WASHINGTON —
Al-Qaida announced Monday that its No. 3 official, Mustafa al-Yazid, had
been killed along with members of his family — perhaps one of the most
severe blows to the terror movement since the U.S. campaign against
al-Qaida began. A U.S. official said al-Yazid was believed to have died
in a U.S. missile strike.A statement posted on an al-Qaida
Website said al-Yazid, which it described as the organization's top
commander in Afghanistan, was killed along with his wife, three
daughters, a grandchild and other men, women and children but did not
say how or where. The statement did not give an exact date for
al-Yazid's death, but it was dated by the Islamic calendar month of
"Jemadi al-Akhar," which falls in May. A U.S. official in
Washington said word was "spreading in extremist circles" of his death
in Pakistan's tribal areas in the past two weeks. His death would
be a major blow to al-Qaida, which in December "lost both its internal
and external operations chiefs," the official said on condition of
anonymity because of the sensitivity of the information. The
Egyptian-born al-Yazid, also known as Sheik Saeed al-Masri, was a
founding member of al-Qaida and the group's prime conduit to Osama bin
Laden and Ayman al-Zawahri. He was key to day-to-day control, with a
hand in everything from finances to operational planning, the U.S.
official said. Al-Yazid has been reported killed before, in 2008,
but this is the first time his death has been acknowledged by the
militant group on the Internet. Two Pakistani intelligence
officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not
authorized to talk to the media, said al-Yazid died in a U.S. missile
strike on May 21 in the North Waziristan tribal area. Soon after
the attack, officials reported that two foreigners were among the 10
people killed, but did know their identities. Five women and two
children were also wounded in the attack, which occurred in the village
of Boya near the main town in the area, Miran Shah. The
intelligence officials said they received word of al-Yazid's death last
week and confirmed it by speaking to local tribal elders and Taliban
members. They said their sources had not seen al-Yazid's body and did
not know where he was buried. Al-Yazid has been one of many
targets in a U.S. Predator drone campaign aimed at militants in Pakistan
since President Barack Obama took office. Al-Yazid made no secret of
his contempt for the United States, once calling it "the evil empire
leading crusades against the Muslims." "We have reached the point
where we see no difference between the state and the American people,"
al-Yazid told Pakistan's Geo TV in a June 2008 interview. "The United
States is a non-Muslim state bent on the destruction of Muslims." The
shadowy, 55-year-old al-Yazid has been involved with Islamic extremist
movements for nearly 30 years since he joined radical student groups led
by fellow Egyptian al-Zawahri, now the No. 2 figure in al-Qaida after
bin Laden. In the early 1980s, al-Yazid served three years in an
Egyptian prison for purported links to the group responsible for the
1981 assassination of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. After his release,
al-Yazid turned up in Afghanistan, where, according to al-Qaida's
propaganda wing Al-Sabah, he became a founding member of the terrorist
group. He later followed bin Laden to Sudan and back to
Afghanistan, where he served as al-Qaida's chief financial officer,
managing secret bank accounts in the Persian Gulf that were used to help
finance the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on New York and Washington. After
the U.S. and its allies invaded Afghanistan in 2001, al-Yazid went into
hiding for years. He surfaced in May 2007 during a 45-minute interview
posted on the Web by Al-Sabah, in which he was introduced as the
"official in charge" of the terrorist movement's operations in
Afghanistan. Some security analysts believe the choice of al-Yazid
as the Afghan chief may have signaled a new approach for al-Qaida in
the country where it once reigned supreme. Michael Scheuer, former
head of the CIA unit that tracked bin Laden, believes bin Laden and
al-Zawahri wanted a trusted figure to handle Afghanistan "while they
turn to other aspects of the jihad outside" the country. Al-Yazid
had little background in leading combat operations. But terrorism
experts say his advantage was that he was close to Taliban leader Mullah
Omar. As a fluent Pashto speaker known for impeccable manners, al-Yazid
enjoyed better relations with the Afghans than many of the al-Qaida
Arabs, whom the Afghans found arrogant and abrasive. That
suggested a conscious decision by al-Qaida to embed within the Taliban
organization, helping the Afghan allies with expertise and training
while at the same time putting an Afghan face on the war. Al-Yazid
himself alluded to such an approach in an interview this year with
Al-Jazeera television's Islamabad correspondent Ahmad Zaidan. Al-Yazid
said al-Qaida fighters were involved at every level with the Taliban. "We
participate with our brothers in the Islamic Emirate in all fields,"
al-Yazid said. "This had a big positive effect on the (Taliban)
self-esteem in Afghanistan." A September 2007 al-Qaida video
sought to promote the notion of close Taliban-al-Qaida ties at a time
when the Afghan insurgents were launching their comeback six years after
their ouster from power in Kabul. The video showed al-Yazid
sitting with a senior Taliban commander in a field surrounded by trees
as a jihad anthem played. The Taliban commander vowed to "target the
infidels in Afghanistan and outside Afghanistan" and to "focus our
attacks, Allah willing, on the coalition forces in Afghanistan." There
is also evidence that al-Yazid has promoted ties with Islamic extremist
groups in Central Asia and Pakistan, where other top al-Qaida figures
are believed to be hiding. "He definitely seems to have
significant influence among the Pakistani Taliban and the Central Asian
groups," terrorism expert Evan Kohlman said. "They regularly post and
share his videos on the Web, just as they would with bin Laden or
al-Zawahri." In August 2008, Pakistani military officials claimed
al-Yazid had been killed in fighting in the Bajaur tribal area along the
Afghan border. However, he turned up in subsequent al-Qaida videos, all
of which had clearly been made after the Bajaur fighting. ___ AP
writers Maamoun Youssef in Cairo, Hussain Afzel in Parachinar, Pakistan
and Adam Goldman in Washington contributed to this report.




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