Zawahiri and Libi rank high in CIA drone hit-list: Report
Zawahiri and Libi's death could mean end of al Qaeda, say US officials.
WASHINGTON:
The Washington Post reported on Wednesday that the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) ranked Ayman al-Zawahiri and his second in command, Abu Yahya al-Libi as high value targets in the drone campaign against al Qaeda in Pakistan.
United States (US) officials, however, reportedly said that lower-level fighters and other insurgent groups will remain a focus of Predator surveillance and strikes.
Officials said al Qaeda’s contraction comes amid indications that the group has considered relocating in recent years. The group’s weakened condition has raised questions for the CIA about its deployment of personnel and resources.
Despite the fact that US counter terrorism officials now assess al Qaeda’s offshoot in Yemen as a significantly greater threat, the CIA’s station in Pakistan’s capital remains one of its largest in the world.
According to officials, CIA has resisted moving operatives away from Pakistan because its priority is to extinguish the network’s base as al Qaeda has regrouped in the past.
The leadership ranks of the main al Qaeda terrorist network, once expansive enough to supervise the plot for September 11, 2001, have been reduced to just two figures whose demise would mean the group’s defeat, US counterterrorism and intelligence officials said.
“Now is not the time to let up the pressure,” said a US official familiar with drone operations, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations.
“We’ve got an opportunity to keep them down, and letting up now could allow them to regenerate.”
The arrest this week of an alleged al Qaeda sympathizer in New York underscored the group’s ability to inspire “lone wolf” attacks.
US officials, still, who described al Qaeda as being on the verge of defeat after Osama bin Laden was killed said they have been surprised by the pace and extent of the group’s contraction in the six months since then.
“We have rendered the organisation that brought us 9/11 operationally ineffective,” a senior US counterterrorism official said. Speaking on whether what exists of al Qaeda’s leadership group beyond the top two positions, the official said: “Not very much. Not any of the world-class terrorists they once had.”
The Washington Post reported on Wednesday that the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) ranked Ayman al-Zawahiri and his second in command, Abu Yahya al-Libi as high value targets in the drone campaign against al Qaeda in Pakistan.
United States (US) officials, however, reportedly said that lower-level fighters and other insurgent groups will remain a focus of Predator surveillance and strikes.
Officials said al Qaeda’s contraction comes amid indications that the group has considered relocating in recent years. The group’s weakened condition has raised questions for the CIA about its deployment of personnel and resources.
Despite the fact that US counter terrorism officials now assess al Qaeda’s offshoot in Yemen as a significantly greater threat, the CIA’s station in Pakistan’s capital remains one of its largest in the world.
According to officials, CIA has resisted moving operatives away from Pakistan because its priority is to extinguish the network’s base as al Qaeda has regrouped in the past.
The leadership ranks of the main al Qaeda terrorist network, once expansive enough to supervise the plot for September 11, 2001, have been reduced to just two figures whose demise would mean the group’s defeat, US counterterrorism and intelligence officials said.
“Now is not the time to let up the pressure,” said a US official familiar with drone operations, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations.
“We’ve got an opportunity to keep them down, and letting up now could allow them to regenerate.”
The arrest this week of an alleged al Qaeda sympathizer in New York underscored the group’s ability to inspire “lone wolf” attacks.
US officials, still, who described al Qaeda as being on the verge of defeat after Osama bin Laden was killed said they have been surprised by the pace and extent of the group’s contraction in the six months since then.
“We have rendered the organisation that brought us 9/11 operationally ineffective,” a senior US counterterrorism official said. Speaking on whether what exists of al Qaeda’s leadership group beyond the top two positions, the official said: “Not very much. Not any of the world-class terrorists they once had.”