Top Qaeda commander ‘killed’ in Syria
An air strike has killed a top al-Qaeda commander and two other fighters in Syria, activists said.
|||Beirut - An air strike has killed a top al-Qaeda commander and two other fighters in Syria, activists said Saturday, but it was not immediately clear whether it was carried out by the US-led coalition or Russian warplanes.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Abdul Mohsen Abdallah Ibrahim al-Charekh, a Saudi better known as Sanafi al-Nasr, was killed Thursday in an air strike near the northern Syrian town of Dana, along with another Saudi and a Moroccan member of al-Qaeda's local affiliate, known as the Nusra Front.
Russian warplanes have been carrying out airstrikes in Syria since September 30. A US-led coalition has been targeting the Nusra Front and the Islamic State group for more than a year.
The Observatory’s chief Rami Abdurrahman said it was not clear if al-Charekh was killed by US or Russian warplanes. The Observatory, which relies on a network of activists inside Syria, said an Egyptian commander escaped the bombing. It said all four men had been dispatched to Syria by al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahri.
Jihadi activists on social media say al-Charekh was killed by a US drone strike.
Al-Charekh, the alleged leader of al-Qaeda's operations in Syria, was one of six men that the UN Security Council imposed sanctions on last year. He was the 49th on a list of 85 most-wanted militants by Saudi Arabia who are outside the kingdom. The list, issued in 2009, includes 83 Saudis and two Yemenis.
“America is offering its services to the Safawi (Iranian) project in the region by removing every brain who confronts this project,” wrote prominent Lebanese jihadi cleric Sirajeddine Zuraiqat on Twitter. Zuraiqat is believed to be in Syria and is wanted in his home country.
The US killed top al-Qaeda official Muhsin al-Fadhli in an air strike three months ago. Some Arab press reports suggested that al-Charekh was a member of the Khorasan group, a secretive cell of al-Qaeda operatives who US officials say were sent from Pakistan to Syria to plot attacks against the West.
The Nusra Front’s leader, Abu Mohammed al-Golani, has denied the existence of the Khorasan group.
AP
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