The New Jackals: Ramzi Yousef, Osama Bin Laden and the Future
of Terrorism

by Simon Reeve
The astonishing true story of the most dangerous men in the world.
On 26 February 1993 a massive bomb devastated New York's World Trade Center,
creating more hospital casualties than any event in American history since the
Civil War. Ramzi Yousef, the young British-educated terrorist who masterminded
the attack, had been seeking to topple the twin towers and cause tens of
thousands of fatalities.
An intensive FBI investigation into the crime quickly developed into a
man-hunt that took top FBI agents across the globe. But even with the FBI on his
trail, Yousef continued with his campaign of terror. He bombed an airplane and
an Iranian shrine. He tried to kill Benazir Bhutto, the former Pakistani Prime
Minister, and planned to assassinate the Pope, President Clinton and
simultaneously destroy 11 airliners over the Pacific Ocean using tiny
undetectable bombs. He also plotted an attack on the CIA headquarters with a
plane loaded with chemical weapons. His pursuers dubbed Yousef "an evil
genius".
During their huge investigation FBI agents discovered that Yousef was funded
and sent on some of his attacks by Osama bin Laden, a mysterious Saudi
millionaire. By the mid-1990s they realized bin Laden had become the most
influential sponsor of terrorism in the world, and agents now conclude that
since the early 1990s a small group of terrorists supported by bin Laden have
dominated international terrorism. These "Afghan Arabs" helped defeat
the Soviets in Afghanistan before killing thousands of people in campaigns
against governments in the West, Africa, the Middle East and Asia. When bin
Laden's followers attacked American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania on 7 August
1998, killing 224 people, the US finally launched cruise missile strikes in an
attempt to destroy his secret organization.
Drawing on unpublished reports, interrogation files, interviews with senior
FBI agents who hunted Yousef, intelligence sources and government figures
including Benazir Bhutto, Simon Reeve gives a harrowing account of Yousef's
bombings, offers a revealing insight into his background, and details the FBI's
man-hunt to catch him. Reeve explains how Yousef was one of bin Laden's first
operatives and documents bin Laden's life and emergence as the leader of a
potent terrorist organization, giving fascinating insights into the man
President Clinton has called "the pre-eminent organizer and financier of
international terrorism in the world today".
Highly detailed and yet immensely readable, The New Jackals sheds new light
on two of the world's most notorious terrorists. Reeve warns that Yousef and bin
Laden are just the first of a new breed of terrorist, men with no restrictions
on mass killing. He also offers evidence that bin Laden's organization may
already have chemical and nuclear weapons and explains why the world could soon
face attacks by terrorists with weapons of mass destruction.
About the Author
Simon Reeve is a journalist and writer. He worked for The Sunday Times of London
for five years before leaving to finish co-writing The Millennium Bomb,
published in 1996. He has since contributed to books on corruption, organized
crime and terrorism, and has written investigative feature articles for
publications ranging from Time magazine to Esquire. He lives in London.