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Afghanistan
UPDATE: Al-Libi-- al-Qaida leader targeted in US drone strike that killed 15 in Pakistan
2012-06-05
Update 12:30 CST (Got 'em) Abu Yahya Al-Libi, a top Al Qaeda operative, was killed in a US drone strike in Pakistan, Fox News confirms.
More on the number two Fred notes below...
"Getting close ... A couple inches higher and you're there!"
A Predator attack over the weekend targeted Abu Yahya al-Libi, a leading al-Qaida operative who was viewed as one of five candidates to succeed Osama bin Laden as leader of the terrorist group when he was killed last year. U.S. officials confirm that he was the target of the Sunday attacks and say they are awaiting word on his status.
Hopefully RTP.
May we see the severed head?
In one of three strikes over the weekend, a U.S. drone struck a militant compound early Monday morning in North Waziristan, part of Pakistan's northwestern tribal area. Pakistan insecurity reports indicated the pre-dawn strike killed 15 insurgents, but. U.S. officials said the number of dead was "exaggerated."
It's kind of a knee-jerk reaction they have, especially if they think the Mighty Pakistaini Army is involved.
The Agence France Presse news agency reported that two missiles were fired on the compound in Mir Ali, 15 miles east of Miramshah, the capital of North Waziristan, near the Afghan border, in an area considered a hive of Taliban and al-Qaida activity.
Bees, meet Brakleen.
A Pakistani official, who spoke with NBC News on condition of anonymity, said the victims were mostly foreigners and Urdu-speaking Punjabi Taliban who had gathered with the intention of crossing into Afghanistan to fight with Afghan Taliban fighters against NATO forces.
And then re-crossing back into the safety of Pakistain if things started getting weird.
Reuters, citing reports from the region, said nearly 30 people were killed during the sequence of strikes, including four suspected militants on Saturday, 10 suspected militants on Sunday, and 15 people in the strike in which Abu Yahya was targeted.
People? Maybe "a gory medley of terrorist chiefs and their bodyguards" would be more descriptive.
Pakistan's Foreign Ministry said Monday it "strongly condemns" the US drone strikes, which it described as "illegal attacks" on Pakistani sovereignty.
Doesn't sovereignty imply that you are in control of your kingdom?
The most-recent attack of the weekend was the eighth drone strike in Pakistan since a NATO conference on Afghanistan in Chicago last month. Since taking office in 2009, the Obama administration has carried out nearly 300 drone strikes in Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia, the majority of them in Pakistan's tribal areas, according to the New America Foundation, which keeps an unofficial count.
The majority of them in Pakistain's tribal areas? Does Pakistain have anything but tribal areas?
If Abu Yahya was indeed killed, it would be another blow to al-Qaida in Pakistan, the so-called al-Qaida Central.
We're out to get your Yahyas.
The Libyan, believed to be 39 years old, is one of the most influential propagandists in al-Qaida and one of its best known deaders leaders.
Getting younger and younger, aren't they. Suppose this guy is old enough to have a sixth grade education yet?
Abu Yahya draws much of his credibility from having escaped a U.S. military prison at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan on the night of July 10, 2005. He subsequently appeared in more than 30 videos produced by al Shahab, the al-Qaida media wing, and other militant sites. In December 2009, Pakistani officials erroneously reported he had been killed in a Predator strike, further enhancing his image.
In that part of the world, a video of a guy molesting a goat would enhance his image. Unless the goat had reached the age of majority, of course.
U.S. officials say unlike many al-Qaida propagandists, Abu Yahya also is a seasoned fighter.
Now he's just seasoning, hopefully.
In May 2011, shortly after bin Laden was killed, U.S. officials identified Abu Yahya as one of five potential successors to the slain al-Qaida leaders. The leading candidate, Ayman al Zawahiri, ultimately did succeed bin Laden. If Abu Yahya was killed, he would be the fourth of the five to have been killed in drone strikes.
I'll bet Zawahiri's aids are having a hard time separating him from his chair right now, even while pulling hard on both arms.
Ilyas Kashmiri, al-Qaida's director of external operations, was killed on June 3. Abdul Rahman Atiya, bin Laden's chief of staff, was killed Aug. 22. Both of those attacks took place in northwestern Pakistan. Anwar al Awlaki, a leader of al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula and an American citizen, was killed in Yemen, also in a drone strike, on Sept. 30.
What did they do, move him over to Yemen and put a target on him so the pattern wouldn't look so obvious?
Posted by:gorb

#6  And if O had kept his big mouth shut until the Seals and CIA had time to exploit the intel they gathered when they whacked bin Laden, we probably could have gotten several more potential number 2's and 3's.
Posted by: Rambler in Virginia   2012-06-05 18:37  

#5  So how many NO.2's killed does this make now...??
Entirely more than I'd feel comfortable with, were I senior -- or middle, come to think of it -- management, crazyhorse. They can,t be having enough time to train these people to do the job before they get killed, let alone before the replacement Number Threes are trained in their new responsibilities.
Posted by: trailing wife   2012-06-05 18:07  

#4  So how many NO.2's killed does this make now...??
Posted by: crazyhorse   2012-06-05 14:52  

#3  You'd think AlQ would be concerned that the one left alive isn't an "asset"...
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2012-06-05 12:28  

#2  4 out of 5 ... not bad!
Posted by: Water Modem   2012-06-05 11:44  

#1  I probably forgot to put this under "Afghanistan".
Posted by: gorb   2012-06-05 02:30  

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