Published: 9:38PM Friday May 09, 2008
Source: Reuters
A man seized by Iraqi forces is not the head of al Qaeda in
Iraq, a senior US military official said, following an announcement
by several Iraqi officials that Abu Ayyub al-Masri had been
captured.
Iraqi security sources had already begun to cast doubt on the
earlier announcement that Masri, an Egyptian also known as Abu
Hamza al-Muhajir, had been captured in an operation in Mosul on
Wednesday.
One senior security source in Mosul said the man seized in that
raid was an Iraqi.
"He has not been detained," the US military official said, without
giving further details.
It is not the first time there has been confusion over the fate of
Masri.
Iraq's Interior Ministry said a year ago he had been killed, but
soon afterwards Sunni Islamist al Qaeda released an audio tape
purportedly from him.
The detention of Masri would have been another blow for al Qaeda,
which has been forced to regroup in northern Iraq after a wave of
US military assaults in the past year.
Earlier, Interior Ministry spokesman Major-General Abdul-Karim
Khalaf said a detained associate of Masri took Iraqi security
forces late on Wednesday to where the al Qaeda leader was
hiding.
After being detained, the man confessed to being the al Qaeda in
Iraq leader, he said.
Duraid Kashmula, the governor of Nineveh province of which Mosul is
the capital, had told Reuters he was certain the detained man was
Masri.
Al Qaeda in Iraq was headed by the Jordanian militant Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi until he was killed in a US air strike in June 2006.
His successor, Masri, was Zarqawi's close associate, and has a
US bounty of $5 million ($NZ6.84 million) on his head.
US officials blame al Qaeda in Iraq for most big bombings in the
country, including an attack on a revered Shiite shrine in Samarra
in February 2006 that set off a wave of sectarian killings that
nearly tipped Iraq into all-out civil war.
A build-up of US troops last year allowed the military to conduct a
series of offensives against the group.
The emergence of Sunni Arab tribal security units also helped to
provide intelligence on al Qaeda activities.
The result was that al Qaeda has largely been pushed out of Baghdad
and its former stronghold in the western province of Anbar to areas
in northern Iraq, such as Mosul.
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