Al-Qaeda has confirmed that its second-in-command, the chief of its
powerful Yemeni branch, was killed in a US drone strike, in the heaviest
blow to the jihadist network since the death of Osama bin Laden.
Already struggling with the rise of rival jihadists from the Islamic
State group, al-Qaeda has suffered a series of setbacks in recent months
with several commanders reported killed.
In a video statement, al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) confirmed that Nasir al-Wuhayshi was dead.
Wuhayshi "was killed in a US drone attack that targeted him along
with two other mujahedeen," who were also killed, said the statement
read by prominent al-Qaeda militant Khaled Omar Batarfi and dated June
15.
If Nasir al-Wuhayshi is killed—a claim that US officials are so far
not disputing—his death would be a significant blow to the already
fragile al-Qaeda terrorist organisation. And it would be the second
major hit in a matter of days on key al-Qaeda leaders, following a
series of US airstrikes over the weekend in Libya that killed another
notorious jihadist, Mokhtar Belmokhtar, reported The Daily Beast.
AQAP -- which was behind several plots against Western targets
including the deadly attack on French magazine Charlie Hebdo in Paris
earlier this year -- said it had named its military chief Qassem al-Rimi
as its new leader.
US officials were earlier reported to have been reviewing
intelligence to confirm that Wuhayshi was killed in a CIA drone strike
on June 9.
A local Yemeni official had told AFP that Wuhayshi was believed to
have been killed in the raid in al-Qaeda-held Mukalla, in southeastern
Yemen.
Another Yemeni official told AFP last week that a drone had fired
four missiles at three al-Qaeda militants, including an unnamed "leading
figure", near Mukalla port, killing them on the spot.
The US government had offered a $10 million reward for any information leading to Wuhayshi's capture or killing.
A former aide to bin Laden, Wuhayshi attended the group's Al-Farouk training camp in Afghanistan in the late 1990s.
He is said to have fled Afghanistan in 2002 to Iran, where he was arrested and handed over to Yemen.
He was held there without charge until he escaped by tunnelling his way out of prison with 22 others in February 2006.
In 2007, Wuhayshi was named head of AQAP, which Washington considers al-Qaeda's deadliest branch.
When Bin Laden was killed by US commandos in Pakistan in May 2011,
Wuhayshi warned Washington not to fool itself that it spelt al-Qaeda's
demise.
"What is coming is greater and worse, and what is awaiting you is more intense and harmful," he said.
As well as the Charlie Hebdo attacks that left 12 people dead, AQAP
was also behind an attempt to blow up a US commercial airliner on
Christmas Day 2009.
Washington has repeatedly targeted AQAP militants in drone strikes in
Yemen and killed several commanders in recent months, including Nasser
bin Ali al-Ansi, who appeared in the video claiming responsibility for
the Charlie Hebdo attack.
While still a powerful and ruthless force, al-Qaeda has seen its role
as the preeminent jihadist group challenged by the rise of ISIS, the
extremist organisation that has seized control of large parts of Syria
and Iraq.
Extremist groups from Egypt, Libya and elsewhere have sworn
allegiance to ISIS and the two groups have clashed in various countries,
most notably in Syria.
Mokhtar Belmokhtar, a senior al-Qaeda-linked jihadist, was also
reported killed in a US air strike in Libya this week but yesterday
extremist group Ansar al-Sharia denied he had died.
The group named seven people it said were killed in the US strike in
eastern Libya but said Belmokhtar, the mastermind of a 2013 siege of an
Algerian gas plant in which 38 hostages were killed, was not among them.
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