Insurgent Leader Nabbed in Iraq Raid

BAGHDAD (AP) -- The leader of the al-Qaida-affiliated Islamic State of Iraq has 
been captured in a raid west of Baghdad, an Iraqi military spokesman said 
Friday. 
Abu Omar al-Baghdadi was captured Friday in a raid in Abu Ghraib on the western 
outskirts of Baghdad, said Brig. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi, spokesman of the 
Baghdad security operation. U.S. officials had no confirmation of the capture. 
 
"One of the terrorists who was arrested with him confessed that the one in our 
hands is al-Baghdadi," al-Moussawi said. 
Al-Baghdadi has been identified in statements posted on Islamic extremist Web 
sites as the head of the Islamic State, which was proclaimed last year after 
the death of the leader of al-Qaida in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. 
Al-Baghdadi was said to have headed the Mujahedeen Shura Council, an alliance 
of al-Qaida and other jihadist organizations, which was set up last year to 
downplay the role of foreigners in the Iraqi insurgency. The name first 
surfaced after al-Zarqawi's death, when the Mujahedeen Shura Council posted a 
condolence message on a militant Web site. 
"As for you the slaves of the cross (U.S.-led coalition forces), the grandsons 
of Ibn al-Alqami (Shiites), and every infidel of the Sunnis, we can't wait to 
sever your necks with our swords," the message read. 
It was signed by Abdullah bin Rashid al-Baghdadi, who was identified as the 
council leader. 
In a tape released last November, the leader of al-Qaida in Iraq called on 
Sunni Muslims to pledge their allegiance to a new state that militants have 
said they created in Iraq, and said al-Baghdadi was its ruler. 
"I vow allegiance to you," Abu Hamza al-Muhajir said in the tape. He addressed 
al-Baghdadi as the "ruler of believers" and placed al-Qaida in Iraq fighters 
under his command. 
On Friday, the Islamic State of Iraq announced it would soon release a video on 
the death of a U.S. Air Force pilot whose F-16 jet crashed Nov. 27 north of 
Baghdad, according to IntelCenter, which monitors insurgent Web sites. 
The pilot, Maj. Troy L. Gilbert, was listed officially as "whereabouts unknown" 
but then reported by the U.S. military as dead following DNA tests from remains 
at the scene. IntelCenter said it was unclear what the video would show.
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