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Al-Qaeda in Iraq confirms deaths of top commanders
Published Date: April 26, 2010 


BAGHDAD: Al-Qaeda has confirmed the deaths of its top two Iraq commanders in a 
joint US-Iraqi military raid, a US monitoring group said, days after a wave of 
apparent revenge attacks killed 58 Iraqis.

Abu Omar al-Baghdadi and Abu Ayub al-Masri, who had direct links with Osama bin 
Laden, were reported by Iraqi and US officials to have been killed in a 
shootout on April 18 near Tikrit in central Iraq.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki in announcing the deaths on Monday said a 
major threat to the nation's security had been removed while US Vice President 
Joe Biden said the killings were "potentially devastating blows to Al-Qaeda in 
Iraq.

The SITE Intelligence Group service said that the Islamic State of Iraq, the 
branch of Al-Qaeda in the country, had in a statement posted late Saturday on 
jihadist Internet forums confirmed the deaths of the two men.

The ISI shariah minister, Abu al-Walid Abd al-Wahhab al-Mashadani, said the two 
leaders were attending a meeting when "enemy forces" engaged them in battle and 
launched an airstrike on their location, SITE said.

We are proud to announce to you... that the Islamic Ummah once again lost two 
leaders... two heroes who were determined to follow the path of jihad, despite 
the severe adversity and the intensity of their burdens, as well as the 
aggressiveness of their enemies," he said.

The joint operation that targeted the main Al-Qaeda leaders in Iraq took place 
10 kilometres (six miles) from Tikrit, the home city of executed dictator 
Saddam Hussein. Mashadani praised Baghdadi and Masri and announced that other 
Islamist groups in Iraq had joined the ISI.

Discussions had already begun with them before and after the initiative of 
Sheikh Abu Omar (al-Baghdadi)," he said. "If Allah fated that the two sheikhs 
be killed at this particular time, know that they left a unique generation 
behind, one that was raised before their eyes," Mashadani added.

Baghdadi had been reported killed off or captured at least three times before 
and Al-Qaeda has previously issued denials, insisting he was still alive and 
free. This is the first time the group has acknowledged his death.

Maliki said that forensic tests had confirmed their identities of Baghdadi and 
Masri and insisted that Al-Qaeda was on the run. On Friday, a wave of attacks 
across Iraq including five car bombs, three as prayers finished at Shiite 
mosques in Baghdad, killed 58 people.

A statement from Maliki's office said the bombs were a direct response from 
insurgents angered by the killing of the two commanders. "The aim of (Friday's) 
attacks is to overshadow the big success achieved by the security services in 
killing the devil terrorist leaders and an attempt to prove their existence 
after that strike," said Maliki's statement.

On Saturday, another three bombs exploded in Al-Amel, another predominantly 
Shiite district of Baghdad, killing at least three people and wounding 19. In 
Washington, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said President Barack Obama was 
briefed on the latest bloodshed but stressed that it would not alter US plans 
to withdraw all combat troops by the end of August.

At the height of Iraq's sectarian violence in 2006 and 2007, Al-Qaeda and other 
Sunni militant groups killed thousands of civilians when they bombed markets 
and mosques crowded with Shiite civilians. Although overall levels of violence 
have fallen in the past two years, a series of massive suicide attacks in 
Baghdad, including several on government buildings, since last August has 
proven that Al-Qaeda remains a potent threat. - AFP

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