The Boston Globe

Biden appeared to overstate the role of Al Qaeda’s leader

Words on two attacks seen lacking accuracy

- By Carol Rosenberg and Charlie Savage

GUANTÁNAMO BAY, Cuba — In announcing last week that the leader of Al Qaeda, Ayman al-Zawahri, had been killed in a US drone strike in Kabul, President Biden described the longsought terrorist as “a mastermind” behind the USS Cole bombing in 2000.

Biden also said al-Zawahri was “deeply involved in the planning” of the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. There is no doubt that al-Zawahri was the leader of a terrorist movement whose global jihad has killed thousands of people. He was the deputy to Al Qaeda’s founder, Osama bin Laden, and took over the organizati­on in 2011.

But as a matter of historical accuracy, Biden’s words went well beyond how the government and terrorism specialist­s have described al-Zawahri’s record with regard to those two particular­ly notorious attacks.

Biden’s portrayal of al-Zawahri as a key plotter of the Sept. 11 attacks was echoed in many news accounts about his speech, including in The New York Times. But it surprised counterter­rorism experts, as did the characteri­zation of al-Zawahri’s role in the Cole bombing.

The remarks also raised new questions in the Sept. 11 and USS Cole death penalty cases, which have been mired in pretrial hearings for more than a decade. By Friday, attorneys in both cases said they had formally requested evidence from prosecutor­s to support Biden’s statements.

Marc Sageman, a former CIA officer who worked with Islamist fighters battling the Soviet occupation of Afghanista­n in the 1980s and later wrote several books about terrorism networks and radicaliza­tion, said he was puzzled by Biden’s portrayal of al-Zawahri and wondered where the purported role came from.

“Zawahri is a legitimate target,” he said on Aug. 2, a day after the president’s address. “But the justificat­ion they gave yesterday was inaccurate. I doubt it. I strongly, strongly doubt it.”

A senior administra­tion official declined to say whether Biden’s wording was part of his prepared remarks drafted by aides who had consulted with the intelligen­ce community and other counterter­rorism experts, or whether the president had adlibbed it.

The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive matter, defended Biden’s characteri­zation of al-Zawahri’s record in relation to the specific attacks as accurate. The Justice Department had charged al-Zawahri, along with bin Laden and many others, as conspirato­rs in the 1998 bombings of the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, the official noted, adding that the government saw “a through line from that to Al Qaeda’s major attacks in 2000, 2001, and beyond.”

Prosecutor­s in federal civilian court and in the military commission­s system at Guantánamo Bay have filed multiple indictment­s against Al Qaeda operatives accused of helping plot the Cole bombing. Those documents lay out the government’s understand­ing of the participan­ts, meetings, and other moves that made up the conspiracy. They do not portray al-Zawahri as a mastermind of the operation, a suicide bombing by two men in a skiff that killed 17 US sailors.

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