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US announces Major al-Qaida Arrest in Iraq
'Pakistan
Times' Foreign Desk
BAGHDAD (Iraq): The U.S.
command announced on Wednesday the arrest of an al-Qaida leader it said
served as the link between the organization's command in Iraq and Osama bin
Laden's inner circle, enabling it to wield considerable influence over the
Iraqi group.
The announcement was made as the White House steps up efforts to link the
war in Iraq to the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks, with a growing number of
Americans opposing the Iraq conflict. Some independent analysts question the
extent of al-Qaida's role in Iraq.
Khaled Abdul-Fattah Dawoud Mahmoud al-Mashhadani was the highest-ranking
Iraqi in the al-Qaida in Iraq leadership when he was captured July 4 in
Mosul, U.S. military spokesman Brig. Gen. Kevin Bergner said.
Bergner told reporters that al-Mashhadani carried messages from bin Laden,
and his deputy Ayman al-Zawahri, to the Egyptian-born head of al-Qaida in
Iraq, Abu Ayyub al-Masri.
"There is a clear connection between al-Qaida in Iraq and al-Qaida senior
leadership outside Iraq," Bergner said.
He said al-Mashhadani had told interrogators that al-Qaida's global
leadership provides "directions, they continue to provide a focus for
operations" and "they continue to flow foreign fighters into Iraq, foreign
terrorists."
The relationship between bin Laden and the al-Qaida in Iraq leadership has
long been the subject of debate. Some private analysts believe the
foreign-based leadership plays a minor role in day-to-day operations.
Analysts have also questioned U.S. military assertions that al-Qaida in Iraq
is the main threat to U.S. forces here.
Former Pentagon analyst Anthony Cordesman quoted a background brief by U.S.
military experts in Iraq this month that said al-Qaida in Iraq was
responsible for only 15 percent of the attacks here in the first half of
2007.
Even before al-Mashhadani's arrest, U.S. military officials have insisted
that links exist between the local al-Qaida group and the bin Laden clique.
From time to time, officials have released captured letters indicating a
flow of policy instructions to the group's commanders in Iraq.
Although numerous armed groups operate here, al-Qaida in Iraq's signature
attacks — high-profile truck bombings against civilian targets — were
largely responsible for unleashing the wave of sectarian slaughter last year
that transformed the character of the conflict, U.S. officials say.
"What we've learned from not just from the capture of al-Mashhadani but from
other al-Qaida operatives is that there is a flow of strategic directions of
prioritization, of messaging and other guidance that comes from al-Qaida
senior leadership to the al-Qaida in Iraq leadership," Bergner said.
Al-Qaida in Iraq was proclaimed in 2004 by Jordanian-born Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
He led a group called Tawhid and Jihad, responsible for the beheading of
several foreign hostages, whose final moments were captured on videotapes
provided to Arab television stations.
Al-Zarqawi posted Web statements declaring his allegiance to bin Laden and
began using the name of al-Qaida in Iraq. Al-Zarqawi was killed in a U.S.
airstrike in Diyala province in June 2006 and was replaced by al-Masri.
Media reports say that although al-Qaida in Iraq's rank-and-file are mostly
Iraqis, the Iraqi group's top leadership is dominated by foreigners, Bergner
said. That includes al-Masri, who joined an al-Qaida forerunner in Egypt in
the 1980s and later helped train fighters who drove the Soviet army from
Afghanistan.
Pointing to the foreign influence within al-Qaida in Iraq could undermine
support for the organization among nationalistically minded Iraqis,
including some in insurgent groups that have broken with al-Qaida.
In an effort to give al-Qaida an Iraqi face, Bergner said al-Mashhadani and
al-Masri established a front organization known as the Islamic State of
Iraq, which the general described as "a virtual organization in cyberspace."
In Web postings, the Islamic State of Iraq has identified its leader as Abu
Omar al-Baghdadi, a name indicating Iraqi origin, with the Egyptian al-Masri
as minister of war. There are no known photos of al-Baghdadi.
Bergner said al-Mashhadani had told interrogators that al-Baghdadi is a
"fictional role" created by al-Masri and that an actor with an Iraqi accent
is used for audio recordings of speeches posted on the Web.
"In his words, the Islamic State of Iraq is a front organization that masks
the foreign influence and leadership within al-Qaida in Iraq in an attempt
to put an Iraqi face on the leadership of al-Qaida in Iraq," Bergner said.
Proclamation of the Islamic State is widely seen as a blunder by al-Qaida
because it alienated independently minded insurgent groups that opposed the
religious zealots' goal of an Islamic caliphate.
Fearing they would be marginalized by al-Qaida, Sunni sheiks and insurgent
leaders began turning against the terror movement, in some cases cooperating
with U.S. forces, notably in Anbar province.
Also Wednesday, the U.S. military said three American soldiers were killed
the day before in separate bombings in the capital. Two were killed in west
Baghdad and another died in east Baghdad, the military said.
Four other Americans were wounded in the east Baghdad blast, the command
said. Two insurgents responsible for the attack were identified, engaged and
killed, the statement added.
At least 12 people were killed Wednesday in a series of bombings in mostly
Shiite areas of eastern Baghdad. Seven of them died in two back-to-back
bombings near a gas station in the Amin district, police said.
Eight civilians were killed when gunmen opened fire in the city of Khalis, a
Shiite enclave in a mostly Sunni area 50 miles north of Baghdad, police
said.
All the police spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not
supposed to release the information.●
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