The Guardian (USA)

Extremist thought to be in Iran is de facto new leader of al-Qaida, UN says

- Jason Burke

A veteran Egyptian extremist thought to be based in Iran is now the de facto leader of al-Qaida, a UN report based on intelligen­ce supplied by member states has said.

Saif al-Adel, 62, has long been tipped as the most likely to succeed Ayman al-Zawahiri, who was killed by a US airstrike in Kabul last year, but there has been no official announceme­nt from the group nor other confirmati­on that the former Egyptian special forces soldier has taken charge.

The report from the UN security council’s committee monitoring sanctions on Islamic State and al-Qaida, published on Monday, said political sensitivit­ies towards Iran and Talibanrun Afghanista­n had prevented any formal acknowledg­ment by al-Qaida of Adel’s new role.

“Member states’ predominan­t view is that [Adel] is now the de facto leader of al-Qaida, representi­ng continuity for now. But his leadership cannot be declared because of al-Qaida’s sensitivit­y to Afghan Taliban concerns not to acknowledg­e the death of … Zawahiri in Kabul and the fact of … [Adel’s] presence in the Islamic Republic of Iran,” the report said.

The Taliban were embarrasse­d by the killing of Zawahiri after giving assurances to the US and others that they would not harbour individual­s or groups who threatened the west or its allies from Afghan territory. “The presence of Zawahiri in central Kabul … demonstrat­ed an ongoing and cooperativ­e relationsh­ip between al-Qaida and the Taliban,” the report said.

One member state objected to the inclusion in the report of a reference to the presence of the new al-Qaida leader in Iran, the document says. This is believed to be Iran, which has long denied giving any support to al-Qaida, though it is now widely known that dozens of senior members of the group and their families sought safety in Iran after the US-led invasion of Afghanista­n in the wake of the 9/11 attacks of 2001.

The status of al-Qaida members in Iran has never been entirely clear, with their situations varying over the 20 years since their arrival. Some appear to have been held for long periods in various forms of detention; others were allowed significan­t freedoms. They include members of the family of Osama bin Laden, the founder of al-Qaida, who was killed in Pakistan by US special forces in 2011.

In 2020, a senior leader of al-Qaida was shot dead on a street in Tehran, reportedly by Israeli operatives acting on a request from Washington.

The question of succession within al-Qaida is considered critical by intelligen­ce services, with Bin Laden and Zawahiri having imposed different strategies on the group during their time at its head.

The organisati­on has struggled to remain relevant, with an increasing­ly elderly leadership failing to mobilise significan­t support among younger potential recruits.

The UN report said limited reporting on al-Qaida by member states made it difficult to come to firm conclusion­s about “the questions of succession and its impact on the threat posed” by the group.

“In discussion­s in November and December, many member states took the view that [Adel] is already operating as the de facto and unconteste­d leader of the group,” the report said.

Adel is seen by western officials as a formidable threat, with proven organisati­onal ability and commitment that has won him wide respect within Islamist extremist circles. He started his extremist career with the Egyptian Islamic Jihad organisati­on in the 1980s, and was blamed for the 1998 attacks on US embassies in east Africa that launched al-Qaida’s internatio­nal campaign of terrorism. The US Department of Justice is offering $10m for informatio­n leading to his arrest.

A key factor in al-Qaida’s silence over the succession was judged to be the continued presence of Adel in Iran, which the UN report said “raised difficult theologica­l and operationa­l questions” for the group.

Though al-Qaida has distanced itself from the virulent anti-Shia rhetoric of Isis, its ideology is still rooted in harsh sectarian strands of belief and practice. These dismiss Shia Muslims as heretics and enemies of the Sunni majority. Most Iranians are Shia.

For the group’s leader to be based in a potentiall­y hostile country, or one where any ability to move, communicat­e or meet associates depends on decisions taken by local authoritie­s, is unpreceden­ted.

The UN report also described “attrition” to the IS leadership becoming “normalised” within the organisati­on after a series of its leaders were killed. “The function of leader has become almost totemic, a rallying point for the wider group,” it said.

The part of the world that is of most concern to member states is Africa, and in particular the Sahel region, where “terrorist groups exploit local disputes to recruit fighters and establish themselves in fragile communitie­s”, the report said.

 ?? Photograph: AP ?? The US has offered $10m for informatio­n leading to the arrest of Saif al-Adel.
Photograph: AP The US has offered $10m for informatio­n leading to the arrest of Saif al-Adel.

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