US Drone Kills Wanted Pakistani Terrorist Leader

http://www.upi.com/Top_News/Special/2011/06/06/Mystery-shrouds-death-of-al-Q
aida-head/UPI-58041307378302/

 

BEIRUT, Lebanon, June 6 (UPI) -- The reported death of Mohammed Ilyas
Kashmiri, considered one of the most dangerous of al-Qaida's commanders and
strategists, in a missile attack in Pakistan remains shrouded in mystery.

If he is dead, it would mark a major coup for the Americans hard on the
heels of the killing of  <http://www.upi.com/topic/Osama_bin_Laden/> Osama
bin Laden in a May 2 U.S. Navy SEALs strike on his hideout near Islamabad,
Pakistan's capital.

The Long War Journal, which monitors international terrorism, reported a
purported photo of Kashmiri's body posted on a jihadist Web site by a
Pakistani group associated with Kashmiri was actually that of Abu Dera
Ismail Khan, a fighter of the Lashkar-e Toiba, or Army of the Pure, killed
in the November 2008 terrorist attack on Mumbai.

Kashmiri, who is also a leader of the Harakat ul Jihad al-Islami and an
elite jihadist unit known as Brigade 313, was reported killed with other
fighters in a missile attack Friday night by a U.S. unmanned aerial vehicle
in the Wana area of South Waziristan, an Islamist stronghold in northern
Pakistan.

HUJI spokesman Abu Hanzla Kashir reported Kashmiri's death in a written
statement, monitored by the SITE Intelligence Group, less than 24 hours
after the attack and vowed to attack the United States to avenge the
slaying.

The statement was posted on the Shamukh al-Islam forum, a Web site
frequented by jihadists linked to al-Qaida, along with the purported image
of Kashmiri's corpse.

There were also misspellings in the text of the statement, including the
HUJI's name, which cast further doubt on its veracity.

Several Taliban leaders in Pakistan, along with Pakistani security
officials, have said that Kashmiri was killed in Friday's missile strike.

But U.S. intelligence officers contacted by The Long War Journal Sunday said
they couldn't confirm that Kashmiri was dead because they couldn't enter
Waziristan to examine the body or check its DNA.

One said the jihadists may have reported Kashmiri's death as part of a
deception plan, possibly to throw U.S. forces off his trail but there is no
record that Islamist groups have sought to fake the death of a prominent
figures in the past.

Still, the reported killing of Kashmiri came within a few days of reports
that joint teams of U.S. CIA and Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence
directorate agents had been formed to hunt down top Taliban and al-Qaida
leaders, including Kashmiri.

The establishment of these units indicates a new sense of cooperation
between the Americans and Pakistanis, who have long been distrustful of each
other.

The Americans say many officers and factions within the ISI, Pakistan
paramount intelligence organization, sympathize and work with the Taliban,
al-Qaida and the various Islamist groups operating in Pakistan and
Afghanistan.

There are other aspects of the reported killing of Kashmiri that merit
attention.

The nighttime drone attack on Wana was mounted five days after the
disappearance of prominent Pakistani journalist Syed Saleem Shahzad of the
Asia Times Online who specialized in terrorism and security affairs and had
contacts with Kashmiri.

Shahzad vanished in Islamabad May 29 after he'd been questioned at ISI
headquarters about a report he published that al-Qaida attacked a naval base
in Karachi May 22 in retaliation for the arrest of two naval officers
suspected of links with the group.

That attack, purportedly masterminded by Kashmiri, was a major embarrassment
for the Pakistani military in the wake of the Americans' killing of bin
Laden, who had been living in plain sight in a garrison town for several
years, possibly with the knowledge of Pakistani authorities.

Shahzad had interviewed Kashmiri in September 2009, after the jihadist
chieftain had been reported killed in a UAV attack.

The 40-year-old journalist had told colleagues he feared the ISI was out to
kill him because of his contacts with Kashmiri and other jihadists.

Shahzad's body, showing signs of torture, was found May 31 on a canal bank
80 miles southeast of Islamabad. The ISI denied any involvement in his
death.

Meantime, two senior operatives with ties to al-Qaida, a commander
associated with bin Laden and a leader of the Islamic Movement of
Uzbekistan, were captured last week in Afghanistan.



Read more:
<http://www.upi.com/Top_News/Special/2011/06/06/Mystery-shrouds-death-of-al-
Qaida-head/UPI-58041307378302/#ixzz1OWUXI5lG>
http://www.upi.com/Top_News/Special/2011/06/06/Mystery-shrouds-death-of-al-Q
aida-head/UPI-58041307378302/#ixzz1OWUXI5lG



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