U.S. Says It Killed Veteran Qaida Leader in Syria

W460

The U.S. military said Wednesday that it had killed eleven al-Qaida operatives, including a veteran leader and suicide bombing pioneer, in a bombing raid in Syria.

The Pentagon said Abu Hani al-Masri, the Qaida veteran, was one of those killed in the precision airstrikes near Idlib carried out on February 3-4.

Al-Masri was an early official in al-Qaida, overseeing the group's training camps in Afghanistan in the 1980s and 1990s as he worked with Qaida founder Osama bin Laden and current leader Ayman al-Zawahiri.

There "he recruited, indoctrinated, trained and equipped thousands of terrorists who subsequently spread throughout the region and the world," the Pentagon said in a statement.

They said he also helped found Egyptian Islamic Jihad "he first Sunni group to use suicide bombers in their terror attacks."

"These strikes disrupt al-Qaida's ability to plot and direct external attacks targeting the U.S. and our interests worldwide," said Pentagon spokesman Jeff Davis.

The U.S. has mostly focused its attacks in Syria on the Islamic State group. But in recent months, U.S. forces have also launched several attacks against its al-Qaida rivals.

Idlib province is largely occupied by the former Syrian branch of al-Qaida, Fateh al-Sham, which has been allied to several Syrian rebel groups fighting the government.

Comments 1
Thumb gigahabib 09 February 2017, 16:23

Isn't that the guy who writes Game of Thrones?