Ayman Fayed recalls details of journey to Afghanistan, joining al-Qaeda
Ayman Fayed's mother always explained to him the merits of jihad and the fight to make Islam victorious.
When Fayed became 18, his mother started to
view him as a fully-fledged soldier. She gave him money to travel to Peshawar,
Pakistan, to join al-Qaeda.
Fayed joined the jihadists in Afghanistan in
1987 when he was 18. He became a personal advisor to al-Qaeda's founder and
leader Osama bin Laden later.
He told al-Marjie that he took the first step
to travel to Pakistan by heading to the Pakistani Embassy in Cairo to request a
visa. He especially requested a visa to the Pakistani capital of Islamabad.
Having taken the visa, he headed immediately
to Cairo International Airport. When he arrived in Islamabad, he took a bus to
Peshawar.
Before taking the bus, he asked two Pakistani
young men, who turned out to be linked to the Pakistani intelligence, about the
best way to reach Peshawar to join the jihadists.
He also showed these two young men a piece of
paper on which the address of al-Benyan al-Marsous magazine was written. He
should have headed to the headquarters of the magazine to meet officials from
the magazine.
The two young men then took Fayed to meet the
Director-General of the Inter-Services Intelligence of Pakistan, Akhtar Abdur
Rahman. Abdur Rahman was also responsible for the Pakistani file. He was the
second-in-command in Pakistan after Pakistani prime minister, Muhammad
Zia-ul-Haq.
Having entered the office of Abdur Rahman,
Fayed did not feel worried or nervous. He told him that he wanted to join the
mujahedeen to fight against the Russians.
Abdur Rahman then advised him to give up the
whole idea and return to his country. He, however, insisted to join the
mujahedeen, which was why Abdur Rahman sent a message to Peshawar to ask the
mujahedeen to accept him as a new member.
In Peshawar, Fayed became close friends with
bin Laden. Some mujahedeen even thought that Fayed was a relative of the al-Qaeda
founder.
Fayed refused to be sent to any of the
training centers of the mujahedeen. This was why some of them suspected him for
a spy.
Espionage suspicions
Fayed
recalled how he tried to prove that he was not a spy. He said he shattered
suspicions around him only by insisting to join a training camp supervised by
Abu Osama al-Masri. The camp aimed to offer training to the best 23 fighters.
"However,
my demand was met with sarcasm from other people," Fayed said.
Other
mujahedeen cited tough conditions for joining the camp. One of conditions was
for those who wanted to join the camp to have a record of jihad not less than
six months.
Fayed
succeeded in joining the camp, even as he did not meet any of its conditions.
There, he was trained in all types of arms.
Abu
Osama al-Masri, Fayed said, was a charismatic commander who was feared by
everybody.
"I
understood him very well," Fayed said. "I did not feel afraid of
him."
Fayed
became then one of five people who founded al-Qaeda organization. These five
people also charted the goals of the organization.
Soon
after the exit of the Soviets from Afghanistan, the Arab mujahedeen, including
bin Laden and Abdullah Azzam, discussed the idea of founding a new organization
to accommodate all the mujahedeen. There were between 19,000 and 30,000
mujahedeen then.
"The
32 people who were trained by Abu Osama al-Masri were the nucleus of the new
organization," Fayed said.
The
mujahedeen then settled on al-Qaeda as a name for the new organization.
Al-Qaeda's goals
The mujahedeen agreed not to stage holy war anywhere
without approval from Islamic scholars. Bin Laden was also selected to be the
leader of the new organization.
He was selected for this position, Fayed
said, for his good reputation and because he was the main financier of the
mujahedeen in their battles against the Soviets.
Fayed said the Egyptian government did not
prevent the travel of its nationals to Afghanistan to join in the Arab
mujahedeen.
There was an agreement, he said, between US
president Ronald Reagan and the late Egyptian president Anwar al-Sadat for
Egypt to send Russian arms to the mujahedeen in Afghanistan. He said Egypt sent
the arms from Port Said to the Port of Karachi in Pakistan.
Fayed was not the only Egyptian to travel to
Afghanistan to join in the mujahedeen and join in the fight against the
Soviets. A large number of other Egyptians did the same, including Ayman
al-Zawahiri, Abu Hafs al-Masri, and Omar Abdurrahman.
He said Afghanistan was a real test for the
mujahedeen.
"We would have established a model
Islamic state after defeating the Russians and kicking them out of Afghanistan,"
Fayed said.
CIA and the takfiris
Fayed said takfiri and militant groups active
in Sinai, Libya and Syria have nothing to do with al-Qaeda. These groups, he
said, were created by the CIA to turn them into a pretext for interfering in
the affairs of other countries.
The anti-terrorism bill drafted by the US
following the 9/11 attacks, he added, gives the US the right to militarily
intervene in countries where al-Qaeda is present to strike it.
"The US enforced this bill in
Afghanistan, Iraq and Somalia," Fayed said.
Fayed said Muslim Brotherhood female leader
Zeinab al-Ghazaly played an important role in encouraging mujahedeen to join in
the jihad against the Russians.
The Brotherhood, he said, offered backing to the
mujahedeen.
"The Muslim Brotherhood is obsessed with
lying," Fayed said. "It uses religion to achieve its own ends."
Fayed revealed that al-Ghazaly travelled to
Peshawar to meet the Mujahedeen. He said she met Zawahiri and Azzam.
Al-Ghazaly was not the only woman who offered
backing to the mujahedeen in Afghanistan, Fayed said. Qadria Mohamed Ali, the
mother of Khaled al-Islaboli, Sadat's assassin, also travelled to the camps of
the mujahedeen in Peshawar where her second son Mohamed al-Islamboli was also
being trained.
Fayed said as a child, his mother always told
him the stories of mujahedeen to make him love jihad.
He said his mother was not highly educated,
but was an observant Muslim from Damanhour. She used to go to mosques and
attend religious classes at these mosques.
Afghanistan and the Muslim Brotherhood
The sermons delivered at mosques also played
a role in encouraging Fayed to travel to Afghanistan. He also always read the al-Benyan
al-Marsous magazine.
Fayed said the Brotherhood refused to send
any of its members to Afghanistan to join in the fight against the Soviets. Instead,
he said, they believed they should give priority to fighting the regime in
Egypt.
"The Brotherhood only raised funds for
the mujahedeen in Afghanistan," Fayed said. "Nonetheless, they
especially sent the money to the Afghan mujahedeen."
He said al-Qaeda had nothing to do with the
9/11 attacks.
The US, he said, masterminded these attacks to
turn them into a pretext for interfering in other countries and occupying them.
He said Zawahiri stood behind the collapse of
al-Qaeda. He added that the current al-Qaeda leader might be in prison in the
US and used to send specific messages only from time to time by sending audios
to his followers.
"Nonetheless, bin Laden's killing in
2011 meant that al-Qaeda is over," Fayed said.