Osama, Zawahiri parted ways 6 years ago – India


8 may 2011

Osama, Zawahiri parted ways 6 years ago: US media report

Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiothoracic Cardiac Heart Surgeon India

Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiothoracic Cardiac Heart Surgeon India

This file photo shows Osama bin Laden with
Ayman al-Zawahiri. (AP)

Washington:  A senior Pakistani intelligence officer has made a startling revelation that slain Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and his deputy Ayman al-Zawahiri had “parted ways” six years ago.

“They had parted ways some six years ago with bin Laden being sidelined because he no longer had the funds to support Al Qaeda operations and that his popularity in the terror network was slipping,” the Wall Street Journal quoted the Pakistani official as saying.

Zawahiri is likely to take over as the new chief of Al Qaeda.

The official said bin Laden had been “marginalised” by Zawahiri, who helped bin Laden found Al Qaeda in 1988 and led its operation in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

It is being said that the latest revelation could help Pakistan’s reputation as it grapples to soothe America’s temper in the wake of bin Laden’s presence in the country as it suggested that Pakistan’s failure to find him wasn’t such a significant lapse.

Pakistani officials are, however, probing the intelligence failure, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Meanwhile, US officials have said that they have not heard of a split between the two men.

“Parted ways? I don’t think so,” said one US counter-terrorism official. “I have not seen anything like that in intelligence reports,” he added.

US forces had annihilated bin Laden at a compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, early on Monday.

Another US official familiar with the intelligence said there was strong evidence, however, to support the contention that bin Laden had money problems. “We do know funding has been an issue,” the official said.

Zawahiri has long been viewed as Al Qaeda’s chief ideologue and operational commander, while bin Laden as the “mastermind” and inspiration of the organisation with a much less active day-to-day role.

Tensions between bin Laden and Zawahiri rose around 2005 after the US-led invasion of Iraq prompted the creation of a new affiliate group, Al Qaeda in Iraq, led by a bloodthirsty Jordanian named Abu Musab al Zarqawi.

The Iraqi affiliate promptly unleashed a brutal campaign against Shiites in Iraq, including attacks on Shiite mosques, which horrified many Iraqis and undermined Al Qaeda’s efforts to win over the local population. That backlash eventually led to the so-called Sunni awakening that helped US forces regain the upper hand in many Iraqi provinces.

A rift could help explain why bin Laden moved to the compound in Abbottabad, 40 miles from Pakistan’s capital, where he was killed in a raid by US forces in the early hours of Monday.

About Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India

Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India Surgery
This entry was posted in Uncategorized and tagged , , . Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a comment