In 1988, Anas spoke to Abdullah Azzam about the need to ensure Muslim help reached northern Afghanistan, and not just that of Western NGOs.[4] He later married the daughter of Azzam, of whom bin Laden is suspected of assassinating.[3]
On January 14, 2001, he was interviewed by The New York Times reporter Stephen Engleberg, who asked him to describe Osama bin Laden, to which he replied that "He's not very sophisticated politically and organizationally. But he's an activist with a great imagination. He ate very little. He slept very little. Very generous, he'd give you his clothes."[1]
Following the United States invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, Anas gave reports critical of bin Laden, reflecting the pair's falling-out after Anas insisted that the dream of a global jihad was unattainable.[5]
Anas, Abdullah. To The Mountains: My Life in Jihad, from Algeria to Afghanistan with Tam Hussein (co-author); Hurst Publ., April 2019. ISBN978-1-78738-011-0.