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Al-Qaeda's No.2 dead, says White House

Washington, June 6: Al-Qaeda's second-in-command Abu Yahya al-Libi has died in a US drone strike, the White House confirmed yesterday, with a top Obama aide terming it as a major blow to the this terrorist

PTI Published : Jun 05, 2012 21:41 IST, Updated : Jun 06, 2012 7:21 IST
al qaeda s no.2 dead says white house
al qaeda s no.2 dead says white house

Washington, June 6: Al-Qaeda's second-in-command Abu Yahya al-Libi has died in a US drone strike, the White House confirmed yesterday, with a top Obama aide terming it as a major blow to the this terrorist outfit.




“Al-Libi is dead,” White House Press Secretary Jay Carney announced at his daily news conference.

However, he refused to discuss how Libi's life came to an end - both the circumstances and the location of his death.

“I can tell you that our intelligence community has intelligence that leads them believe that al-Qaeda's number two leader is dead,” Carney said amidst news reports that al-Libi died in a US drone strike in Pakistan.

“Removing leaders like al-Libi from the top of al-Qaeda is part of the effort of the Obama Administration to defeat and dismantle the terror network,” Carney said.

49-year-old Libi, considered the most-prominent figure in al-Qaeda after Ayman al-Zawahiri, carried a reward of USD one million on his head.

Carney said Al-Libi was very much an operational leader, a general manager of the organization and his absence would be a “job hard to fill” and it is very much possible to find a suitable replacement for him in the near future.

“It is a job that is hard to fill. There may not be ...  the duration of late that people have held that job... there could be a lot of candidates hoping to fill. So the point is that removing leaders ... from the very top of al-Qaeda is part of an ongoing effort to ultimately disrupt and defeat al Qaeda,” he said.

“I can't get into details about how his death was brought about, but I can tell you that he served as al-Qaeda's general manager, responsible for overseeing the group's day-to-day operations in the tribal areas of Pakistan, and he managed outreach to al-Qaeda's regional affiliates,” Carney said.

“His death is part of the degradation that has been taking place to core al-Qaeda during the past several years, and that degradation has depleted the ranks to such an extent that there is now no clear successor to take on the breadth of his responsibilities, and that puts additional pressure on al-Qaeda's post-bin Laden leader, Zawahiri, to try to manage the group in an effective way,” he said.

“This would be a major blow, al-Libi's death is a major blow to core al-Qaeda, removing the number two leader, for the second time in less than a year, and further damaging the group's morale and cohesion and bringing it closer to its ultimate demise than ever before,” Carney said.

“And that represents, in the wake of the death of Osama bin Laden, another serious blow to core al-Qaeda in what is an ongoing effort to disrupt, dismantle and ultimately defeat a foe that brought great terror and death to the United States on September 11, 2001 and that has perpetrated acts of terrorism against innocent civilians around the globe,” Carney said.
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