Top al Qaeda leader, commanders reported killed in Syria airstrike

"Shami died of injuries on Thursday, but it is not clear when he sustained them."


Afp March 06, 2015
Fighters from the Al-Nusra Front, Al-Qaeda's Syria branch, hold a position near Syria's northern city of Aleppo as they fight against forces loyal to the regime on December 19, 2014. PHOTO: AFP

BEIRUT: The military chief and several top commanders of the al Qaeda-affiliated Al-Nusra Front have been reported killed in northwestern Syria, where the militia has been making major gains in recent months.

Syrian state media, a monitoring group and a local activist reported that Abu Hammam al-Shami had been killed, but provided contradictory information on the circumstances of his death.

Official Nusra sources did not announce the death of the militant, a Syrian national believed to have fought with al Qaeda in Afghanistan.

"Shami... was killed with a number of other leaders during a special operation by the army" in Idlib province, Syrian state news agency SANA reported, without specifying a date.

Rami Abdel Rahman, the head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group, also said the commander had been killed but that the circumstances of his death were unclear.

"Shami died of injuries on Thursday, but it is not clear when he sustained them," said Abdel Rahman.

He said Shami may have been one of five Nusra leaders wounded in an air strike in Idlib province on February 27 by the US-led coalition attacking jihadists in Syria.

An official Nusra statement that day named two commanders killed in the strike but did not mention Shami.

Local Syrian activist Ibrahim al-Idlibi said Shami had been killed in the February raid but that Nusra had not published his name due to the "sensitivity" of the information.

Reports of Shami's death came as the al Qaeda affiliate consolidates gains in northern Syria.

Already the most powerful military force in Idlib province, Nusra handed a major defeat to one of its rivals -- the Western-backed Hazm movement -- at the weekend when it seized Hazm's base in Aleppo province.

Nusra also claimed to have led a spectacular assault against a regime intelligence headquarters in Aleppo city on Wednesday, blowing up a tunnel near the building before storming the surrounding area.

Attacks on the group's leadership are "an indication of the rising strength and influence of Nusra on the ground in Syria in recent months," said Lina Khatib, director of the Carnegie Middle East Centre think tank.

"Because it operates in a decentralised manner, not top down, the loss of a leader is something that Nusra can recover from with minimal damage," she said.

Thomas Pierret, a lecturer at the University of Edinburgh, called Shami's death a "severe blow" but said that the impact should not be overstated.

"Organisations of this type are very well structured and prepared for the loss of important leaders," he said.

But Idlibi, the local activist, disagreed.

"It's a definite hit to the morale of Nusra's supporters," he said.

He said there were rumours of serious internal disputes within Nusra's ranks regarding an apparent Qatar-led proposal for Nusra to split off from al Qaeda.

"They want to turn it into something like the Taliban -- into a political movement," he said.

Idlibi said Nusra political chief Abu Mohamed al-Jolani is in favour of the split, while Shami was against it.

Nusra has emerged as the most powerful jihadist group in northwestern Syria and, as well as fighting President Bashar al-Assad's regime, has clashed with moderate rebels and its jihadist rival the Islamic State group.

Shami is reported to have travelled to Afghanistan in the late 1990s and was eventually put in charge of Syrian militants there.

According to a Lebanese security source, he served a four-year sentence in the notorious Roumieh prison alongside high-profile Islamists.

He then returned to Syria, where he became Nusra's main military commander.

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