Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

U.S., Israel worked together to track and kill al-Qaida No. 2

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WASHINGTON » The United States and Israel worked together to track and kill a senior al-Qaida operative in Iran earlier this year, a bold intelligen­ce operation by the two allied nations that came as the Trump administra­tion was ramping up pressure on Tehran.

Four current and former U.S. officials said Abu Mohammed al-Masri, al-Qaida’s No. 2, was killed by assassins in the Iranian capital in August. The U.S. provided intelligen­ce to the Israelis on where they could find al-Masri and the alias he was using at the time, while Israeli agents carried out the killing, according to two of the officials. The two other officials confirmed al-Masri’s killing but could not provide specific details.

Al-Masri was gunned down in a Tehran alley on Aug. 7, the anniversar­y of the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Al-Masri was widely believed to have participat­ed in the planning of those attacks and was wanted on terrorism charges by the FBI.

Al-Masri’s death is a blow to al-Qaida, the terror network that orchestrat­ed the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in the U.S, and comes amid rumors in the Middle East about the fate of the group’s leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri. The officials could not confirm those reports but said the U.S. intelligen­ce community was trying to determine their credibilit­y.

Two of the officials — one within the intelligen­ce community and with direct knowledge of the operation and another former CIA officer briefed on the matter — said al-Masri was killed by Kidon, a unit within the secretive Israeli spy organizati­on Mossad allegedly responsibl­e for the assassinat­ion of high-value targets. In Hebrew, Kidon means bayonet or “tip of the spear.”

The official in the intelligen­ce community said alMasri’s daughter, Maryam, was also a target of the operation. The U.S. believed she was being groomed for a leadership role in al-Qaida and intelligen­ce suggested she was involved in operationa­l planning, according to the official, who like the others, spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive intelligen­ce.

Al-Masri’s daughter was the widow of Hamza bin

Laden, the son of al-Qaida mastermind Osama bin Laden. He was killed last year in a U.S. counterter­rorism operation in the Afghanista­n-Pakistan region.

The news of al-Masri’s death was first reported by The New York Times.

Both the CIA and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office, which oversees the Mossad intelligen­ce agency, declined to comment.

Israel and Iran are bitter enemies, with the Iranian nuclear program Israel’s top security concern. Israel has welcomed the

Trump administra­tion’s withdrawal from the 2015 Iranian nuclear accord and the U.S. pressure campaign on Tehran.

At the time of the killings, the Trump administra­tion was in the advanced stages of trying to push through the U.N. Security Council the reinstatem­ent of all internatio­nal sanctions on Iran that were lifted under the nuclear agreement. None of the other Security Council members went along with the U.S., which has vowed to punish countries that do not enforce the sanctions as part of its “maximum pressure” campaign on Iran.

Israeli officials are concerned the incoming administra­tion of Presidente­lect Joe Biden could return to the nuclear accord. It is likely that if Biden does engage with the Iranians, Israel will press for the accord to be modified to address Iran’s long-range missile program and its military activity across the region, specifical­ly in Syria and its support for groups like Hezbollah, Hamas, and Islamic Jihad.

The revelation­s that Iran was harboring an al-Qaida leader could help Israel bolster its case with the new U.S. administra­tion.

Al-Masri had been on a kill or capture list for years. but his presence in Iran, which has a long history of hostility toward al-Qaida, presented significan­t obstacles to either apprehendi­ng or killing him.

Iran denied the reports, saying the government is not harboring any al-Qaida leaders and blaming the U.S. and Israel for trying to foment anti-Iranian sentiment. U.S. officials have long believed a number of al-Qaida leaders have been living quietly in Iran for years and publicly released intelligen­ce assessment­s have made that case.

Al-Masri’s death, albeit under an assumed name, was reported in Iranian media on Aug. 8. Reports identified him as a Lebanese history professor potentiall­y affiliated with Lebanon’s Iranian-linked Hezbollah movement and said he had been killed by motorcycle gunmen along with his daughter.

Lebanese media, citing Iranian reports, said that those killed were Lebanese citizen Habib Daoud and his daughter Maraym.

The deaths of al-Masri and his daughter occurred three days after the catastroph­ic Aug. 4 explosion at the port of Beirut and did not get much attention. Hezbollah never commented on reports and Lebanese security officials did not report that any citizens were killed in Tehran.

A Hezbollah official on Saturday would not comment on al-Masri’s death, saying Iran’s foreign ministry had already denied it.

The alleged killings seem to fit a pattern of behavior attributed to Israel in the past.

In 1995, the founder of the Palestinia­n militant group Islamic Jihad was killed by a gunman on a motorcycle in Malta, in an assassinat­ion widely attributed to the Mossad. The Mossad also reportedly carried out a string of similar killings of Iranian nuclear scientists in Iran early last decade. Iran has accused Israel of being behind those killings.

Yoel Guzansky, a senior fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies and former analyst on Iranian affairs in the prime minister’s office, said it has been known for some time that Iran is hiding top alQaeda figures. While he had no direct knowledge of al-Masri’s death, he said a joint operation between the U.S. and Israel would ref lect the two nations’ close intelligen­ce cooperatio­n, with the U.S. typically stronger in the technical aspects of intelligen­ce gathering and Israel adept at operating agents behind enemy lines.

 ?? AP PHOTO/SAYYID AZIM, FILE ?? In this Aug. 9, 1998, file photo, Israeli soldiers bring in heavy lifting equipment to the wreckage of the Ufundi House, adjacent to the U.S. embassy in Nairobi. Abu Mohammed al-Masri was widely believed to have participat­ed in the planning of those attacks and was wanted on terrorism charges by the FBI.
AP PHOTO/SAYYID AZIM, FILE In this Aug. 9, 1998, file photo, Israeli soldiers bring in heavy lifting equipment to the wreckage of the Ufundi House, adjacent to the U.S. embassy in Nairobi. Abu Mohammed al-Masri was widely believed to have participat­ed in the planning of those attacks and was wanted on terrorism charges by the FBI.

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