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Iraq
Obituary: Abu Musab al-Zarqawi
2006-06-08
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq, was believed to be behind many of the most headline-grabbing attacks of the conflict in Iraq. The Jordanian-born fighter rose to prominence as leader of the Islamist Tawhid and Jihad group in 2003.
Tawhid was founded to overthrow the Jordanian monarchy. It was active in Europe at least as early as 2000.
In 2004, al-Zarqawi announced that he pledged allegiance to Osama bin Laden and changed the organisation's name to al-Qaeda in Iraq.
The group carried out some of the most deadly attacks in Iraq since the US-led invasion, including the January 2005 bombing of a crowd of police and Iraqi National Guard recruits in the southern city of Hilla that killed 125 people. Al-Zarqawi is alleged to have personally beheaded at least two American hostages during 2004 - Nick Berg and Eugene Armstrong. During 2005, al-Qaeda in Iraq began to move their campaign beyond Iraq's borders - carrying out a suicide attack on a Jordanian hotel that killed 60 people and claiming responsibility for a rocket attack against Israel.
That was a mere extension of the al-Qaeda operation to al-Tawhid.
The US put a $25 million on his head, the same as for Osama bin Laden, and al-Zarqawi was sentenced to death three times in his native Jordan.
Guess they can close the books on that one now...
The group was also at the centre of the Iraqi sectarian conflict that has threatened to develop into all-out civil war.
Zark and his organization are takfiri. Anybody who doesn't agree with them 100 percent is an infidel. That puts Shiites into the same category as Lutherans.
Al-Qaeda in Iraq claimed responsibility for the bombing of Shia mosques and al-Zarqawi described Shia muslims as "enemies of Islam" in an audiotape posted on the internet in June. But analysts believe that despite being a prominent figure in the Iraqi uprising, his influence was often exaggerated by the media.
Which just goes to show you don't have to be a genius, or even moderately smart, to be an analyst.
His organisation was believed to be only 3,000 strong at most and US army officials admitted raising al-Zarqawi's profile by blaming attacks on his group, the Washington Post reported in April. After reports that he had been dislodged as political leader of the Iraqi uprising, al-Zarqawi released a video in May in an attempt to maintain his profile - a move that may have provided the US with information on his whereabouts.

Born Ahmad Fadhil Nazzal al-Khalayla in 1966, al-Zarqawi was known in the Jordanian industrial town of al-Zarqa as a small-time criminal. He adopted his Islamist radical ideology while in a Jordanian prison in the late 1990s. After being released in an amnesty, al-Zarqawi went in 1999 to Afghanistan, where he formed links with bin Laden. He fled during the US-led war that toppled the Taliban government in late 2001, passing through Iran to Iraq, according to US officials.
Posted by:Fred

#7  Inshallah, Zarq, inshallah.
Posted by: Thinemp Whimble2412   2006-06-08 19:18  

#6  Shit happens?
Posted by: Snump Ebbons4287   2006-06-08 16:27  

#5  Time for a meal for some hungy pigs.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2006-06-08 12:09  

#4  This Allan fellow must be a real pussy if he can't protect his Brave Lions.
Posted by: mcsegeek1   2006-06-08 10:11  

#3  It is Allan's will, pieces be upon him.
Posted by: Abu Musab all-Blownupi   2006-06-08 10:08  

#2  I mourn his purty mouth. We will never see it's like again...
Posted by: Mahmoud Al-Jailbirdi   2006-06-08 09:30  

#1  On tombstone:
"Never did learn to fire an MG right."
"Please do not throw cigarette butts in urinal."
"Employees must wash hands before returning to work."
"Do not eat the big white mints."
Posted by: Dar   2006-06-08 09:23  

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