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Al-Qaeda propaganda chief killed in Pakistan strike: officials

Abu Jihad al-Masri

At least 28 'militants' killed in Pakistan missile strikes: officials
Suspected US missile strikes on Friday killed at least 23 militants in a Pakistani tribal area known as a haven for Al-Qaeda and the Taliban, security officials said. They were the latest in series of attacks that have raised tensions between Washington and Islamabad. Two missiles hit a pick-up truck and a house west of Mir Ali, a town in the troubled North Waziristan region bordering Afghanistan, killing 16 mainly Arab militants, they said. Officials said the strike targeted an Al-Qaeda financial coordinator known as Abu Akasa Al-Iraqi and that there were unconfirmed local reports that he was among the dead. Two further missiles fired by a suspected US drone at a militant hideout near Wana, the main town in neighbouring South Waziristan, killed 12 suspected rebels soon after, a senior security official said. They included "foreigners," the official said -- using the term by which security services refer to Al-Qaeda operatives. Unconfirmed reports quoting local tribal sources said a key Taliban commander, Mullah Nazir, was possibly injured in the strike. The attacks came just two days after Pakistan, a key ally in the US-led "war on terror", summoned Washington's ambassador to Islamabad and lodged a strong protest over a number of similar strikes. "At least 16 militants were killed in the attack and most were Arabs. It was a successful strike," one Pakistani security official told AFP on condition of anonymity, referring to the first attack. Local residents said the strike hit the house of a Pakistani tribesman named Amanullah Dawar. It was not immediately clear whether the house or the vehicle, a pick-up truck, was blown up first, officials said. Officials in North Waziristan said al-Iraqi was believed killed but added that they were still seeking confirmation. He was known locally as Abdullah and officials said that while he was not part of the top Al-Qaeda hierarchy he played an important role as a financial "lynchpin". Friday's attacks were the 17th and 18th such strikes in the past 10 weeks, according to an AFP tally. All have been blamed on US-led coalition forces or CIA drones based in neighbouring Afghanistan. A strike on Sunday killed senior Taliban commander Haji Omar Khan, a lieutenant of veteran Afghan Taliban chieftain and former anti-Soviet fighter Jalaluddin Haqqani.
by Staff Writers
Islamabad (AFP) Nov 1, 2008
An Egyptian Al-Qaeda operative described by the United States as the terror network's propaganda chief was killed in a missile strike in Pakistan, security officials said Saturday.

Abu Jihad al-Masri was among several rebels killed when two missiles fired by a suspected US spy drone hit a truck in the North Waziristan tribal region bordering Afghanistan on Friday night, they said.

The United States has offered a one-million-dollar bounty for the death or capture of al-Masri, who has appeared in an anti-Western video introduced by Ayman al-Zawahiri, Osama bin Laden's number two.

"The strike was aimed at a vehicle carrying Abu Jihad and two others. The target was successfully hit and all three people were killed," a senior Pakistani security official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

His death came in one of two separate missile attacks in Pakistan's troubled tribal belt on Friday, the latest in a series of 18 strikes in the past three months that have raised tensions between Washington and Islamabad.

The attacks also come just days before the US presidential election, in which the "war on terror" in Afghanistan and, increasingly, Pakistan has been a key foreign policy issue.

There was no immediate confirmation from the Pakistani military or from US forces deployed in Afghanistan about al-Masri's death.

But some 250 schoolchildren in Wana, the main town in South Waziristan where a second strike on Friday killed 12 militants and injured 30 others, staged a protest march shouting "Death to America" and urging an end to "US aggression".

The US State Department's Rewards for Justice website said that the balding al-Masri "is in charge of Al-Qaeda media and propaganda. He may also be the chief of external operations for Al-Qaeda".

It said he was believed to operate out of Iran, but Pakistani officials said he was known to have moved to the Pakistani tribal belt in 2005 or 2006. It said he also went by the alias Mohammad Hasan Khalil al-Hakim.

In 2006, al-Masri appeared in a video introduced by his fellow countryman Zawahiri, in which al-Masri said that his own Islamic group, Al-Jamaa Al-Islamiya, had joined forces with Al-Qaeda.

The video was released by As Sahab, Al-Qaeda's media arm.

Later that year al-Masri issued a website statement calling Pope Benedict XVI a "spiteful crusader" after the pontiff made remarks on Islam and violence, according to the SITE Intelligence Group, a US organisation that monitors Islamist websites.

Militant sources in Pakistan said al-Masri was primarily involved in "ideology" and not so much with Al-Qaeda's operational side.

A former member of Islamic Jihad, Kamal Habib, told AFP in Cairo that al-Masri used to belong to the same Islamist group that assassinated Egyptian president Anwar Sadat in 1981, leading a cell in the southern Aswan province.

"He was a second generation leader, not from the generation involved in killing Sadat," he said.

The last Al-Qaeda figure on the State Department list to be killed in a missile strike was chemical weapons expert Midhat Mursi al-Sayid Umar, who died in July in the South Waziristan tribal region.

Among those wounded in the Wana attack Friday was Mullah Nazir, a top Pakistani Taliban commander accused of engineering attacks on international forces deployed in Afghanistan, officials said.

Security officials said that Abu Akash, an Arab Al-Qaeda militant reported to have been killed in the first missile attack, now appeared to have escaped.

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An expanding war in Afghanistan awaits next US president
Washington (AFP) Nov 1, 2008
An expanded US military involvement awaits a new US president in Afghanistan where the unfinished business of September 11 has flared over the past three years into a major insurgency.







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