the people vibe to the press.
He's consistent, right?
I mean, he's truly living this way.
So at Turnac Farms, Osama Bin Laden turns that base
into a compound.
There's about 80 buildings, there's a mosque,
there's a training camp for new recruits.
I think a lot of people who, like Gordon,
were turning 50 in the mid-90s,
were probably accustomed to seeing videos
of jihadists on jungle gyms kind of running around and doing phys ed.
Again, which looks slightly comic.
This is what you're imagining, right?
Are these facilities in Afghanistan in the late 90s.
It's quite a bureaucracy, isn't it?
I mean, we talked about it last time.
Again, it's structured like a company in some ways with a bureaucracy, with committees, membership lists, oaths, all that kind of stuff. It's very very structured.
Yeah they're big on paper in Al-Qaeda, a lot of paper.
Big on paper.
I mean they've got committees for military affairs, PR, finance, legal, media, administration.
There's a farming committee in Afghanistan.
Sunflower farming, yeah.
The sunflower subcommittee. Asam bin Laden has deputies who handle all of these details.
And listeners will note from our first episode that when Al-Qaeda was formed, The Sunflower Subcommittee. Osama Bin Laden has deputies who handle all of these details.
And listeners will note from our first episode that when Al-Qaeda was formed, its members
were swearing allegiance to God. And this is starting to change in the late 1990s. Members
are swearing bayat, which is a loyalty oath, to Bin Laden personally when they join Al-Qaeda.
For all of its jihadi fun camp vibes, it's not a democracy, right?
As someone Bin Laden is exercising really strict control over Al Qaeda in these years.
Yeah.
So those kind of cult leader vibes are growing, aren't they?
Around Bin Laden, whether it's the oaths, whether it's the media interviews, it's this sense
that he is this prince-like figure, almost a kind of spiritual leader as well, even though
he didn't have much spiritual training.
He's really trying to turn himself
into something different now at this point.
And this is probably a good point in the story
to talk a little bit about his own personal charisma,
because if you listen to the fatwa that you read, Gordon,
or you watch some of the videos
that have become very well known,
these interviews from the 1990s,
or much later when he's in hiding, a lot of his public speeches that get dissemin very well known, these interviews from the 1990s or much later when he's in hiding
a lot of his public speeches that get disseminated by video. I don't think we have a great appreciation
in the West for how personally charismatic he could be. And it is interesting that a lot of
the followers, a lot of the people who are with him in Afghanistan in this period, describe their
first meeting with Osama Bin Laden
as a spiritual experience, right?
It is really true sort of cult leader vibes.
He is bringing people into his aura and into al-Qaeda
in part by virtue of his own abilities as a recruiter
and a charismatic leader and judge of people.
He's kind of turning al-Qaeda in this period
into a kind of jihadi club met in Afghanistan
where there are a lot of people around him.
There's a lot of PE, there's a lot of sunflower farming,
and there's a lot of sort of, you know,
embryonic terrorist plotting mixed in.
And his family, because we know you're very interested
in his wives and kids, David.
So the family are there, aren't they, as well?
That's right, yeah.
Listeners to the first few episodes will
remember that Gordon Carrera, especially if you watched on
video, was sort of rolling his eyes anytime I would talk about
polygamy or Osama bin Laden's finances. So I mean, we're just
Gordon and I are agreeing to disagree on what's interesting
here. Although I think we can both agree, Gordon, that it is
interesting that Al-Qaeda was playing a lot of volleyball in
this period. Volleyball also featured as kind of Al Qaeda's sport of choice in the mid 1990s, presumably
in scenes just like in Top Gun.
I would imagine it's very much like the Top Gun volleyball scene where Al Qaeda guys are
well oiled and kind of, you know, in a really rough and tumble volleyball game for high
stakes at Tarnac Farms.
Bin Laden also apparently played soccer in this period, but he had really consistent back pain,
which forced him to walk with a cane. So the soccer was a little harder. I don't exactly know
how he was able to manage volleyball with that either, but I guess he liked it. There's also
more horse stuff, Gordon. Bin Laden takes his family out on massive horseback riding excursions. He's teaching his wives to use guns.
He is also, we should note,
very personally sort of miserly, right?
So when his son Saad asks for a gift
so he can get married in this period,
Saad refuses to give him a gift,
tells his son to basically take a plot of land, farm it,
save the money, and then get married later on. He's not abusive to his family. There seems to take a plot of land, farm it, save the money and then get married later on.
He's not abusive to his family.
There seems to be no indication of that,
at least in the sort of more traditional forms,
but he's not particularly generous either.
And in this period, the Taliban give him a parcel of land
up in the Tora Bora mountains,
and he sort of splits his time between Tarnak Farms
and Tora Bora.
Now, just from the family standpoint
to round this out, Gordon, he's got three wives and a dozen kids with him there in 1996,
right? So they are all at this massive compound and heading up to Torre Bora for weekends
in the mountains. Now, Osama bin Laden is doing a lot of reading in this period. He's
reading about America. He's reading a very strange collection of books about America, I would say. He has on his shelf in the late 1990s, a book of undetermined origin
about Franklin Delano Roosevelt's alleged plan to control the world. He's got copies, I think is all
good, Jihadi terrorist should of the protocols of the elders of Zion, which is one of Hitler's
favorites, sort of essentially a fabricated story
that is very anti-Semitic.
And I think for him in this period,
it's fair to say that the line between his fantasies
and reality is perhaps getting harder and harder to discern.
And then Gordon, in 1998,
I think there is a kind of important theological addendum
to the fatwa that you so eloquently read at the beginning
of this episode, which is that Al-Qaeda releases a message that essentially says it is an individual
duty for every Muslim to kill Americans wherever they may be found.
And Osama bin Laden cites this verse from the Quran that says, quote, kill the unbelievers
wherever you find them, seize them, besiege them, ambush them.
And what's interesting is he actually makes this point in some of his interviews, doesn't
he?
He says, there is no distinction between the American military or civilians.
They are all the same.
They are all to be targeted.
And I mean, that is a very significant statement because it's an indication of his intent,
not just to target the U.S the US military is maybe we've seen in
some of the previous attacks or US officials, but actually go
after US civilians who is issuing that warning at this
point. I think in the early 90s, there actually are some
statements from Bin Laden that indicate he was concerned
about civilian casualties or perhaps more so or drew some
distinction between civilian and military targets. By the late
1990s,
there's no distinction in his mind whatsoever between those. And so he's really laid out,
I mean, he's not a religious scholar with any formal training, but he has, I think,
really laid out a kind of formal theological justification for the war that he has already
announced. The question is, he's making these statements. He's saying all these things quite publicly in interviews and elsewhere.
What's the US doing about this?
What's the CIA doing?
Cause there is this guy making quite clear his intent is to kill Americans.
Well, listeners will recall that there is a group in CIA called Alex station,
led by a zealous gentleman named Mike
Shoyer and his Manson family who are watching Osama bin Laden
very, very closely in this period and who are seeing his
public profile rise and are increasing the amount of time,
energy and collection importantly, that is being
expended on him. And in the summer of 97, the Americans get a break. So there's been an
interrogation of a defector from al Qaeda that has generated, I
think one of the first kind of maps of the organization that
bureaucratic structure, who's actually in it, where are they?
What are they doing in Afghanistan or around the world?
And that leads to technical collection on Al Qaeda,
phone taps on the organization,
including the CIA probably beginning to listen in
on Osama Bin Laden's satellite phone calls.
Surely the NSA, you're giving the CIA credit for everything.
Oh, sorry, yeah, no, I just kind of do that naturally.
Naturally, just to our friends in the NSA
and in the signals intelligence community.
I apologize to my friends at the NSA.
But this is actually a very interesting point because he is calling London, I think, with
this satellite phone.
He's calling all his contacts.
This is main mode of communication.
The people, when they go interview him, see him using it.
And it becomes one of the great kind of intelligence gathering advantages that US and the UK have
is that they are in his satellite phone communications,
calls to his mother, all the kind of plotting he's doing.
Interestingly enough, there's a kind of big thing in the media actually about the fact
that at some point he realizes they're listening into him and stops using it.
And for a long time, actually, people from the signals intelligence world would have
a massive go at the media and say, it's because you exposed the fact we were listening to
his calls. And actually, I think that's not entirely true. I think he worked
out that they were listening to his calls. All the media did was report he uses a satellite
phone. But there was a lot of media bashing around it because it was actually a real insight
into what he was doing, which I think switches off soon after this period around 98. And
they lose that insight. Well, I think it's this period of collecting on his calls and on Al-Qaeda more broadly,
that starts to flip the switch from the CIA's standpoint from, oh, this guy's kind of a
financier of international terrorism to, oh, wait a minute, he's actually the leader of this group
and he has his hands in the
operational planning. He's directing the operational planning, right? That's the change here. And
so what happens is in 1997, the CIA begins planning to try to actually render Osama bin
Laden from Afghanistan to the U.S. where he might be put on trial. Now, we should introduce
a major CIA character at this point.
It's George Tenet.
He's the director of Central Intelligence in 1997.
He has just been confirmed in July of that year.
He's a very gregarious, hardworking,
politically astute man of DC
who is sort of famous for chomping on cigars.
Although I think by this point he'd had a heart attack
and had given up smoking them,
but he just sort of chomped on them.
He's the son of Greek immigrants
and he's basically been a kind of perpetual staffer in DC
in increasingly important roles in Congress,
in intelligence oversight,
on the Hill and then in the White House, right?
He is a people person par excellence.
He's very charming. He's very blunt and direct. I didn't overlap with him at the CIA, but
there are stories upon stories of him just sort of wandering around headquarters, meeting
people sitting down in cafeteria tables. I think he's one of the most important directors
of the agency in its modern history. And the plan that gets cooked up in 1997
is to use Afghan tribesmen who are assets
left over from the days of the Soviet invasion,
their code name, we love a good kryptonym, Gordon,
on the rest is classified.
And you might have a different way of pronouncing this.
When I look at this word, I see trod pints.
Trod pints or trod pints?
Trod pints.
It's a weird one. one yeah it's not the best
kryptonite we've heard on this program they had been known as GE the digraph of GE senior
during the soviet days but they're the trod pints at this point a CIA official in his memoir
describing this group said their fighting record was quote undistinguished but they were supplied
with weapons,
cash vehicles and commo equipment.
Essentially it's also a sign of just how kind of hollowed out
the CIA has become in Afghanistan by this point,
is that we have this group of crappy tribesmen
who are going to be called upon to go after some of bin Laden.
And the plan that they cook up is to actually send this group to Tarnac Farms, to this compound,
to kidnap Osama bin Laden.
And Gordon may be there with this operational planning getting underway.
We should take a break.
When we come back, we'll see how the CIA and the trod pints attempt to snatch up Osama
bin Laden.
See you after the break.
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ends. The link is in the episode description. Welcome back. We're looking at this curiously titled Trud Pint's plan in which the CIA is looking to capture Osama bin Laden using Afghan tribesmen.
Slightly mad plan, perhaps, to kidnap him and put him on a shipping container and then ship him back like a bit of cargo, is that right? Well, it's actually even crazier than that. George Tenet, the CIA director in his memoir wrote
that the plan was literally that Osama bin Laden
would be kidnapped by rolling him up into a rug
that appears in the memoir.
So they were gonna roll him up in a rug,
the Trod Pines were going to enter
this 80 building compound,
take him to a cave outside Kandahar.
And then the plan was they would hide there for a month or so,
so that the American role would become less obvious.
Some of the line would then be taken to Pakistan, flown to the US,
essentially inside a shipping container, which would be fitted into a C-130.
Tariffed on the way in.
What is the tariff from Pakistan? It's probably high.
What's the tariff rate on Pakistani It's probably a tariff rate on Pakistani carpets containing a jihadi terrorist.
Yeah, exactly.
What are you going to pay on this cargo?
Yeah.
Well, and he's going to be seated in a dentist chair that they had purpose built for a tall
guy because bin Laden's about six foot four.
There'd be a medic that would go along.
There would be an FBI special agent who would read him his rights when he landed.
But the big question, Gordon,
as if everything we just said doesn't raise
a number of big questions,
was what do you do with the son of Inladen when he arrives?
Is he going to be indicted in the United States?
What would the count be?
What's the charge?
So the CIA is well within its rights
to render fugitives from abroad,
but there's a presidential ban
in case anyone is applying the sort of post 9-11 lens
to this.
At this point in time,
the CIA doesn't have authorization
to just kill the guy, right?
There's a presidential ban on assassinations,
which has been in place since the Ford administration.
And it means that the CIA and the Drodpines
have to be sure that the operation doesn't turn into an assassination
hit.
And there is, I think, something Gordon, which listeners might remember from our first couple
episodes on Team Alpha's experience in Afghanistan in the days after 9-11, which is Afghan spray
and pray, which is when Afghan fighters will just start to fire their gun all over the place in the middle of a battle,
kind of come what may.
And I think the fear on the part of the CIA officers who are planning this
is that they're going to end up with Osama bin Laden dead,
and then you're going to have CIA officers who could actually be in legal jeopardy
because they have conducted an assassination without any kind of legal authorization
from the White House to do so.
Now, a CIA group probably inside the Directorate of Operations
outside of Alex Station reviews the plan.
They give it a 30% chance of success.
Which seems high to me.
Maybe seems a little high. Yeah, I agree.
Mike Scheuer, the head of Alex Station,
obviously doesn't agree with that.
But George Tenet, the CIA director,
is briefed on the operation.
He decides to scrap it, turn off the raid.
And I think it's interesting, actually, again,
as a measure of how little influence Scheuer
has in this period.
Because for some reason, this plan
is briefed all the way up the chain
of the directorate of operations and
it gets to Tenet. And I mean, Shoyer, Shoyer is an analyst. Shoyer is an analyst running this
operational unit. He's cooking up this plan and it gets briefed all the way up only to get rejected.
Also, by the way, Clinton does not see the plan, but the White House, the team at the National
Security Council from the policy side,
kind of have an open disdain for it, right? Because it's basically a frontal assault by
poorly trained Afghan tribesmen on a massive walled compound.
And I've spoken to Shoya, and this is not the only one of his plans that gets rejected, and he is
very bitter about this and the others. We might come back to some of the others later. So this
one gets rejected. Actually, it might have been one of the last chances when it was relatively straightforward
to get to Bin Laden because they knew where he was. He was at Tarnak Farms. He seemed to be
based there and they knew where he was because it's at this point he kind of starts to go off
the radar much more, both his satellite phone and his own personal movements. It changes. And I
guess the crucial reason is because he knows he's got something big in store. He is about to launch the real first salvo of his war on the United States,
and it's coming and he knows it. And so he's going to ground.
This game of cat and mouse that's gone on for a couple years after he's openly declared war
on America is about to come to an end. And it comes to an end on August 7th of 1998. In the morning,
two teams of suicide bombers roll through Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
Some of the bombers have sworn fealty to Al-Qaeda, others have never met a Salman Laden,
but they've all been living quietly in East Africa since they had been trained in Afghanistan a few years before.
So they've been helped by al-Qaeda operatives flown in from Afghanistan to help manufacture the bombs.
And shortly before 1030 in the morning, a truck bomb goes off outside the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi.
It wrecks the embassy, the building next door, a bank a little further away.
There are 213 dead,
including 12 Americans.
Osama bin Laden himself had chosen the target years before, but he's kind of delegated the
details to his field commanders.
He'd picked Nairobi because he thought it was a hub for US troops going in and out of
Somalia.
He'd been shown photographs of the embassy and Osama bin Laden had picked the spot
to point the truck bomb.
His hands are all over this, quite literally.
The bomb goes off on a Friday morning.
It had been timed.
So in theory, observant Muslims
should be at the mosque in prayer.
So I guess in bin Laden's kind of twisted world,
the Muslims who are not praying are worthy of death.
And then nine minutes later,
there's another explosion in Dar es Salaam in Tanzania, killing 11.
No Americans die. By sheer luck, an embassy water tanker is actually parked between the truck bomb
and the building and it absorbs most of the impact. The thing about this is that most of the people
killed, by far the majority, more than 200 of the people killed are Africans, not Americans.
I mean, he's targeted American embassies, but the result is he's killed innocent Africans. I mean,
it's tragic and shocking and absurd, but it's also a real wake-up call for the United States,
that someone is willing to carry out such carnage with no warning against the United States.
In that last episode, Gordon, we did a brief run through of kind of the mental model and
the ideology of Osama bin Laden.
And I think this is a great example of how he believes that innocent Africans, Muslims,
just random people who happen to be walking by these embassies on this Friday morning,
I think he would say that those deaths are regrettable, but justifiable, right?
They're justified because unless Osama bin Laden,
in his view, conducts these sort of attacks,
America will continue to encroach on the Islamic world.
And so I think what he would say is,
he's killing human shields that the Americans
have sort of taken in order to limit death in the future, right?
I mean, it's crazy, but that's how I think in his brain,
he justifies the fact that one of, you know,
really the opening mass casualty attack
in his war on the United States kills 212 Africans
and only 12 Americans.
And it's pretty clear pretty quickly, isn't it?
That it is Bin Laden and al-Qaeda. I
think there's someone who was supposed to be involved in it is captured in Kenya. They get
phone numbers very quickly. It's clear that it's Bin Laden that's behind this now al-Qaeda. And then
the question becomes, you know, what do you do about it? I think within about a week, it's clear
that the CIA knows it's Osama Bin Laden. We should note that it's not like on the day of he's claiming
credit, but between some of the arrests that had taken place in Kenya and Tanzania and some analysis
of the phones that had been collected, the CIA knows within a week that it's
al-Qaeda and it's Osama bin Laden.
Now, Bill Clinton wants to respond.
He is in the middle of publicly acknowledging his affair with Monica
Lewinsky at this point, he's on vacation in Martha's Vineyard sleeping on the
couch, probably apologizing to Hillary. I mean,
actually think Peter Bergen in his book on this period, writes
that Clinton was actually sleeping on the couch in
Martha's Vineyard.
This becomes a big part of the story, doesn't it? Because the
pressure is on to do something. But this film had come out in
the summer called Wag the Dog, which is actually a great film,
which was all about a president trying to distract from his affair by launching a military
operation. And so he's caught in the domestic politics. And it's the kind of eternal tragedy
of Bill Clinton that someone who was a talented politician on one hand, the fact that he couldn't
kind of keep it in his pants really did undermine his presidency. And this is a good example of it,
isn't it? Because everyone is seeing his response through the lens of the Monica Lewinsky story and
his affair with the intern.
I suppose, though I will note that I don't think that there were many other good options.
I mean, we'll talk about how we respond here because I mean, basically, the options are
we need to fire cruise missiles at al-Qaeda targets in Afghanistan.
Training camps, the CIA and the NSA, Gordon,
have intercepts suggesting that Osama Bin Laden
is going to visit some of these camps the next day.
There's some debate on the quality of that intel,
but Clinton has to authorize launching these strikes
on the 20th of August if he wants to kill Osama Bin Laden
because listeners to this podcast,
if you are under a certain age,
you will be forgiven for not knowing that at this point in time, we do not have a constant stair drone capability over Afghanistan or Pakistan.
There's a delay in launching these cruise missiles to hitting the target, right? And you need to know where someone's going to be hours from when you launch.
You can't watch it.
You can't do it in real time. So targets get picked.
There's these training camps.
There's a tannery owned by Osama Bin Laden in a Sudanese factory that's linked to him
that's supposedly producing VX nerve agent.
Clinton basically says, don't bomb the tannery.
And he authorizes the other strikes.
The US Navy fires 75 cruise missiles at 750,000 a pop.
So the cost of these strikes is a cool $56.2 million
in 1998 money, destroys al Qaeda training camps
in Eastern Afghanistan, which sounds cool,
but they're actually built out of like mud
and crappy wood.
So it's really nothing.
Bin Laden is not there.
He may have heard rumors of US diplomatic personnel
being evacuated. He might have just not been there. Yeah. But you have something to say, Gordon.
Yeah, no, I have something to say. I mean, scoop. Well, no, I don't have a scoop. I just remember
this. In Sudan, they hit this kind of what was supposed to be what chemical weapons factory,
and it turns out to be a pharmaceutical factory. I mean, that was bad intelligence. I mean, this
was a significant pharmaceutical
factory for Sudan, which gets taken out by American cruise missiles. Bad intelligence.
But also, the result of all of this is, I think, it's not just missing Bin Laden, but
it becomes a propaganda coup for Bin Laden, doesn't it? Because the Americans have fired
these expensive missiles, they've missed him, he's eluded them, they've hit a Sudanese pharmaceutical factory.
So the kind of mythology that bin Laden is building about himself is only going to grow as a result.
This becomes a kind of plus for bin Laden rather than any damage to him and al-Qaeda.
That's right. And I mean, we should also note another theme here of the Osama bin Laden story will be that you cannot trust the Pakistanis because I mean, a
bunch of former CIA officials will basically come out and say
in their memoirs that they think that bin Laden may have been
tipped off by sources inside Pakistan that these strikes
were coming.
Because the missiles are going to fly over Pakistan, right?
I think to go into Afghanistan. So the US feels it has to warn
the Pakistanis that the missiles are going to kind of
overfly. And that's right risk is because
of the potential relationship there between Pakistani
intelligence. That's the allegation.
I mean, the strikes kill 33 al Qaeda members. But again, those
timber and mud hut camps are rebuilt within maybe a week,
right? So other than setting back the Sudanese pharmaceutical
industry by several decades, the strikes accomplish almost nothing. And you're right, Gordon, it's not just they don't accomplish
any military objective or kill Osama bin Laden, but they turn him into a global celebrity.
Biographies of Osama bin Laden begin to go on sale in Pakistan and sell out instantly.
Osama in that period actually becomes a very common name for sons in Pakistan because I
think bin Laden is seen at this point as a fighter. He is on the front lines of the fight against the
infidel Americans who have stuck their fingers into the Middle East. Interestingly, the strikes
also cement the Taliban's determination not to hand Osama bin Laden over.
The Taliban see the missile strikes as a violation of their sovereignty and also, I think, feel
honor bound by these sort of Pashto, Pashtunwali tribal codes to offer hospitality to visitors,
to offer asylum.
And you know, it's complicated, but it basically, I think, hardens the Taliban to saying, we're
not going to turn this guy over, right?
We're not going to kowtow to your pressure.
And the Saudis had been pushing the Taliban,
and quietly there were visits
from Saudi intelligence officials,
very senior Saudi intelligence officials,
throughout a lot of this period to try to go to Kabul
and try to convince the Taliban to just hand Bin Laden over.
Cause I think at this point,
the Saudis would have been willing to take him back, take him off the table.
And the Taliban basically say pound sand, and the Saudis will break off diplomatic relations.
But privately, the Taliban are furious at bin Laden.
And Mullah Omar, the leader of the Taliban, actually visit Osama at his compound and he tells him
to leave.
And Osama bin Laden, I guess, convinces Mullah Omar to let him stay, kind of arguing that,
look, if you give in to the Americans, if you give in to the Saudis, the decision is
going to be un-Islamic.
And bin Laden in 98 is granted a reprieve of another year and a half, which is going
to turn out to be a pretty crucial year and a half to stay in Afghanistan and kind of
figure things out.
Now the Saudis, I'd written in the notes, they send one more Hail Mary, which I guess
wouldn't be the right term.
Send up a Hail Mary pass to try to get Osama to come home.
They send his mother to Afghanistan to see if she can
convince him to come back.
She brings chocolates, which apparently Osama's children have never seen before, but Osama
of course refuses to go back home.
It would have perhaps somewhat dented his image as global jihadist leader if his mother
says come home and he comes home.
If you're convinced by your mother with some chocolate.
He's very close to his mother. He respects his mother.
I still think that would be a bit weird.
So I don't know what they were thinking with that. But yeah, didn't work.
That's right. And now Gordon, we have the nexus of the future of al-Qaeda
and Osama bin Laden's wife.
So you cannot prevent me from speaking about his marital choices in this part.
So bin Laden is realizing that the writing is on the wall
and that he is gonna have to find someplace
to go after Afghanistan on his sort of itinerant global ways.
And he wants to go to Yemen next.
He's got family connections in Yemen.
I'm sure the Saudis will love him being right
on their doorstep,
but he needs to ensure tribal protection.
Listeners will recall if you're tracking how many wives does
Osama bin Laden have with him at any point in time,
he believes that he's permitted up to four.
Right now in the late 90s, he has three.
One of them left him in Sudan,
divorced him and took her three children.
He's short one potential wife, Gordon.
He is looking for a wife to cement
these blood ties with a tribe in Yemen. He is looking for a very to cement these sort of blood ties with a tribe in Yemen.
He is looking for a very pious teenager and they find one. They find a 16-year-old in Yemen.
Osama bin Laden dispatches a bodyguard from Afghanistan with a $5,000 dowry.
Feels like he could have probably afforded a little bit more. They are married in 2000
in Kandahar. Her name is Amal and she is younger than many of Osama bin Laden's children.
The other wives are very frustrated with this.
Thank you for the update on Osama bin Laden's marital status.
You're welcome, Gordon.
What about the CIA though? This is the thing, like-
I'm not interested in talking about the CIA here, Gordon.
Yeah, the rest is classified, not the rest is like family matters.
The rest is classified, not the rest is like family matters.
The rest is polygamy.
Could we get back to the CIA and what they're doing?
Because surely now the previous plan was vetoed, the missiles have missed.
You'd think the CIA would be kind of putting everything into this plan to go after it,
but it still feels like they're cooking up plans, aren't they?
But they're not getting put into action,
really. I find it's kind of bizarre at this period. What did Trump say in the debate concepts
of a plan? I think that was the, that's what the CIA is going. I mean, obviously, there's a tremendous
amount of pressure building inside the CIA and at the White House to do something, right? Yeah. But
there really are nothing but bad options at this stage. Now, George Tenet, the CIA director,
begins writing letters to the White House
asking for more funding for the counterterrorism mission.
Tenet wrote in his memoir that, quote,
the fact is that by the mid to late 1990s,
American intelligence was in chapter 11, just bankruptcy,
and neither Congress nor the executive branch
did much about it.
Budgets had declined, as we mentioned last time,
but the counterterrorism resourcing is starting to kind of pick up in the late
90s. And Tennant writes a letter to the agency workforce in 1999,
the title of which is We Are At War.
I mean, Bin Laden has already declared war on the United States in 1996.
Tennant basically says, we need to listen to this guy. We are at war with Osama Bin Laden and already declared war on the United States in 1996. Tenet basically says we need to listen to this guy.
We are at war with Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda.
And Tenet deputizes a man named Kofor Black,
who is then the chief of CTC, the Counterterrorism Center, to come up with a plan.
Yeah. So Kofor Black, I mean, people who listen to our very first episodes,
some of our earliest ones on the CIA in Afghanistan, will remember him. He's a very colourful character, deep, growly, gravelly voice, slightly
Atlantic, mid-Atlantic accent, tough talking as well. Interestingly enough, the thing about
Kofor Black, and I've kind of met him a few times, is that he'd actually had some run-ins with
Bin Laden even earlier in the 90s, because he'd been in Khartoum as a head of station when Bin
Laden was in Sudan
and he'd had some of bin Laden's operatives tail him out of the embassy. So he kind of had this
experience but he's a tough, aggressive talking operator. So you can see why he's the right person
to put in charge of the counter-terrorist center and charge of this plan. And yet, when I look back
on it now, you still see that there you know, there's plans, there's
memoranda, there's notifications, there's all these things, but they're never actually executed.
They never actually kind of pull the trigger on anything, do they?
I'm a little bit of two minds on this, because I agree with you that the theme of this episode
really is a series of missed opportunities to get Osama bin Laden prior
to 9-11.
Yeah.
But we should also note that once Tenet and the CIA understand that Osama bin Laden is
coming for us, in particular after the East Africa bombings, there is a push to improve
our collection and our understanding of Al-Qaeda
pretty significantly. I mean, there's a bunch of human sources who get recruited in this period.
There's a lot more technical collection. Alex Station is beefed up to more than 40 people.
There's a bunch of connections with foreign partners on Al-Qaeda that hadn't existed before.
I mean, interestingly, there's a PDB president's daily brief in December, December the fourth of 1998, which is titled
quote, Bin Laden preparing to hijack us aircraft and other
attacks. Yeah. So there's a lot of strategic warning, I think
you could say about what al Qaeda is up to. And yet, there's
an inability, I think, to translate that into practical efforts
and operations to stop these attacks and to stop Al-Qaeda from ultimately carrying out
9-11.
Yeah, there's a kind of memorandum of notification authorizing the CIA to capture or kill Osama
bin Laden.
Yeah, and this is Christmas of 98.
Yeah, so they've got a bit more authorization. And yet, when you talk to the Mike Shawers of this world,
as I did kind of years ago, there is an anger there.
There were opportunities to potentially capture or kill him,
but there was always a reason not to.
So he will say there was one time they thought
he was going to be in a particular place.
They had some intelligence.
But then it was opposite a mosque.
And the worry was that Shrapnel from a missile strike
might hit the mosque and anger people.
Another time Bin Laden was thought to be out hunting with some people who were actually
from a royal family, linked to a royal family in the Gulf.
And again, the thought was, are there kind of diplomatic reasons not to do it?
So if you listen to the Mike Shorries of this world, there is a kind of deep abiding sense
that what was happening was he was offering plans which are going up through tenet to
the White House and somewhere along the line someone was saying no. Now there was always a reason that it
was too risky or it wasn't going to work or it would cause diplomatic offense to another country,
it might cause outrage. So you do get a sense that even though George Tenet said we're at war
with al-Qaeda, in terms of the actual willingness to take risks to do it,
just not quite sure it's followed through when I look back at that period.
I guess in one sense, we do need to remember that this is all happening prior to 9-11.
Yeah, hindsight.
Osama bin Laden is considered to be a threat to US national security. There has been an effort
inside the counter-terrorism center to do more, right? But we do not have the shadow of almost 3,000 dead Americans cast over this story
yet. I do think it's also important, Gordon, to note that in that memorandum of notification,
which is essentially a covert action finding that is going to authorize the CIA to capture or kill Osama bin Laden. There is a deep and still ongoing disagreement, I think, over what authorities the CIA actually
had in this period, right?
What could the CIA legally do against Osama bin Laden?
And I think that Scheuer, again, is the head of Alex Station, Kofor Black, head of the
Counterterrorism Center, George Tenet, the CIA station, Kofor Black, head of the counterterrorism center,
George Tenet, the CIA director has said that we didn't actually have authorization to go
out and just kill bin Laden.
There's a line in Tenet's memoir where he says he was told by the attorney general,
Janet Reno, that an attempt by the CIA to kill bin Laden would have been illegal.
And I think really in this period, the CIA believed that it had justification to kill
him only if it judged that capture wasn't feasible during the operation.
So there's a lot of ambiguity.
Your best sort of hammer at this point are those trod pints, that Afghan militia, which
you kind of figure is going to result probably in maybe their deaths
or in Osama bin Laden's death
through the death of his family members
if they go and assault him somewhere.
He's also moving around a lot more
in the sort of post East Africa, 98, 99 and 2000.
So he's a harder target.
And there was a kind of inching forward
of these plans to kind of do more.
And it just was never clear enough.
There was never enough weight given.
I think maybe there weren't even appropriate
or useful levers to really get him in this period.
You sort of have to disrupt the Afghan sanctuary
in this stage.
And it was never going to be
on Clinton's bingo card to invade, right? I mean,
they were not going to invade Afghanistan. And this period, I think it's probably fair to say
there was never even a consideration of using a US Special Forces team to go in and actually get
bin Laden. But I think in retrospect, you say maybe something like that should have been considered.
December of 98, the CIA gets tipped off
that Sam Ben Laden is gonna be at a guest house in Kandahar,
you know, should we fire a cruise missile?
Clinton doesn't want to.
There's worries about collateral damage.
Mike Scheuer goes bananas.
You mentioned that falconing incident, Gordon,
and this is in early 1999.
Sam Ben Laden is apparently going out
to visit this desert hunting camp.
The CIA has an asset at the camp who can tell the CIA when
Sam is coming for dinner,
but they see this group of what they think are maybe Emirati royals.
And so there is concern that what if we kill members of the royal family?
They don't do it.
There were a number of instances where I think particularly if someone in the
White House had said, we need to kill this guy, history might've been totally different. And there were a number of instances where I think particularly if someone in the White
House had said, we need to kill this guy, history might have been totally different.
Who said no is an interesting question because I remember talking to Richard Clark, who was
the kind of counterterrorism advisor to President Clinton and then President Bush.
And he would say, well, the CIA would bring these plans up to the White House and they'd
be like, these guys, meaning Mike Shaw and Alex Stach, should come up with these plans up to the White House and they'd be like, these guys, meaning Mike Shaw and Alex Station, have come up with these plans.
But when they got briefed up to the White House, they'd go, but they're kind of nutty
plans and they probably won't work.
Yeah.
And then they'd go back to Shawyer and say, well, the White House has said no to you.
So whether it was the CIA leadership or the White House saying no, quite how that happened
is a little bit unclear.
But the result is, I guess, Shawoya gets increasingly angry, doesn't he? And furious
at these missed opportunities and saying that officials would have blood on their hands.
He's basically writing emails and memos that are going around the seventh floor at Langley,
which is frowned upon in a bureaucracy. It's actually saying, look, yeah, if the American
people find out later that we've missed all these opportunities. You will quite literally have blood on your hands.
Unsurprisingly, he is relieved of his command of Alex station and he's told he'll get a
cash award or two medal and Shoyer apparently says, if you try to give me medal and a money,
they'll be back on your desk if I don't shove them up your ass, which is exactly the kind
of person that Mike Shoyer was.
He is then sent to a job in the CIA library where he quietly works on a
lengthy report on Osama bin Laden and it is now a book called Through Our Enemy's Eyes, from which
some of this is drawn. Yes. He wrote it anonymously while still a CIA officer and had it published.
That's when I first met him and interviewed him when he was writing that book. But yeah, so he's
ignored it, but al-Qaeda and bin Laden are still plotting.
I guess the key thing here in this period is we're heading towards 9-11 and the CIA
is looking at all these plans, but Al-Qaeda is plotting and is plotting bigger and bigger
things.
There's a plot to bomb LA airport in 1999.
I remember there was a New Year's Eve plot linked to Jordan, I think, to do something
huge there.
And then there's, I think, a particularly significant one against the USS Cole, the
warship in Aden in Yemen, isn't it?
Which actually killed 17 Americans.
Yeah.
I mean, 17 American sailors killed in this.
I mean, it is yet another sign that Bin Laden is absolutely determined to do something spectacular.
But still, there's no kind of
retaliation.
There's nothing happening.
When you look back on it now, you look at this kind of growing tide of attacks and ever
more ambitious attacks, and you can sense something building, can't you?
That Bin Laden is building towards trying to do something more ambitious.
Now I know that's hindsight, but now looking back, it feels very ominous, doesn't it?
It does. And I think in particular, the lesson that bin Laden will take away from the bombing
of the USS Cole in Yemen is that the Americans are weak. They're not going to do anything because,
I mean, that one, unlike East Africa, 17 American sailors die. There's a hole the size of a house
blown in the side of this destroyer while it's refueling
at port in Yemen.
And there's no retaliation.
The CIA knows shortly after that Al-Qaeda is involved and nothing happens, right?
I mean, literally no reaction to it.
So I think bin Laden's takeaway from really the opening salvos of his war is that he's getting what he wants, right?
The United States is a paper tiger.
And if he does something really big, it will eventually flee the Middle East, which is exactly what he wants.
And so I think with Osama bin Laden eluding the CIA and planning something spectacular.
Let's end there.
And when we come back next time, we'll see how all of this leads to 9-11.
But Gordon, if listeners cannot wait and want to binge listen, the
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