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Iraq
AQI #3 Abu Usama al Tunisi bites the dust
2007-09-28
U.S.-led forces have killed one of the most important leaders of al-Qaeda in Iraq, and recent similar operations have left the organization fractured, a top American commander said Friday.

"Abu Usama al-Tunisi was one of the most senior leaders ... the emir of foreign terrorists in Iraq and part of the inner leadership circle," said Brig. Gen. Joseph Anderson. Al-Tunisi was a leader in helping bring foreign terrorists into the country and his death "is a key loss" to al-Qaida leadership there, Anderson told a Pentagon news conference via videoconference from Baghdad.

Anderson said recent coalition operations also have helped cut in half the previous flow of foreign fighters into Iraq, which had been at about 60 to 80 a month. He credited the work of the Iraqi Department of Border Enforcement and U.S. teams.

Commanders have said previously that the increase in troops ordered by President Bush in January — and the increased operations that followed — have pushed militants into the remote parts of the north and south of the country. Additional operations have been going after those pockets of fighters. "We're having great success in isolating these pockets," Anderson said. "They are very broken up, very unable to mass, and conducting very isolated operations," he said.

Additional: ``He operated in Yusufiyah, southwest of Baghdad, since the second battle of Fallujah in November '04 and became the overall emir of Yusufiyah in the summer of '06,'' Anderson said in a videoconference from Baghdad. ``His group was responsible for kidnapping our American soldiers in June 2006,'' Anderson said. Anderson laid out a series of operations over the last two weeks that led up to the air strike that killed al-Tunisi in the town of Musayib.

He said an associate of al-Tunisi's was captured in one mission on Sept. 12 in Baghdad and another with links to him was captured Sept. 14 in Mahmudiyah when coalition forces targeted the network that facilitates the flow of foreign fighters in the southern belts around Baghdad.

More associates were captured over the next few days. On Sept. 25, commanders received information that a meeting was taking place near Musayib with al-Tunisi and other al-Qaida in Iraq members. A U.S. Air Force F-16 aircraft attacked the target. Al-Tunisi's presence was confirmed by a detainee who had just fled the area before the attack and was captured minutes later, Anderson said.
Posted by:trailing wife

#13  HHHHHMMMMMM, HHHHHHMMMMM, Saipan. Perhaps PAULA "DELILAH/BATHSHEBA" ABDUL doth remembers too much [Darth Vader breathing here].
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2007-09-28 20:34  

#12  So.....perhaps there is something we have taught to Iraqi security about border security that might apply to our own?....I thought not.
Posted by: Skunky Glins5285   2007-09-28 19:54  

#11  get yer chocolates here...
Posted by: Querent   2007-09-28 16:49  

#10  My thanks to the moderator who added the additional, the pictures, and punched up the headline. I take sole credit for the #3, however, based on the bit in the first article that says

was one of the most senior leaders ... the emir of foreign terrorists in Iraq and part of the inner leadership circle

Because if that isn't a number three, then I don't know my organizational charts. Remember, only one #1 at a time, several #2s, each of which has one or more #3s. Like species evolution, it's a bush, not a tree. ;-)
Posted by: trailing wife   2007-09-28 16:02  

#9  TWO 500-pounders. I LIKE that.

Why the two different types, I wonder?
Posted by: Bobby   2007-09-28 16:01  

#8  CentCom Release had a bit more info. Apparantly a couple other 'leaders' also received terminal 500 pound laser-guided headaches with him.

U.S. AIR FORCE F-16 AIR STRIKE KILLS 3 TERRORIST LEADERS
COMBINED AIR OPERATIONS CENTER, Southwest Asia - A U.S. Air Force F-16CJ Fighting Falcon dropped precision munitions near Al Nussayyib, Iraq Sept. 25, killing Abu Nasr al-Tunisi and two other Al Q'aeda in Iraq operatives.

They were killed when the aircraft, assigned to U.S. Central Command Air Forces, dropped two precision-guided 500lb bombs on the target-one laser-guided GBU-12 and one GBU-38 Joint Direct Attack Munition, destroying the terrorist safe house where the three were meeting.
Posted by: Glenmore   2007-09-28 14:09  

#7  This appears to have been the end of a two-week roll-up. I presume the three day delay in announcing it was so they were sure they had finished rolling. Still, it will be interesting to see if there are more announcements in the pipeline.
Posted by: Glenmore   2007-09-28 13:59  

#6  Pickin' up the pieces of his sweet, shattered dreams...
Posted by: Anonymoose   2007-09-28 13:56  

#5  He's a firm #3 with a bullet...in his head.
Posted by: Seafarious   2007-09-28 13:42  

#4  I am glad he's met his virgins, and not a moment too soon, but how do we know that he was specifically number 3?

Is this like a college football poll, that some bearded schmockmeister is #3 this week, then #2 afeter planting a few successful roadside bombs, then #5 after some insult of Osama's Aide.
Posted by: BigEd   2007-09-28 13:23  

#3  Al-Tunisi was killed in an air strike on Tuesday that followed a series of raids in which several of his associates had been captured, Brig Gen Anderson added.

"Ok, Ok, I'll tell you where Abu is hiding. Just get THAT away from me!"
Posted by: Steve   2007-09-28 13:13  

#2  (Budda bomp bomp bomp)
Another one bites the dust!
(Bomp bomp bomp)
Another one bites the dust!
Posted by: Mike   2007-09-28 12:47  

#1  There's lots of positive news floating around on various fronts (this, Tora Bora, Israel's bombing of Syria, etc...)

Is this what momentum feels like?
Posted by: Captain Lewis   2007-09-28 12:44  

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