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Abu Ayyub al-Masri Abu Ayyub al-Masri al-Qaeda in Iraq Iraq Egyptian At Large 20060908 Link
    Reported killed May 2007; false alarm.
  Abu Ayyub al-Masri al-Qaida in Iraq Iraq 20060611 Link
  Abu Ayyub al-Masri Egyptian Islamic Jihad Iraq 20060703 Link

Iraq
Iraq issues a sentence of death against Al-Qaeda members
2022-03-01


Shafaq News/ On Monday, a Criminal Court issued a death sentence against two terrorists from Baghdad.

A security source told Shafaq News Agency, "The Criminal Court in Dhi Qar Governorate issued a sentence of death by hanging against two al-Qaeda members who were in prison for eight years for killing citizens in the Latifiya area in Baghdad."

It is worth noting that the Latifia- Mahmoudia-Yusufia area is known as the "Triangle of Death," where groups affiliated with Al-Qaeda were active and carried out massacres against citizens and security forces after 2004.

Al Qaeda in Iraq, or the Islamic State of Iraq as the group is also known, is one of several Sunni Islamist insurgent groups that had been very active just after the withdrawal of the US troops.

The group has claimed a string of attacks.

According to Reuters, the group was founded in October 2004 when Jordanian militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi pledged allegiance to Osama bin Laden. An Egyptian, Abu Ayyub al-Masri, has become the leader of al Qaeda in Iraq after Zarqawi was killed in 2006.

In October 2006, the al-Qaeda-led Mujahideen Shura Council said it had set up the Islamic State of Iraq (ISI), an umbrella group of Sunni militant affiliates and tribal leaders led by Abu Omar al-Baghdadi. Reuters reported.

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Terror Networks
Who benefits from Zawahiri pledge to Taliban?
2015-08-17
[RFE/RL] After almost a year of silence, Ayman al-Zawahiri has released an audio message swearing allegiance to Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Mansur, the new Taliban chief.

Zawahri's message is another response to, and nullification of, Daesh and its claims to have established a caliphate. In declaring a caliphate, Daesh leader and Zawahiri's archrival Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi confirmed his rejection of Al-Qaeda's authority.

But in his pledge to Mansur, Zawahiri does not mention Baghdadi, Daesh, or its "caliphate" at all. And he refers to Mansur as Amir al-Mu'amin, the leader of the faithful -- the same title adopted by Baghdadi.

"We pledge allegiance to you to establish the Islamic caliphate that rises on the choice and preference of the Muslims, with the spreading of justice and consultation, realizing security, removing injustice and restoring rights, while raising the banner of jihad," Zawahiri said, implying not only that the Daesh caliphate has not fulfilled these criteria, but that it doesn't even exist.

Zawahiri calls his vow to Mansur as a continuation of the "path of jihad" of Al-Qaeda's "just leaders," including Al-Qaeda in Iraq founder Zarqawi and -- notably, since he led the Islamic State of Iraq (ISI), the forerunner of Daesh -- his successor, Abu Hamza al-Muhajir (Abu Ayyub al-Masri).

Zawahiri's pledge to Mansur could lend the new Taliban leader greater credibility, according to one Afghan intelligence official. But how much?

One major difficulty for Zawahiri in his pledge to Mansur is the highly damaging revelation that the Taliban lied about Mullah Omar's death for two years. Beyond that, Mansur is not viewed as a figure with particularly strong jihadi credentials, some analysts say.

Zawahiri's pledge could prove boon for Daesh. Soon after the audio recording of Zawahiri's pledge was released, online Daesh supporters began to mock it, saying that the Al-Qaeda leader had effectively pledged himself to the Pakistani intelligence service.

Mansur accepted Zawahiri's pledge in a statement published on the Taliban's English-language website on August 14. But other key figures, including some of Daesh's most fierce critics -- Abu Muhammad al-Maqdisi, Al-Qaeda's intellectual godfather, and Sheikh Abu Qatada al-Filistini, who has referred to Daesh as a "mafia group" -- have yet to react.
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Iraq
ISIS: Mosul and Ninevah Province Monstrosities
2015-04-24
ISIS executes 4 Nineveh Protection Council members in Mosul

[IraqiNews.com] According to a local source in Nineveh province ISIS has executed four members of Nineveh Protection Council in djinn-infested Mosul
... the home of a particularly ferocious and hairy djinn...
on Wednesday.

The source informed IraqiNews.com "At noon, ISIS executed four members of the Nineveh Protection Council after their so-called Mufti issued an order to kill them by firing squad at the Sharia Court in Mosul."

The source, who requested to remain anonymous, added "ISIS elements handed the bodies of the dead to the Forensic Medicine Authority."

ISIS assigns former physics teacher to replace injured leader al-Baghdadi

[(IraqiNews.com] The American magazine 'Newsweek' revealed on Wednesday, that the ISIS group has assigned a former physics teacher as an interim leader of the organization, after the injury of its current leader His Supreme Immensity, Caliph of the Faithful and Galactic Overlord, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi
...formerly merely the head of ISIL and a veteran of the Bagram jailhouse. Looks like a new messiah to bajillions of Moslems, like just another dead-eyed mass murder to the rest of us...
The newspaper quoted an advisor to the Iraqi government, Hisham al-Hashemi as saying, "The so-called Abu Alaa Afri, who was Vice-President of al-Baghdadi, has been assigned as the alternative leader of the terrorist organization ISIS in the absence of al-Baghdadi," noting that, "As al-Baghdadi was injured, Afri began to head the terrorist group with the help of officials from other provinces."

Hashemi stated that, "Afri is from al-Khidr area in djinn-infested Mosul
... the home of a particularly ferocious and hairy djinn...
and rose through the ranks of ISIS to become more prominent in the terrorist group, and even more important than al-Baghdadi himself", adding that, "Afri was nominated by bin Laden, after the death of Abu Omar al-Baghdadi and Abu Ayyub al-Masri, to be the Amir of Al-Qaeda in Iraq."

It is believed that Afri traveled to Afghanistan in 1998 before pledging allegiance and becoming a big shot of al-Qaeda in 2004, according to the newspaper.

British newspaper 'The Guardian' reported that the ISIS leader His Supreme Immensity, Caliph of the Faithful and Galactic Overlord, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi is no longer able to manage the terrorist group, while he is trying to recover from a serious injury in an aerial raid western Iraq.

The US Department of Defense 'Pentagon' confirmed that the US military sees there is no reason to believe that al-Baghdadi was injured.

ISIS cut off 12 civilians’ fingers, hands in Nineveh

[IraqiNews.com] According to a local source in Nineveh, the ISIS group has cut off the hands and fingers of 12 civilians accused of theft and use of cell phones in the center of the province.

The source said in an interview for IraqiNews.com, "This afternoon, the ISIS group cut off the hands of three civilians accused of theft in Ghazlani Square in the center of Nineveh," and continued, "Afterwards, nine other civilians had their fingers cut off for using cell phones to get in touch with their relatives."

The source, who requested to remain anonymous, added, "The orders were issued by the so-called Board of Grievances Court in the state of Nineveh."

Coalition warplanes destroy vital tunnel for ISIS in south of Mosul

[(IraqiNews.com] On Thursday, a Kurdish official source asserted, that a tunnel under construction for the ISIS group has been destroyed in an air strike in Sinjar area south of djinn-infested Mosul
... the home of a particularly ferocious and hairy djinn...
Giyas Surji, an official front man of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) stated in an interview for IraqiNews.com, "Warplanes of the international coalition carried out an attack on a tunnel for the ISIS group bandidos Death Eaters in the city of Sinjar," noting that, "The attack resulted in killing dozens of ISIS elements who were working on the construction of the tunnel which was aimed to facilitate the movement for ISIS in the areas controlled by the [paramilitary] Peshmerga forces."

"The air strike was based on accurate intelligence received by the Peshmerga forces," Surji added.
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Iraq
Al Qaida leader's wife gets 20 years in prison
2011-06-27
[Emirates 24/7] An Iraqi judicial front man says a court has sentenced the wife of a slain al-Qaeda leader to 20 years in prison for terrorism-related charges.
Iraqi prisons aren't nearly as nice as American ones...
An Iraqi Supreme Judicial Council front man on Sunday said Hasna Ali Yahya, the Yemeni wife of Abu Ayyub al-Masri, was convicted last Thursday.

Spokesman Abdul-Sattar Bayrkdar didn't give details on the charges, but a government official said she was convicted of facilitating correspondence between Death Eaters and preparing explosive-laden belts.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity as he was not authorized to release information.

She has been in jug since the April 2010 joint U.S.-Iraqi north of Storied Baghdad
...located along the Tigris River, founded in the 8th century, home of the Abbasid Caliphate...
that killed al-Masri along with another prominent al-Qaeda in Iraq myrmidon.
Link


Terror Networks
Bin Laden's death deals severe blow to al-Qaeda
2011-05-05
[Magharebia] the late Osama bin Laden
... who has made the transition back to dust...
was not hiding in a cave in Afghanistan when he was killed by a unit of elite US troops.
Nor was he leading his troops in that country as we had been assured...
He was in fact living in a luxury accommodation valued at about $1 million in Abbottabad near Pak capital Islamabad, near Pak military barracks.

Perhaps he did not live a life of luxury, but he most likely believed that such a place would eliminate suspicions and leave the security services - which pursued him for many years -- to continue to focus their search for him in the tribal areas of Pakistain and the caves of Afghanistan, the two locations where it was widely believed the al-Qaeda leader was hiding.

Bin Laden's death will probably not mean the end of violence and terrorism carried out by his organisation. It may even lead to an escalation in order to avenge his killing.
If so it'll probably be brief and ineffectual...
But his departure would certainly be a great moral setback for al-Qaeda since this organisation was exclusively associated with his name since its inception in 1988 at the hands of Arabs who participated in the Afghan Jihad. Al-Qaeda did not have a commander during its 23 years of existence other than bin Laden. Therefore, his absence will create a vacuum that will not be easy for any successor to fill.

Bin Laden left behind disintegrated al-Qaeda in Afghanistan
Al-Qaeda will undoubtedly appoint a successor to bin Laden. It may be Dr. Ayman al-Zawahiri,
... Second in command of al-Qaeda, occasionally described as the real brains of the outfit. Formerly the Mister Big of Egyptian Islamic Jihad. Bumped off Abdullah Azzam with a car boom in the course of one of their little disputes. Is thought to have composed bin Laden's fatwa entitled World Islamic Front Against Jews and Crusaders. Currently residing in the North Wazoo area. That is not a horn growing from the middle of his forehead, but a prayer bump, attesting to how devout he is...
or any other person. But the new emir of the organisation will face many challenges, and his handling of these challenges will determine the extent of his success or failure.
One of those challenges will be the lack of the bin Laden checkbook...
One of these key challenges is al-Qaeda's situation along the Afghan-Pakistain border areas, where it is believed that most of the key leaders of the organisation are hiding.
... and where they're almost routinely picked off.
The killing of bin Laden outside Islamabad may reveal that the organisation's leaders decided to move to other areas because the campaign of strikes against them intensified, whether from the Mighty Pak Army or from drones.
More the latter, I'd guess, since the Mighty Pak Army seems content to leave North Wazoo to the Haqqanis...
Many leaders in al-Qaeda's first, second and even the third ranks were killed during these strikes in recent years. It became clear that the organisation was suffering from a decline in its ability to produce new leaders to replace the leaders who were falling quickly, which did not allow for the training of people with the sufficient security and fighting experience to replace them.
Meaning we were bumping them off quicker than they could stuff new ones into the barrel...
This disintegration and shortage among al-Qaeda's leadership ranks in Pakistain's tribal areas may be one of the main reasons for the organisation failure to execute any new operations against targets in Western countries, despite numerous attempts, which were always thwarted. Cells that were tasked to execute these operations were always dismantled. The individuals who oversaw the planning of these operations in the tribal areas were also found, notably the planner of the 2010 alleged bomb plot in Europe.

Taliban may no longer be bound to protect al-Qaeda
Perhaps what makes matters worse for al-Qaeda is that the Afghan Taliban today will probably not feel obligated to protect al-Qaeda leaders as it did in 2001. The Taliban sacrificed its authority over Afghanistan when it refused to hand over bin Laden for trial on charges of involvement in the September 11th attacks.
So now they're out of power for ten years and Binny's titzup anyway. Betcha Mullah Omar feels like such a clone...
Although it is unlikely that Taliban leaders, led by Mullah Omar, would hand over al-Qaeda members who are currently on Afghan territory, the Taliban will undoubtedly be in a stronger position now when they talk to al-Qaeda without bin Laden at its helm, regardless of who replaces him.
"Al-Qaeda without bin Laden at the helm" consists of Zawahiri and however many he's got personally loyal to him, the Haqqani network, Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, Hekmatyar's Hizb-i-Islami, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, Lashkar-e-Taiba, a few Chechen flotsam and jetsam, and a few other minor Pak terror groups. My guess is that they ceased being a coordinated whole even in theory when Binny developed a brief but splitting headache...
The Taliban will also be in a better position to decide whether to reconcile with the Afghan government without being obliged to continue to bear the burden of al-Qaeda on its back. Although this may not mean giving up completely on the organisation, it could lead to reining it in and preventing it from doing things that might reflect negatively on the Afghans themselves, as happened with the September 11th attacks.
Mullah Omar's Taliban are perfectly capable of doing things that might reflect negatively on the Afghans themselves...
In spite of the obvious alliance between al-Qaeda and Pak bully boy turbans, especially the Pakistain branch of the Taliban (Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistain, or TTP), al- Qaeda leaders know that the arena in which they wanted to play, and where they can have influence, is not in South Asia but in Arab countries.
... which regard the TTP as country cousins at best, cheap muscle at worst...
Therefore, regardless of how important al-Qaeda's role grows in Pakistain, it will remain marginal because the organisation is only a guest of the Pak Taliban, whose leaders decide -- regardless of al-Qaeda's opinion-- if they want to reconcile with their government or to continue fighting against it.

Bin Laden's al-Qaeda lost the support of the Arab street
If these challenges in Pakistain and Afghanistan were not sufficient on their own to cause insomnia for the new leader of al-Qaeda, then the developments in the Arab world, the primary focus of this organisation, will no doubt leave its mark on any future step the new "emir" will take.

The revolutions in the Arab world showed in clear terms that the Arab population resides in one valley and al-Qaeda resides in another even if both sides agreed about the need for regime change.

The Arab people, whether in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Syria, Yemen or other countries that revolted or are waiting for their turn to rise up, proved that al-Qaeda cannot claim to represent a wide range of Arabs and Mohammedans. The organisation therefore cannot act in any way that does damage to the vast majority of these citizens.

Regime change in Egypt occurred after millions erupted into the streets in peaceful demonstrations calling for democracy and the end of President Hosni Mubarak's
...The former President-for-Life of Egypt, dumped by popular demand in early 2011...
tenure. It did not come about through the bombing of a hotel frequented by Westerners, an attack on foreign tourists, or even the liquidation of officials in the Egyptian government.

The same applies to Tunisia where the regime was tossed through a popular revolution and not the result of the al-Qaeda bombing of a temple frequented by Jews, as happened at the Djerba synagogue in 2002, or the abduction of foreign tourists in the desert, as happened at the hands of the Maghreb branch of al-Qaeda in 2009.

Similarly, the Libyan revolution against the regime of Colonel Muammar Qadaffy
... Custodian of Wheelus AFB for 42 long years ...
has also shown that al-Qaeda had no prominent role in its mobilisation, despite accusations repeated by the Libyan regime that the rebels were linked to al-Qaeda.

Security successes weakened al-Qaeda in the Arab world
Al-Qaeda's absence from popular uprisings in the Arab world is tied to the multiple setbacks the organisation's branches endured in this region.
It's also tied to the fact that al-Qaeda is a Salafists and Deobandi phenomenon. That makes them a Saudi import, and Salafism is tottering behind the scenes in Saudi Arabia itself. It requires primitive conditions to actually thrive, and lots of money doesn't make for primitive conditions even when the royal family's raking most of it off.
Al-Qaeda's branch in Iraq today is only capable of executing a few sporadic operations that have no real impact on the security situation in the country. Only a few years ago, this organisation extended its influence over a number of Sunni-dominated provinces.
Al-Qaeda in Iraq was al-Qaeda in miniature: it died when Zarqawi did.
The actions of al-Qaeda's branch in Iraq alienated even the residents of the Sunni areas -- who had provided sanctuary to members of the organisation. This allowed the Iraqi government and coalition forces to eliminate the emirs of al-Qaeda one after the other, including Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and Abu Ayyub al-Masri. This tightened the screws on their areas of deployment, leaving them unable to find an area that the Iraqi government could not reach.

The same applies to some extent to the branches of al-Qaeda in the Gulf. The Saudi security forces inflicted a humiliating defeat over its cells in the past years, which forced it to move to Yemen where they regrouped in remote areas. In Yemen they took advantage of the many issues the Yemeni government was wrestling with such as the conflict with the Houthis in the north, the separatist insurgency in the south, the lack of natural resources and the problems of unemployment.

But even during the million-man demonstrations that took place on the streets of Sanaa and other Yemeni cities, both those in favour of President President-for-Life Ali Abdullah Saleh or the ones opposed to him that sought his departure, no trace of al-Qaeda appeared among the ranks of the demonstrators. Once again the demonstrations indicated that Yemeni citizens live in one valley and al-Qaeda lives in another.

In the Maghreb, the situation does not seem any better for al-Qaeda. The organisation has been working for years outside the traditional areas of northern Algeria where the majority of the population resides. Algerian security services forced the organisation to move to the Sahel region,
... North Africa's answer to the Pak tribal areas...
where the grip of the security forces is weaker and where activity is possible in the vast desert areas.

But their work in the desert is far from populated areas where rebels and cut-throats flourish in any country. Therefore, any growth in al-Qaeda's activity in the Sahel region will not have a significant impact. Nowadays, al-Qaeda activity appears to be limited to a large degree now to the kidnapping of Westerners for ransom.

The new leader of al-Qaeda will face each of these challenges, so how will he deal with them?

The weeks and months ahead will no doubt bring an answer to the question, and it will become clear whether al-Qaeda will continue its bloody attacks or learn the "lesson" of the Arab revolutions that change can happen through popular, peaceful mobilisation.
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Iraq
Iraqi court sentences al-Qaeda leader to death
2011-03-17
[Asharq al-Aswat] An Iraqi court on Wednesday ordered the execution of an al-Qaeda leader and five of his lieutenants for criminal masterminding some of Storied Baghdad's deadliest bombings, a judiciary front man said.

Munaf al-Rawi was convicted and sentenced to death for the attacks that included the August 2009 government ministry bombings that killed more than 100 people, according to Iraqi Supreme Judicial Council front man Abdul-Sattar Bayrkdar.

After his capture last year, al-Rawi led Sherlocks to the two top al-Qaeda leaders in Iraq, Abu Omar al-Storied Baghdadi and Abu Ayyub al-Masri, both of whom were killed in a joint raid by U.S. and Iraqi security forces in last April.

The sentence was not a surprise and al-Rawi said in an News Agency that Dare Not be Named interview last May that he expected to be executed.

A car booming in Kirkuk,
... a thick stew of Arabs, Turkmen, Kurds, and probably Antarcticans, all of them mutually hostile most of the time...
a northern Iraqi city rife with ethnic tensions, killed three people Wednesday, including a four-month old baby and the baby's mother, said Kirkuk city police front man Brig. Gen. Sarhat Qadir.

He said the car was parked near a hospital and government office when it went kaboom! around 9 a.m. The attack appeared aimed at the city's Kurdish director of water and sewage, Qadir added.

Government officials are frequently targeted by gunnies looking to disrupt Iraq's shaky security.

Kurds and Arabs have been feuding for years over control of Kirkuk, an ethnically mixed, oil-rich city 180 miles (290 kilometers) north of Storied Baghdad.
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Iraq
Saudi smugglers nabbed in Najaf
2010-09-15
[Iran Press] Iraqi border guards have detained five Saudi arms dealers in the southern province of Najaf while trying to smuggle weapons, ammunition and drugs into the country.

The men were jugged in Najaf's Waksa district on Monday as they were traveling in a car, carrying drugs, explosive-laden belts and fire arms fitted with silencers, local media reported.

Iraq's Buratha news agency had earlier disclosed documents indicating Prince Bandar bin Sultan bin Abdulaziz, who heads the Saudi National Security Council, has appointed a new leader for the al-Qaeda cell operating in Iraq.

Known for his support for a number of regional terrorist groups, the prince has reportedly chosen a turban leader identified as Abu Suleiman as the new commander of al-Qaeda forces of Evil in Iraq.

Abu Suleiman holds both Saudi and Iraqi nationalities and replaces al-Qaeda leaders Abu Ayyub al-Masri and Abu Omar al-Storied Baghdadi who were killed earlier by Iraqi security forces.

Reports released by officials in Baghdad show tens of Saudi nationals are being held in Iraqi prisons over charges of terrorism.
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Iraq
Al-Qaeda claims attack on Iraq army recruits
2010-08-21
[Al Arabiya Latest] An Al-Qaeda group on Friday claimed it was behind a suicide kaboom on a crowded Iraqi army recruitment centre in Baghdad that killed 59 people in the deadliest attack this year, US monitors said.

The Islamic State of Iraq said Tuesday's attack, which coincided with the holy Mohammedan month of Ramadan, "struck a group of Shiites and 'apostates' who sold their faith for money and to be a tool in the war on Iraqi Sunnis," according to the SITE group which monitors Islamist websites.

The attack occurred ahead of the Aug. 31 end to U.S. combat operations in Iraq, a milestone in the war launched by former President George W. Bush 7-1/2 years ago. U.S. troop numbers will fall to 50,000 by the end of the month, from 52,000 now.

In a statement posted on a website often used by Islamist radicals, the Islamic State of Iraq (ISI), a local al-Qaeda umbrella group, said the target was in a highly secure area.

"One of the heroes of the State of Islam ... armed with a suicide vest, targeted a gathering of disbelieving cattle and other apostates who sold their religion for little money ...," the statement said.

It said the army recruits were offering themselves as weapons in a war against Sunni Mohammedans waged by the Shiite-led authorities of Iraq.


"Our brother triggered and exploded his vest after plunging himself into the crowd," the statement said.

The sectarian conflict between minority Sunnis and majority Shiites that began after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion has largely subsided but a stubborn Sunni Islamist insurgency opposed to Shiite dominance of Iraq persists and attacks continue.

The Orcs and similar vermin have sought to exploit a political vacuum created by a failure of Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish factions to agree on a coalition government five months after an inconclusive March 7 parliamentary election.

U.S. and Iraqi security officials say the attacks are also a message to supporters that the groups remain effective despite a series of blows to al-Qaeda's network, including an April raid that killed Abu Ayyub al-Masri, the leader of al Qaeda in Iraq.

General Ray Odierno, the top U.S. military commander in Iraq, said in early June that 34 of the top 42 al-Qaeda leaders in Iraq had been killed or captured in the previous 90 days.
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Iraq
Involuntary Martyrs Finish Off Al Qaeda In Iraq
2010-06-07
The U.S. recently reported that, in the last few months, American and Iraqi forces had killed or captured 34 of the 42 most senior al Qaeda leaders in Iraq. American intelligence has discovered that this huge loss has paralyzed al Qaeda in Iraq, which is now unable to find volunteers to replace all the lost leaders.
Nobody wants to be a Number Three anymore, because they can't get health insurance.
The losses have also cut communications with other al Qaeda groups, especially the senior leadership in Pakistan. The large loss of leaders also led to an unprecedented capture of documents and al Qaeda leaders willing to talk. Many family members of these leaders were also willing to discuss their experiences. For example, the widow of slain (in April) al Qaeda in Iraq leader Abu Ayyub al-Masri revealed that she and her husband (they are both Egyptian) came to Iraq in 2002, having been offered sanctuary by Saddam Hussein.
No, no! Saddam Hussein was a typical secular fascist strongman. He would have had nothing to do with a radical Islamist terror group. I know this is so because I read it in the New York Times! Mrs. al Masri must be mistaken, or lying out of her love for Chimpy BusHitler.
Many other al Qaeda were found to be terrorists hiding out in Iraq, under Saddam's protection, and having nowhere to run after 2003. While many of the terrorist leaders were Iraqis who used to work for Saddam (and also had nowhere to run, given their known crimes), there were hundreds of foreigners. Few of them are left, outside of prison and graveyards.

This devastation began two years ago. Between mid-March and mid-April, 2008, al Qaeda suffered major losses in Iraq. American and Iraqi troops killed or captured 53 al Qaeda leaders.
And clearly they've been talking together over tea ever since. How odd that nothing has been mentioned in the New York Times editorials. Ah well, perhaps some of their johnnies have been reading Rantburg over lunch in an attempt to keep up.
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Iraq
Detained militant in Iraq details World Cup plot
2010-05-18
An alleged al-Qaida militant detained in Iraq said Tuesday he was plotting to attack Danish and Dutch teams at the World Cup in South Africa next month to avenge insults against the Prophet Muhammad.

Iraqi security forces holding a Saudi citizen identified as Abdullah Azam Saleh al-Qahtani arranged for The Associated Press to interview him at an unidentified government building in Baghdad. He said he initially came to Iraq in 2004 to fight Americans and was recruited by al-Qaida.

An Iraqi security official with knowledge of the investigation said al-Qahtani was arrested after a joint U.S.-Iraqi operation in April that killed the two top al-Qaida in Iraq figures — Abu Ayyub al-Masri and Abu Omar al-Baghdadi. The official asked not to be identified because he was not authorized to discuss details of the case.

Documents found in the house where they were killed, including a note written by al-Qahtani detailing the World Cup plot, led to his arrest on May 3. Iraqi authorities announced the arrest on Monday.

"We discussed the possibility of taking revenge for the insults of the prophet by attacking Denmark and Holland," al-Qahtani told The AP. "The goal was to attack the Danish and the Dutch teams and their fans," he added.

"If we were not able to reach the teams, then we'd target the fans," he said, adding that they hoped to use guns and car bombs.

The alleged militant, who is about 30 years old with a mustache, was wearing an orange prisoner jumpsuit and had no outward signs of injury or abuse. He did not appear nervous or fearful.

It was unclear whether the militants had the ability to carry out what would have been quite a sophisticated operation — a complicated attack far from their home base.

A U.S. military spokesman referred all questions about al-Qahtani to the government of Iraq.

He said the idea came up in late 2009 during talks with friends over some publications in Western media they deemed offensive to Muslims.

In 2006, 12 cartoons of the prophet in a Danish newspaper sparked furious protests in Muslim countries.

In the Netherlands, an anti-Islam party has become the country's fastest growing political movement. Its leader, Geert Wilders, calls the Quran a "fascist book" and wants it banned in the Netherlands. His 2008 short film "Fitna," offended many Muslims by juxtaposing Quranic verses with images of terrorism by Islamic radicals.

He advocated closing borders to immigrants, and taxing clothing commonly worn by Muslims, such as headscarves, because they "pollute" the Dutch landscape.

Wilders' popularity is partly a reaction to a spate of Islamic radical violence that sent shudders through the nation a few years ago. In 2004, a young Muslim from the Slotervaart neighborhood murdered Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh, who had produced a short film portraying alleged oppression of Muslim women.

Al-Qahtani said the World Cup was considered a high-profile international event and South Africa was thought to be easier to travel to than either of the two European countries they wanted to target.

The Iraqi security official said no steps had yet been taken to put the plan into motion, such as obtaining bomb-making materials.

Al-Qahtani said the plot still needed approval from the al-Qaida chain of command, specifically the group's No. 2 Ayman al-Zawahiri.
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Iraq
Car blast kills seven in Baghdad
2010-05-14
[Dawn] Seven people were killed and 22 wounded after a car bomb planted outside a cafe exploded on Wednesday in a Shia area of Baghdad, police and a source at the Iraqi Interior Ministry said.

The bomb late on a hot early summer evening came two days after suspected al-Qaeda insurgents launched assaults across the country that killed more than 125 people in what officials said was a message that the weakened group was still a threat.

It also came amid continued political wrangling following a March 7 election that produced no outright winner.

A cross-sectarian alliance heavily supported by minority Sunnis took a slim, two-seat lead in the parliamentary vote, but the main Shia-led alliances, including Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's bloc, have agreed to join forces to try to form a coalition government.

If they succeed, that could anger once-dominant Sunnis who supported the Iraqiya list of former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, a secular Shia, and possibly fuel renewed bloodshed as US troops prepare for a sharp reduction in numbers by August.

The area in Sadr City where the bomb blew up on Wednesday evening was popular with young people, many of whom play dominoes into the evening.

Sadr City is a stronghold of fiery anti-US cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, whose militia battled US troops until a crackdown by the Iraqi military in 2008 throughout the Shia south and Baghdad ordered by Maliki.

Earlier on Wednesday, a bomb planted inside a grocery store in another mainly Shia area of Baghdad killed three people and wounded 23 others, police said.

Police said insurgents first killed the shop owner in front of his store in a popular market area in the Shula district of northwestern Baghdad and then detonated a bomb at the door of the shop when people crowded around the body.

The attacks bore the hallmark of Sunni insurgents such as al-Qaeda, who often target crowded, mostly Shia areas.

Gunmen and bombers killed about 125 people on Monday in a series of attacks across the country that included assaults on security checkpoints in Baghdad and car and suicide bombings in the southern oil hub of Basra and the southern town of Hilla.

The attacks showed that insurgents were still strong despite recent setbacks inflicted by US and Iraqi forces, including the death of Abu Ayyub al-Masri, the leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq, in a raid in April.

Late on Tuesday, a roadside bomb blast killed five Iraqi police officers and wounded 14 others who were lured to a Baghdad market by the detonation of another improvised explosive.
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Iraq
Attacks kill over 100 in Iraq, al-Qaeda blamed
2010-05-11
[Al Arabiya Latest] A wave of attacks across Iraq, including twin car bombs against a textiles factory, killed at least 102 people on Monday, security and hospital officials said.

The attacks wounded more than 300 others in the capital, Baghdad, the southern oil hub of Basra and other towns and cities, and appeared aimed at showing Iraqis that Sunni Islamist insurgents were still a potent force, even after battlefield defeats in recent weeks. "Despite strong strikes that broke al Qaeda, there are some cells still working, attempting to prove their existence and their influence," said Baghdad's security spokesman, Major General Qassim al-Moussawi, calling the attacks "hysterical."

The attackers exploited the political disarray that followed a March 7 election that produced no outright winner and pitted a cross-sectarian bloc backed by minority Sunnis against two major Shi'ite-led coalitions.

Two months on, results have not been certified after an election that Iraqis hoped would deliver stable governance as U.S. troops prepare to withdraw more than seven years after ousting Sunni dictator Saddam Hussein.

In the bloodiest incident on Monday, two suicide car bombers drove into the entrance of a textile factory as workers were ending a shift in the town of Hilla, south of Baghdad, a regional office of the national media centre said.

A third bomb exploded as police and medics rushed to the scene, causing additional casualties. At least 45 people died and 190 were wounded, a hospital source said.

"This looks like a major campaign by the terrorists, not just in Hilla," said Babil province governor Salman al-Zarqani. The attacks were a reaction to efforts by Shi'ite factions to form a governing coalition after the March 7 election, he said.

The southern oil city of Basra was struck by three car bombs killing 21 people and wounding more than 70 others, security and medical sources said. The first was in a central market and the other two exploded in northern Basra near a petrol station and in a residential area.

Oil production, the bulk of which comes from fields outside the city, was not affected.

Earlier, a suicide bomber wearing an explosives-laden vest and another driving a car killed 13 people and wounded 40 in a marketplace in al-Suwayra, 50 km (30 miles) southeast of Baghdad, said Majid Askar, an official with the Wasit provincial council.

At dawn in Baghdad, gunmen equipped with silencers killed at least seven Iraqi soldiers and policemen when they attacked six checkpoints, while bombs planted at three others wounded several more, an Interior Ministry source said.

"This was a message to us that they can attack us in different parts of the city at the same time because they have cells everywhere," the source said.

A series of further attacks in the western province of Anbar, the volatile northern city of Mosul, the northern and western outskirts of Baghdad and elsewhere took the death toll from Monday's bloodshed to at least 102, with about 350 wounded.

Show of strength
The attacks reaffirmed the continuing vigor of the insurgency after government forces dealt a series of blows to al Qaeda's network in recent weeks, including an April raid that killed Abu Ayyub al-Masri, the leader of al Qaeda in Iraq.

Overall violence in Iraq has subsided sharply since the height of sectarian warfare in 2006-07, but the March election has fuelled tensions again.

The cross-sectarian alliance led by former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, a secular Shiite, rode strong support from Sunnis to take a two-seat lead in the parliamentary vote.

Iraq's main Shiite-led coalitions, however, have agreed to form an alliance that could deprive Allawi of a chance to try to form the next government, potentially angering Sunnis.

At a news conference on Monday before a meeting of Iraqiya's winning candidates, Allawi repeated his assertion that his bloc had the right to make the first attempt at forming a government.

"We will not allow ... our hands to be tied against attempts to undermine Iraqiya and confiscate the will of the Iraqi electors," he said.
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