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by Daniel Golden,
James Bandler and Marcus Walker
The Wall Street Journal, September
27, 2001
A U.S. inquiry into bin Laden
family business dealings could brush against some big names associated
with the U.S. government. Former President Bush said through his chief of
staff, Jean Becker, that he recalled only one meeting with the bin Laden
family, which took place in November 1998. Ms. Becker confirmed that there
was a second meeting in January 2000, after being read the ex-president's
subsequent thank-you note. "President Bush does not have a relationship
with the bin Laden family," says Ms. Becker. "He's met them twice."
Special Report: Aftermath of Terror
Bin Laden Family Could Profit From a Jump In Defense Spending Due to Ties
to U.S. Bank By Daniel Golden, James Bandler And Marcus Walker, Staff
Reporters of 'THE WALL STREET JOURNAL'
If the U.S. boosts defense spending
in its quest to stop Osama bin Laden's alleged terrorist activities, there
may be one unexpected beneficiary: Mr. bin Laden's family.
Among its far-flung business
interests, the well-heeled Saudi Arabian clan -- which says it is
estranged from Osama -- is an investor in a fund established by Carlyle
Group, a well-connected Washington merchant bank specializing in buyouts
of defense and aerospace companies.
Through this investment and its
ties to Saudi royalty, the bin Laden family has become acquainted with
some of the biggest names in the Republican Party. In recent years, former
President Bush, ex-Secretary of State James Baker and ex-Secretary of
Defense Frank Carlucci have made the pilgrimage to the bin Laden family's
headquarters in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Mr. Bush makes speeches on behalf of
Carlyle Group and is senior adviser to its Asian Partners fund, while Mr.
Baker is its senior counselor. Mr. Carlucci is the group's chairman.
Osama is one of more than 50
children of Mohammed bin Laden, who built the family's $5 billion
business, Saudi Binladin Group, largely with construction contracts from
the Saudi government. Osama worked briefly in the business and is believed
to have inherited as much as $50 million from his father in cash and
stock, although he doesn't have access to the shares, a family spokesman
says. Because his Saudi citizenship was revoked in 1994, Mr. bin Laden is
ineligible to own assets in the kingdom, the spokesman added.
The bin Laden family has long
disavowed Osama, and has cooperated fully with several federal
investigations into his activities. The family business, headed by Osama's
half-brother Bakr, epitomizes the U.S.-Saudi alliance that the suspected
terrorist often rails against. After the 1996 truck bombing in Dhahran,
Saudi Arabia, that killed 19 U.S. servicemen, Saudi Binladin Group built
military barracks and airfields for U.S. troops.
But the Federal Bureau of
Investigation has issued subpoenas to banks used by the bin Laden family
seeking records of family dealings, a person familiar with the matter
said. This person said the subpoenas weren't an indication the FBI had
found any suspicious behavior by the family. A family spokesman said he
had no knowledge of the subpoenas but that the family welcomes them and
has nothing to hide.
People familiar with the family's
finances say the bin Ladens do much of their banking with National
Commercial Bank in Saudi Arabia and with the London branch of Deutsche
Bank AG. They also use Citigroup Inc. and ABN Amro, the people said.
"If there were ever any company
closely connected to the U.S. and its presence in Saudi Arabia, it's the
Saudi Binladin Group," says Charles Freeman, president of the Middle East
Policy Council, a Washington nonprofit concern that receives tens of
thousands of dollars a year from the bin Laden family. "They're the
establishment that Osama's trying to overthrow."
Mr. Freeman, who served as U.S.
ambassador to Saudi Arabia during the Gulf War, says he has spoken to two
of Osama's brothers since hijacked airplanes rammed the World Trade Center
and the Pentagon on Sept. 11. They told him, he says, that the FBI has
been "remarkably sensitive, tactful and protective" of the family during
the current crisis, recognizing its longstanding friendship with the U.S.
A Carlyle executive said the bin
Laden family committed $2 million through a London investment arm in 1995
in Carlyle Partners II Fund, which raised $1.3 billion overall. The fund
has purchased several aerospace companies among 29 deals. So far, the
family has received $1.3 million back in completed investments and should
ultimately realize a 40% annualized rate of return, the Carlyle executive
said.
But a foreign financier with ties
to the bin Laden family says the family's overall investment with Carlyle
is considerably larger. He called the $2 million merely an initial
contribution. "It's like plowing a field," this person said. "You seed it
once. You plow it, and then you reseed it again."
The Carlyle executive added that he
would think twice before accepting any future investments by the bin
Ladens. "The situation's changed now," he said. "I don't want to spend my
life talking to reporters."
A U.S. inquiry into bin Laden
family business dealings could brush against some big names associated
with the U.S. government. Former President Bush said through his chief of
staff, Jean Becker, that he recalled only one meeting with the bin Laden
family, which took place in November1998. Ms. Becker confirmed that there
was a second meeting in January 2000, after being read the ex-president's
subsequent thank-you note. "President Bush does not have a relationship
with the bin Laden family," says Ms. Becker. "He's met them twice."
Mr. Baker visited the bin Laden
family in both 1998 and 1999, according to people close to the family. In
the second trip, he traveled on a family plane. Mr. Baker declined
comment, as did Mr. Carlucci, a past chairman of Nortel Networks Corp.,
which has partnered with Saudi Binladin Group on telecommunications
ventures.
Former President Carter met with 10
of Osama's brothers early in 2000 on a fund-raising trip for the Carter
Center in Atlanta. According to John Hardman, executive director of the
center, the brothers told Mr. Carter that Osama was completely removed
from the family. After Mr. Carter and his wife followed up with breakfast
with Bakr bin Laden in New York in September 2000, the bin Laden family
gave $200,000 to the center. "We don't have any reason to think there's a
connection" between Osama and the rest of the family, Mr. Hardman says.
During the past several years, the
family's close ties to the Saudi royal family prompted executives and
staff from closely held New York publisher Forbes Inc. to make two trips
to the family headquarters, according to Forbes Chairman Caspar
Weinberger, a former U.S. secretary of defense in the Reagan
administration. "We would call on them to get their view of the country
and what would be of interest to investors."
Mr. Weinberger said no trips to
Saudi Arabia were planned. "If we went," he said, "we may or may not call
upon them. I don't think the sins of the son should be visited on the
father or the brother and the cousins and the aunts."
There is no indication President
George W. Bush has met any of the bin Ladens, but he was indirectly linked
to one of them two decades ago. His longtime friend James W. Bath, who met
Mr. Bush when they were both pilots in the Air National Guard, acted as a
Texas business representative for Osama's older brother, Salem bin Laden,
from 1976 to 1988, when Salem died in a plane crash. Mr. Bath brought
real-estate acquisitions and other deals to Salem bin Laden, an ebullient
man who headed the family construction business. Mr. Bath generally
received a 5% interest as his fee, and was sometimes listed as a trustee
in related corporate documents. Mr. Bath acknowledged that during the same
period he invested $50,000 in two funds controlled by Mr. Bush but said
that stake was unrelated to his dealings with Mr. bin Laden.
Among the properties that Salem bin
Laden bought on Mr. Bath's recommendation was the Houston Gulf Airport, a
lightly used airfield in League City, Texas, 25 miles east of Houston. But
Mr. bin Laden's hope that it would develop a major overflow airport for
Houston never materialized, in part due to concern over wetlands. Ever
since his death, his estate has sought to sell the airfield -- without
success. Today, it is still on the market.
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