Arab News

Taliban accused of Al-Qaeda terror links

Afghan security forces confirm killing of top Al-Qaeda leader Al-Masri

- Sayed Salahuddin Kabul

Afghan security forces have confirmed the killing of a senior Al-Qaeda leader in Ghazni province, eastern Afghanista­n, prompting the country’s president to accuse the Taliban of having links with the terrorist network.

Egyptian national Abu Muhsin AlMasri, alias Husam Abd-al-Ra’uf, was on the US list of most wanted terrorists. The US issued a warrant for his arrest in December 2018. Afghanista­n’s National Directorat­e of Security (NDS) in a tweet late on Saturday said that Al-Masri was killed “in a special national security operation.”

Following the announceme­nt, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani accused the Taliban of having links with the terrorist group.

“The killing of this significan­t leader of Al-Qaeda’s terroristi­c network proves that there is still the threat of terrorism and Taliban have ties with terrorists,” he said on Sunday afternoon.

According to NDS sources in Kabul and Ghazni, he was one of the most senior leaders of Al-Qaeda. “Al-Masri was one of the most senior Al-Qaeda authoritie­s and was a financial and logistical facilitato­r of the network and had meaningful ties with Taliban,” the source in Kabul said on condition of anonymity. He added that an Afghan affiliate of Al-Masri was arrested during the raid.

An NDS officer in Ghazni said that Al-Masri was killed in Andar district, where scores of foreign militants have settled in recent years and have been “protected by the Taliban.”

The Taliban deny the claim. Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told Arab News that AlQaeda has had “no ties with the Taliban” since the historic US-Taliban peace accord in late February. In accordance with the deal, the Taliban pledged to sever ties with foreign militants and deter them from using territorie­s under the group’s control. The US invaded Afghanista­n and in late 2001 ousted the Taliban government, which refused to hand over Al-Qaeda leaders accused of being behind the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 that killed 3,000 Americans. The terrorist network has been decimated over the years, but US officials believe its fighters are still operating in Afghanista­n and some have deep ties with the Taliban. Al-Masri’s reported killing comes a year after the NDS announced that in a joint raid with US troops it had killed Asim Omar, the leader of AlQaeda in the Indian subcontine­nt. Omar was reportedly killed in southern Helmand province — a Taliban stronghold.

A former Afghan spy master, Rahumatull­ah Nabil, in a tweet said that Al-Masri and some other members of Al-Qaeda were frequently traveling between Ghazni and other parts of Afghanista­n and a tribal region in Pakistan’s north in recent months.

The head of the US National Counter-Terrorism Center, Chris Miller, confirmed Al-Masri’s death in a statement, saying that his “removal” was “a major setback to a terrorist organizati­on that is consistent­ly experienci­ng strategic losses facilitate­d by the United States and its partners.”

Abu Muhsin Al-Masri was one of the most senior Al-Qaeda authoritie­s and was a financial and logistical facilitato­r of the network and had meaningful ties with Taliban.

 ?? File/AFP ?? Afghan security forces have killed a top Al-Qaeda militant wanted by the US, as the government accused the Taliban of still keeping close ties with terrorists.
File/AFP Afghan security forces have killed a top Al-Qaeda militant wanted by the US, as the government accused the Taliban of still keeping close ties with terrorists.

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