Al Qaeda leader Zawahiri killed in US drone strike in Afghanistan: US President Joe Biden

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Al Qaeda leader Zawahiri killed in US drone strike in Afghanistan: Biden

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Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri was killed in a US strike in Afghanistan over the weekend, American President Joe Biden said on Monday.

Zawahiri, an Egyptian surgeon who had a $25 million bounty on his head, helped coordinate the Sept 11, 2001, attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people.

US officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the United States carried out a drone strike in the Afghan capital Kabul on Sunday morning at 6:18 a.m. local time.

"Now justice has been delivered, and this terrorist leader is no more," Biden said in remarks from the White House. "We never back down."

US intelligence determined with "high confidence" that the man killed was Zawahiri, a senior administration official told reporters. No other casualties occurred.

"Zawahiri continued to pose an active threat to US persons, interests and national security," the official said on a conference call. "His death deals a significant blow to al Qaeda and will degrade the group's ability to operate."

There were rumors of Zawahiri's death several times in recent years, and he was long reported to have been in poor health.

His death raises questions about whether Zawahiri received sanctuary from the Taliban following their takeover of Kabul in August 2021. The official said senior Taliban officials were aware of his presence in the city.

The drone attack is the first known US strike inside Afghanistan since US troops and diplomats left the country in August 2021.

In a statement, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid confirmed that a strike took place and strongly condemned it, calling it a violation of "international principles."

The senior US official said finding Zawahiri was the result of persistent counterterrorism work. The United States identified this year that Zawahiri's wife, daughter and her children had relocated to a safe house in Kabul, then identified that Zawahiri was there as well, the official said.

"Once Zawahiri arrived at the location, we are not aware of him ever leaving the safe house," the official said. He was identified multiple times on the balcony, where he was ultimately struck. He continued to produce videos from the house and some may be released after his death, the official said.

In the last few weeks, Biden convened officials to scrutinise the intelligence. He was updated throughout May and June and was briefed on July 1 on a proposed operation by intelligence leaders. On July 25, he received an updated report and authorised the strike once an opportunity was available.

A loud explosion echoed through Kabul early Sunday morning.

"A house was hit by a rocket in Sherpoor. There were no casualties as the house was empty," Abdul Nafi Takor, spokesman of the interior ministry, said earlier.

One Taliban source, requesting anonymity, said there had been reports of at least one drone flying over Kabul that morning.

With other senior al Qaeda members, Zawahiri is believed to have plotted the October 12, 2000, attack on the USS Cole naval vessel in Yemen which killed 17 US sailors and injured more than 30 others, the Rewards for Justice website said.

He was indicted in the United States for his role in the August 7, 1998, bombings of the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania that killed 224 people and wounded more than 5,000 others.

Both bin laden and Zawahiri eluded capture when US-led forces toppled Afghanistan’s Taliban government in late 2001 following the Sept 11 attacks on the United States.

DAWN
 
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Probably one of the conditions for the imf money that usa had told bajwa allow us to carry drone strikes and then the imf will release the money for the beggars can't be choosers imported government.
 
Probably one of the conditions for the imf money that usa had told bajwa allow us to carry drone strikes and then the imf will release the money for the beggars can't be choosers imported government.

Strike was in Afghanistan. Even Bajwa's chacha cannot allow Yanks to use drone terrorism in Pakistan anylonger.
 
Well, the world is a better place today than it was yesterday.

Pretty obvious that Pakistan continues to host US drone strikes against Afghan targets, and then pretends to oppose them by condemning what they are participating in!
 
Al Qaeda leader Zawahiri killed in US drone strike in Afghanistan: Biden

Pakistan has immense latent capabilities to be a valuable partner for its key strategic partners, but its ruling elite must wake up to new realities.

Since its independence some 75 years ago, Pakistan’s ruling elite have thrived on foreign largesse. Over the decades, the desire to benefit from geopolitical rents has become innate.

Lulled into a comfortable life, the current generation of this class is blind to how the geopolitical sands have shifted under their feet. Rather than wake up from their slumber and find a way to steady themselves and the country in today’s world, the country’s elite are insistent on staying firmly in place, no matter the consequences.

Since the turn of the 21st century, Pakistan’s stability has been underpinned by four main patrons — the United States, China, and the Gulf monarchies of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

It was the United States that offered a lifeline to Musharraf’s dictatorship following the 9/11 terror attacks. With loans restructured and Uncle Sam sending oodles of money to Islamabad and Rawalpindi, the good times had come back.

As the dictatorship collapsed under the weight of its own illegitimacy, the country stared into the abyss. But Washington needed a stable and secure Pakistan — the last thing anyone in the world wanted was the collapse of a nuclear-armed country and possible takeover of its nuclear assets by terrorists. Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates — long-time strategic allies — also got involved, playing the role of political guarantor and lender of last resort.

Enter China
By the time Washington soured on Pakistan, a new economic player was in town — China.

Another strategic ally, China was flush with cash and confidence at the time. It was done with hiding its strength and biding its time, and so embarked on a massive push to expand its global economic influence.

Islamabad, given its historical relationship with Beijing, emerged as a key target, especially because it was a neighbouring country whose economy was on the brink. Crippled by terrorism and power blackouts, Pakistan needed a saviour which emerged in the form of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).

The good times rolled again, but like previous such cycles, Pakistan once again was on the brink. This time around, however, the geopolitical gods were not inclined to be kind to Pakistan and its ruling elite. A multipolar world was emerging and great power competition was back in vogue; the coronavirus only accelerated the pace of events.

Lessons from history
In the past, great power competition between the United States and the Soviet Union had been a boon for Pakistan, but this time around the action was in East Asia.

Washington’s foreign policy establishment, which had begun its pivot to Asia under Obama in fits and starts, was shocked and awed by Donald Trump.

China was priority number one, meaning that the forever war in Afghanistan had to be wrapped up. Biden continued this policy, clearly signalling that the only country in South Asia that he had a personal interest in was India.

This view was reinforced by the collapse of Ashraf Ghani’s regime in the backdrop of the withdrawal of American forces; Imran Khan’s statement that Afghans had broken the shackles of slavery underscored the view in Washington that Pakistan was not worth the drama.

Modernising the Gulf
During this period, a major shift occurred in the Gulf monarchies as well. The emergence of a younger, more globally connected leadership in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates altered the regional geopolitical map.

The Arab monarchies were now interested in pursuing radical transformation of their economy, society, and foreign policy. The Abraham Accords, a major achievement of Trump’s presidency, was an inflection point.

The monarchies now cared about return on investment from their allies, which included Pakistan. Unfortunately for them, both the economic and geopolitical returns in the recent past were in the red.

China also began to develop a more nuanced and jaded view of Pakistan and what its elites could offer.

The beginning of the Khan government started things off on the wrong foot, with Army Chief Bajwa having to visit Beijing to smooth things over.

But trouble would have brewed regardless of who ruled Islamabad, primarily because Pakistan’s elites were pursuing policies that would neither satisfy Chinese expectations nor minimise risks to Chinese investments in the country. Payments owed to the Chinese got stuck, projects stalled, visas were not approved, and the security situation deteriorated sharply.

The road ahead

The ongoing political and economic crisis must be viewed within the context of this history.

With the country’s ruling class currently engaged in scorched-earth warfare, all four of Pakistan’s historical patrons are recalibrating their policy towards Islamabad.

This is not only because Pakistan has fallen short of the expectations these countries have had over the years, but also because they have more important strategic challenges that they must contend with. As a result, they are not interested in spending an inordinate amount of time or resources in dealing with Pakistan.

Today’s increasingly multipolar world demands a different set of strategies from Pakistan. This is especially true because Pakistan’s traditional guarantors are preoccupied with a different set of challenges, and they increasingly believe that Pakistan does not offer much to them as a force multiplier — both geopolitically and economically.

This does not need be the case, because Pakistan has immense latent capabilities to be a valuable partner for its key strategic partners. For one, Pakistan’s defence capabilities, including its nuclear prowess, offers the Saudis a buffer to backstop its security concerns. Then there is the potential to be part of a diversified global supply chain as the world seeks to move away from China. Finally, to China, Pakistan offers access to a deep sea port if Gwadar finally reaches its potential.

Harnessing these capabilities, however, requires the country’s ruling class to first internalise that the world has changed – it will no longer rescue the Sick Man of South Asia simply because it is too big to fail.

Once elites recognise that the days of extracting geopolitical rents are over, the country can begin the process of rebuilding its value proposition to the world.


https://www.dawn.com/news/1702154/pakistans-days-of-extracting-geopolitical-rent-are-over-what-next
 
Strike was in Afghanistan. Even Bajwa's chacha cannot allow Yanks to use drone terrorism in Pakistan anylonger.

And Afghanistan is a landlocked country

So usa needs someone's airspace whose airspace did they use to carry out this operation ?

It's no secret usa cia want a base in pakistan including a drone base.
 
Well, the world is a better place today than it was yesterday.

Pretty obvious that Pakistan continues to host US drone strikes against Afghan targets, and then pretends to oppose them by condemning what they are participating in!

It is for public consumption. USA has all the access still and lot of CIA operatives roam and operate in Islamabad under Bajwa's watch.
 
Well, the world is a better place today than it was yesterday.

Pretty obvious that Pakistan continues to host US drone strikes against Afghan targets, and then pretends to oppose them by condemning what they are participating in!

lol. The strike was in Afghanistan, please improve your basic reading skills.
 
And Afghanistan is a landlocked country

So usa needs someone's airspace whose airspace did they use to carry out this operation ?

It's no secret usa cia want a base in pakistan including a drone base.

The drone likely took off from Kandahar Airbase in Afghanistan.
 
Still plenty of juice left.
US and Arabs will help.
US already agreed to help negotiate bailout deal with IMF.
 
Great sruff by usa, hope pakistan played a part.

May ayman al zwahiri perish in hell fire
 
Shebaz Sharif's country has allowed drone strikes from their territory again, i see.
 
Great sruff by usa, hope pakistan played a part.

May ayman al zwahiri perish in hell fire

While what US did is good but Pakistan will be playing with fire if they are anyway involved in this, absolutely wrong time for them to be involved in this.(assuming they are)
 
While what US did is good but Pakistan will be playing with fire if they are anyway involved in this, absolutely wrong time for them to be involved in this.(assuming they are)

How so? Ayman al zawhiri isnt an afghani. Second, Pakistan is still fighting with ttp who get protection from afghan taliban. Afghan taliban believes that whole kpk and sme parts of punjab and balochistan belong to them.

Seriously, how is pakistan pkaying with fire when afghanistan is the one that has been messing around.

Pakistan is a proper state while afg is a joke of country and its govt is a bigger joke
 
Whata beautiful to see is that some pakistanis critisizing pakistan, but than again these people dont know about how alqaeda killed pakistanis and did damage to us....

Same lot will call afghans namak haram while at the same time dont care if ayman al zawhiri was involved in murders of innocent
 
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Zawahiri just got killed in Kabul. Apparently Sirajuddin Haqqani's son was killed along with him.

Now make sense of the OP.
 
Everyone is for now speculating that Drone did happen from Pakistani airspace, more data will be revealed once Pakistani journalusts wake up.

If that is true then clearly the timing of this article is remarkable .
 
Remarkable how nobody is questioning where the Drone flew from, lol. Biden made sure he kept it a secret.
 
“ In the months since the United States withdrew from Afghanistan, American military and diplomatic officials have discussed with allies where to reposition American forces for strikes on high-value targets in Afghanistan. This so-called over-the-horizon strategy is still in its infancy, and talks about positioning forces in neighboring Tajikistan, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan have proceeded slowly.

—-

Even without nearby bases, the United States has plenty of capability to send unmanned drones as well as manned attack aircraft within striking distance of Afghanistan, from land bases along the Persian Gulf, the Indian Ocean and even the United States.“

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/01/us/politics/al-qaeda-strike-afghanistan.html
 
“ In the months since the United States withdrew from Afghanistan, American military and diplomatic officials have discussed with allies where to reposition American forces for strikes on high-value targets in Afghanistan. This so-called over-the-horizon strategy is still in its infancy, and talks about positioning forces in neighboring Tajikistan, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan have proceeded slowly.

—-

Even without nearby bases, the United States has plenty of capability to send unmanned drones as well as manned attack aircraft within striking distance of Afghanistan, from land bases along the Persian Gulf, the Indian Ocean and even the United States.“

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/01/us/politics/al-qaeda-strike-afghanistan.html

The airspace was likely pakistani. I doubt they will fly a drone over Iran or Central Asia.

Couple of days back, Bajwa calls USA to ask for help at the IMF. Then Zawahiri is killed.
 
It is always a good news whenever a terrorist is killed.

Haven't seen much news about Al-Qaeda in the past decade. They have been quite irrelevant since groups like ISIS and Boko Haram came into prominence.
 
WASHINGTON, Aug 1 (Reuters) - Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri was killed in a U.S. strike in Afghanistan over the weekend, the biggest blow to the militant group since its founder Osama bin Laden was killed in 2011. read more

Zawahiri had been in hiding for years and the operation to locate and kill him was the result of "careful patient and persistent" work by the counter-terrorism and intelligence community, a senior administration official told reporters.

Until the U.S. announcement, Zawahiri had been rumored variously to be in Pakistan's tribal area or inside Afghanistan.

Speaking on the condition of anonymity, the official provided the following details on the operation:

* For several years, the U.S. government had been aware of a network that it assessed supported Zawahiri, and over the past year, following the United States' withdrawal from Afghanistan, officials had been watching for indications of Al Qaeda's presence in the country.

This year, officials identified that Zawahiri's family - his wife, his daughter and her children - had relocated to a safe house in Kabul and subsequently identified Zawahiri at the same location.

* Over several months, intelligence officials grew more confident that they had correctly identified Zawahiri at the Kabul safe house and in early April started briefing senior administration officials. Jake Sullivan, National Security Advisor, subsequently briefed President Joe Biden.

"We were able to build a pattern of life through multiple independent sources of information to inform the operation," the official said.

Once Zawahiri arrived at the Kabul safe house, officials were not aware of him leaving it and they identified him on its balcony - where he was ultimately struck - on multiple occasions, the official said.

* Officials investigated the construction and nature of the safe house and scrutinized its occupants to ensure the United States could confidently conduct an operation to kill Zawahiri without threatening the structural integrity of the building and minimizing the risk to civilians and Zawahiri's family, the official said.

* In recent weeks, the president convened meetings with key advisors and Cabinet members to scrutinize the intelligence and evaluate the best course of action. On July 1, Biden was briefed on a proposed operation in the White House Situation Room by members of his cabinet including CIA Director William Burns

Biden "asked detailed questions about what we knew and how we knew it" and closely examined a model of the safe house the intelligence community had built and brought to the meeting.

He asked about lighting, weather, construction materials, and other factors that could affect the success of the operation, the official said. The president also requested analysis of the potential ramifications of a strike in Kabul.

* A tight circle of senior inter-agency lawyers examined the intelligence reporting and confirmed that Zawahiri was a lawful target based on his continuing leadership of Al Qaeda.

On July 25, the president convened his key Cabinet members and advisors to receive a final briefing and discuss how killing Zawahiri would affect America's relationship with the Taliban, among other issues, the official said. After soliciting views from others in the room, Biden authorized "a precise tailored air strike" on the condition that it minimize the risk of civilian casualties.

* The strike was ultimately carried out at 9:48 p.m. ET (0148 GMT) on July 30 by a drone firing so-called "hellfire" missiles.
 
Whata beautiful to see is that some pakistanis critisizing pakistan, but than again these people dont know about how alqaeda killed pakistanis and did damage to us....

Same lot will call afghans namak haram while at the same time dont care if ayman al zawhiri was involved in murders of innocent

No what we want is peace and prosperity progressive society and a country built on Islamic foundations and morals like our predecssors we don't want to follow western liberalism and the zionist globalist agenda we want an independent country that can make its own decisions freely.

Just like iran it's not friends with taliban sunnis wahabbis in Afghanistan but hasn't signed up to usa demands .

We want namak harams and all Afghans to be deported a deal can be reached with peaceful trade only but Afghans must remain in their own country we also don't want to be part In any war operations that violates the sovereignty of another country and ends up killing their people because pakistan people haveny signed up for taliban reprisals and revenge attacks or to go to war with Afghans on Americas behest .
 
Kabul: The United States carried out a drone strike on a residence in Kabul over the weekend, the Taliban's chief spokesman said on Monday.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in a statement that the attack took place on Sunday and condemned it as a violation of "international principles" and the 2020 agreement on a US troop withdrawal.
 
Well, the world is a better place today than it was yesterday.

Pretty obvious that Pakistan continues to host US drone strikes against Afghan targets, and then pretends to oppose them by condemning what they are participating in!

A prominent guy was killed every week in the 2000s and 2010s. It sadly barely changed the situation in the ground in Afghanistan - he was just replaced with the next able hand.
 
A prominent guy was killed every week in the 2000s and 2010s. It sadly barely changed the situation in the ground in Afghanistan - he was just replaced with the next able hand.

The problem is usa is separated by Atlantic and Pacific oceans

And the drone strike killed taliban fighters as well

And since afghans have a cultural foundation based on retribution their target will end up being the easy one which is pakistan right on doorstep.
they will start sending brainwashed youngsters to start blowing themselves up in shia mosques processions and markets across pakistan we suffered decade of this under the ttp who carried out revenge attacks because of the hundreds of drone attacks in tribal areas

Under ik we made a transition from this foreign policy blunder of signing up to a US war but likes the old days have come back.

Usa is deliberately antagonising the taliban first by withholding their funds economically isolating and now starting to carry out attacks again.

So there will be no peace

The way it looks like usa wants pakistan army to fight the Afghan taliban and be its slave army in the region they banked on the ana but that turned out to be a disaster because most of them ran away surrendered or didn't exist in first place even the So called vaunted panjshir resistance collapsed and didn't mount to much the local tajiks even joined the taliban .

Yet we have major here wanting pak army to go into conflict with these people fully knowing any full fledged hostilities these Afghans and their refugee diaspora In pakistan could set fire to pakistsn overnight.
 
The Saudi Arabian government on Tuesday applauded the U.S. announcement of the death of al-Qaeda terrorist organization leader Ayman al-Zawahiri in a weekend bombing in Afghanistan's capital, Kabul.

The Saudi Foreign Ministry has indicated that al-Zawahiri "is considered one of the leaders of terrorism who encouraged the planning and execution of heinous terrorist operations in the United States, Saudi Arabia and other countries, killing thousands of innocent people of different nationalities and religions, including Saudis."

"The Saudi Arabian government further stresses the importance of strengthening international cooperation and concerted international efforts to combat and eradicate terrorism and calls on all countries to cooperate within this framework to protect innocent people from terrorist organizations," he concluded.

The death of Al Zawahiri, leader of Al Qaeda since 2011, was announced by US President Joe Biden, who stressed that the man was 'number two' of the former leader of the organization Usama bin Laden and "was deeply involved in organizing" the attacks of September 11, 2011, in which nearly 3,000 people were killed.

The FBI declassified in September 2021 the first of what is expected to be several documents on the agency's investigation of the attacks a document detailing contacts between two of the terrorists who hijacked the planes they used to attack the Twin Towers and the Pentagon and an alleged Saudi intelligence agent, as well as a Saudi consulate official, although Riyadh has disassociated itself from any role in the attacks.

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/worl...sedgntp&cvid=4193ba2acca94b2bacd01caa4b30841a
 
The US has no DNA confirmation of the death of al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri in Kabul - but has verified his identity through "multiple" other sources, the White House has said.

Al-Zawahiri, one of the masterminds of the 9/11 attacks, was killed in a US drone strike on his home in the Afghan capital where he had been hiding out with his family.

White House national security spokesman John Kirby told CNN: "We do not have DNA confirmation. We're not going to get that confirmation.

"Quite frankly, based on multiple sources and methods that we've gathered information from, we don't need it.

"We have visual confirmation, but we also have confirmation through other sources."

"This terrorist leader is no more," Mr Biden added, before expressing his hope the killing brings "one more measure of closure" to families of the nearly 3,000 people who died in the attacks on 11 September 2001.

The president added that Afghanistan will "never again become a terrorist safe haven" after the strike was carried out nearly a year after US troops withdrew from the country.

The Egyptian terror leader was standing on the balcony of a safehouse on Sunday morning when he was killed by two hellfire missiles fired from a drone.

Mr Biden said none of the 71-year-old's family members were injured and there were no civilian casualties.

The FBI had been offering $25m (£20m) for "information leading to the apprehension or conviction" of the terror leader, whose death is the biggest blow to al Qaeda since its founder Osama bin Laden was killed by US special forces in 2011.

The operation to kill al-Zawahiri was many months in the planning, according to a senior US administration official.

Mr Biden was first briefed about a proposed operation to take out the al Qaeda leader on 1 July this year.

But it was much earlier in the year when intelligence suggested that his wife and children had relocated to Kabul. He and his family were believed until that point to have been in hiding in Pakistan.

The family were located to a safehouse where, the US official says, al-Zawahiri was eventually spotted too.

He was watched for several months and his pattern of life was recorded. He never left the house but did spend time on a balcony where he was eventually killed.

On 25 July, a detailed proposal had been presented to Mr Biden who, the administration official said, requested "granular level interest" because of the focus on taking "every step… to minimise civilian casualties".

Intelligence allowed the Americans to study the construction of the house to ensure that civilian casualties were avoided.

The official added al-Zawahiri's death is "a significant blow to al Qaeda and will degrade their ability to operate".

SKY
 
Shehbaz Airbase is still being used by the Americans for these drone strikes it seems.


I would be really surprised if this attack used someone else's airspace. Dont think they flew over Iran, thats for sure. They used Pakistan and its airbase and airspace for this attack.
 
Following the death of Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri in a US drone strike in Afghanistan, the Foreign Office said on Tuesday that Pakistan condemns terrorism in all its forms and manifestations.

FO Spokesperson Asim Iftikhar Ahmad aid that Pakistan stands by countering terrorism in accordance with international law and relevant UN resolutions.

“We have seen the official statements by the United States and media reports regarding a counter-terrorism operation carried out by the U.S. in Afghanistan,” the spokesperson said in a statement.

“Pakistan’s role and sacrifices in the fight against terrorism are well-known,” the spokesperson added.

The spokesperson’s statement comes hours after President Joe Biden on Monday disclosed that a US drone strike in Afghanistan over the weekend had killed top al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahri.

In a televised address, Biden said the strike in Kabul, Afghanistan had been carried out on Saturday. “I gave the final approval to go get him,” he said, adding that there had been no civilian casualties.

“Justice has been delivered and this terrorist leader is no more,” Biden said.

A senior administration official said Ayman al-Zawahiri had been killed on the balcony of a house in Kabul in a drone strike, and that there had been no US boots on the ground in Afghanistan.
 
Pakistan should go after high value TTP targets in Afghanistan unilaterally too if Afghan Taliban continue to refuse to turn them over.
 
It also proves another thing, afghan taliban lied and they havent changed.

Intially when the afghan taliban took over, our west hating but living in west posters celebrated and were sharing evidence to us that look they have changed even when they banned women education.

The afghan taliban had said they would not host foreign terrorist group members, yet they still did.... They are protecting ttp members.

This country is again gonna become a problem for pakistan in the near future...

Pakistan should also do strikes on them now especially on targets that threaten pakistan
 
A prominent guy was killed every week in the 2000s and 2010s. It sadly barely changed the situation in the ground in Afghanistan - he was just replaced with the next able hand.

It was afghanistans job to arrest them in the first place. They did not and paid the price for it.
 
I was quite surprised to open up the news pages today and see this making the major headlines. I don't know why we give so much importance to a bunch of raggy bearded people living in caves in Afghanistan. I'm sure there must be some deeper point to it all, but hey ho.
 
I was quite surprised to open up the news pages today and see this making the major headlines. I don't know why we give so much importance to a bunch of raggy bearded people living in caves in Afghanistan. I'm sure there must be some deeper point to it all, but hey ho.

This is the guy who was one of the founding members of al qaeda. He was always second in command when bin ladden existed and would always work with bin ladden when giving orders.

This is a guy who prove to the world that lack of education iant the reason why people become terrorist. He was a surgeon in his earlier life. He was a well known target along with Bin laden.

Over the years many had speculated that he might have died.

He was not a cave living terrorist, he was living in a compound in one of kabuls poshs area. That neighborhood houses the embassey of uk and usa aswell. Uk embassey is just few houses away from it.

The fact that he was living like this and came to afg after taliban came to power shows that afghan taliban hasnt learn their mistake and they will soon create problems for the world.

The whole ** that let the afghanis choose whoever they want even if its afghan taliban isnt going to suit us now because this proves they are again upto no good
 
This is the guy who was one of the founding members of al qaeda. He was always second in command when bin ladden existed and would always work with bin ladden when giving orders.

This is a guy who prove to the world that lack of education iant the reason why people become terrorist. He was a surgeon in his earlier life. He was a well known target along with Bin laden.

Over the years many had speculated that he might have died.

He was not a cave living terrorist, he was living in a compound in one of kabuls poshs area. That neighborhood houses the embassey of uk and usa aswell. Uk embassey is just few houses away from it.

The fact that he was living like this and came to afg after taliban came to power shows that afghan taliban hasnt learn their mistake and they will soon create problems for the world.

The whole ** that let the afghanis choose whoever they want even if its afghan taliban isnt going to suit us now because this proves they are again upto no good

They might be able to cause trouble in Afghanistan or other third world dives like your country or Africa, but they are no threat to us in the first world. If they are that capable then maybe you should consider making Pakistan a caliphate.
 
They might be able to cause trouble in Afghanistan or other third world dives like your country or Africa, but they are no threat to us in the first world. If they are that capable then maybe you should consider making Pakistan a caliphate.

Why should pakistan be made a caliphate just because the afghanis are fool?

That makes no sense
 
Why should pakistan be made a caliphate just because the afghanis are fool?

That makes no sense

You yourself are saying how dangerous they are to the whole world, that means they are a capable bunch. Not a bunch of raggy beard cave dwellers which was my impression. I am taking on board your analysis and then presenting a solution.
 
You yourself are saying how dangerous they are to the whole world, that means they are a capable bunch. Not a bunch of raggy beard cave dwellers which was my impression. I am taking on board your analysis and then presenting a solution.

So when someone becomes a threat instead of taking care of that threat you turn yourself into a caliphate?

Nice solution, maybe uk should had followed on your advise after the train bombings, the queen could had become the khalifa.

All hail khalifa elizebeth
 
So when someone becomes a threat instead of taking care of that threat you turn yourself into a caliphate?

Nice solution, maybe uk should had followed on your advise after the train bombings, the queen could had become the khalifa.

All hail khalifa elizebeth

We can take care of ragtag cave dwellers though, that was my point. We don't need Khilafah in the UK. I present it as a solution only for failed states whose leaders empty the coffers and buy up property in Dubai and London.
 
We can take care of ragtag cave dwellers though, that was my point. We don't need Khilafah in the UK. I present it as a solution only for failed states whose leaders empty the coffers and buy up property in Dubai and London.

Really, could you? Nato failed to get bin laden or ayman al zawahiri, it was usa alone each time.

You talk about "we" taking care yet had to face train bombings.

As for failed states and coffers, didnt "ur" pm had to resign....

Anyways, as i said before, if i were you, i would be more worried about an indian origin pm
 
We can take care of ragtag cave dwellers though, that was my point. We don't need Khilafah in the UK. I present it as a solution only for failed states whose leaders empty the coffers and buy up property in Dubai and London.

Really, could you? Nato failed to get bin laden or ayman al zawahiri, it was usa alone each time.

You talk about "we" taking care yet had to face train bombings.

As for failed states and coffers, didnt "ur" pm had to resign....

Anyways, as i said before, if i were you, i would be more worried about an indian origin pm
 
No one cares anymore, most people in UK have realised this is just a timing game with US Midterm elections coming up. Biden is getting slated on SM, and Democrats are demanding he resigns.

The AQ/ISIS bogeyman has run its course.
 
https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/poli...airspace-drone-killed-al-qaeda-chief-ayman-al

US used Pakistani airspace for drone that killed al-Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahri: analysts

Islamabad gave Washington permission and could have provided intelligence confirming whereabouts of the al-Qaeda leader, observers say
Operation was ‘probably conducted’ under agreement that kept Pakistani airspace open for US military flights to and from Afghanistan
 
Drone that killed Zawahiri did not operate from Pakistan: minister

KARACHI: Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah on Wednesday said the drone that targeted and killed Ayman al-Zawahiri was not operated from Pakistan. Talking to Geo News in Islamabad, Rana Sanaullah said: “Do you know how Ayman al-Zawahiri was killed and where he was? This is a matter on which talks should be held between Afghanistan and US.”

The interior minister said it should be taken into account that what had been discussed during the US-Taliban talks (in Doha) in this regard. If the talks were not held earlier (on this issue), the matter needs to be resolved now.

He further said peace in Afghanistan had its impact on Pakistan. When there is peace in Afghanistan, there is peace in Pakistan, adding that if the situation in Afghanistan is not good, it adversely affects Pakistan.

The News PK
 
If Zwahiri was indeed the person we have been told he was and did those heinous crimes, then it's good that he died.

It's hard to believe what international media reports cause they preach the narrative what they want everyone to believe.

Even then, it seems like ISIS are a much bigger threat to the world than Al Qaeda.

Plus Afghanistan has proved to be a place who will keep fighting back and will not go away when it is attacked. That's something history has taught us. I wonder why US continues to pursue Afghanistan.
 
Without pakistan logistics airspace and bases us cannot operate in Afghanistan

Since rana sahib should know afghanistan is a landlocked country and its not the taliban with pizza chains in USA or ones sending their sons to American universities and having drink and tea parties with Bill Gates etc.
 
I wonder why US continues to pursue Afghanistan.

Because the country is run by globalists and zionists and want world domination any goverment or regime that doesn't fall in place with the globalist agenda they will economically isolate or start a war.

With Afghanistan they failed so the next stage is to economically sanction them and have them isolated and start a proxy civil war within or create a situation where Afghanistan and pakistan start fighting each other, the usa would love that I.e the pakistan army starts fighting afghan taliban , just how they used the kurdish groups in Syria against isis .
 
https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/poli...airspace-drone-killed-al-qaeda-chief-ayman-al

US used Pakistani airspace for drone that killed al-Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahri: analysts

Islamabad gave Washington permission and could have provided intelligence confirming whereabouts of the al-Qaeda leader, observers say
Operation was ‘probably conducted’ under agreement that kept Pakistani airspace open for US military flights to and from Afghanistan

Pakistan needs money. US needs airspace. Win-Win for both.
 
I wonder why US continues to pursue Afghanistan.

Because the country is run by globalists and zionists and want world domination any goverment or regime that doesn't fall in place with the globalist agenda they will economically isolate or start a war.

With Afghanistan they failed so the next stage is to economically sanction them and have them isolated and start a proxy civil war within or create a situation where Afghanistan and pakistan start fighting each other, the usa would love that I.e the pakistan army starts fighting afghan taliban , just how they used the kurdish groups in Syria against isis .

Biden is in a whole lot of trouble with his popularity sinking by the day. With this Drone strike, he wants to prove to people he means business.
 
Kyrgyzstan closed the base in 2014

Their president in 2021 was on record saying he won't allow any us bases in Kyrgyzstan
Plus the country comes under russian and China sphere of influence why would they allow yanks in heart of Central Asia.

The only people with access and spy abilities and agents within afghanistan and acces to taliban circles are isi and pak military only they have ability to help Americans monitor and catch people.

Plus bajwas son is in usa and one of his caste kin owns a pizza empire there

It's not Kyrgyz who have habit of begging and selling themselves to the highest bidder

Now we know why ik was removed one he refused cooperation like drone attacks bases etc and second he tried to steer the country towards the Russian China bloc . That's why the coas was given the danda to act in a swift way
 
The timing of it all! Its quite clear. Shehbaz Base in Pakistan is being rented out again. Our own military found a way around "Absolutely Not"
 
Will Taliban and Al-Qaeda attack Pakistan now? I hope not.

Al Qaeda is gone, no such thing left anymore. Whatever splintered cells are left are running around for their lives or working for whoever can pay them. The TALIBAN in Afghanistan dont bother us either if they are left well alone.
Only time they create a problem for us is when India pays them conduct terrorism in Pakistan.
 
Al Qaeda is gone, no such thing left anymore. Whatever splintered cells are left are running around for their lives or working for whoever can pay them. The TALIBAN in Afghanistan dont bother us either if they are left well alone.
Only time they create a problem for us is when India pays them conduct terrorism in Pakistan.

Pakistan were Taliban's cheer leaders not long ago. If Imran comes back to power he will be a huge supporter of Taliban like he did before. Taliban and Pakistan are friends.
 
The Taliban said Thursday they have no knowledge of Ayman al-Zawahiri's presence in Afghanistan, days after US President Joe Biden announced the Al-Qaeda chief's killing by a drone strike in Kabul.

Zawahiri's assassination is the biggest blow to Al-Qaeda since US special forces killed Osama bin Laden in 2011, and calls into question the Taliban's promise not to harbour militant groups.

"The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan has no information about Ayman al-Zawahiri's arrival and stay in Kabul," said an official statement -- the Taliban's first mention of his name since Biden's announcement.

Zawahiri was believed to be in charge of steering Al-Qaeda's operations -- including the 9/11 attacks -- as well as serving as bin Laden's personal doctor.

A senior US administration official said the 71-year-old Egyptian was on the balcony of a three-storey house in the Afghan capital when targeted with two Hellfire missiles early on Sunday.

Thursday's carefully phrased Taliban statement neither confirmed his presence in Afghanistan nor acknowledged his death.

"The leadership of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan has instructed the intelligence agencies to hold a comprehensive and serious investigation," it said.

"The fact that America invaded our territory and violated all international principles, we strongly condemn the action once again.

"If such action is repeated, the responsibility of any consequences will be on the United States of America."

The Taliban reiterated in their statement that there was "no threat" to any country from Afghanistan's soil.

They called on Washington to adhere to the Doha pact signed in February 2020 that paved the way for the withdrawal of foreign forces from Afghanistan, ending two decades of US-led military intervention in the country.

In announcing Zawahiri's death Tuesday, Biden declared "justice had been delivered" to the families of victims of the 9/11 attacks on the US.

Sunday's drone attack was the first known over-the-horizon strike by the US on a target in Afghanistan since Washington withdrew its forces from the country on August 31 last year, days after the Taliban swept back to power.

The house targeted in the strike is in Sherpur, one of Kabul's most affluent neighbourhoods, with several villas occupied by high-ranking Taliban officials and commanders.

Zawahiri took over Al-Qaeda after bin Laden was killed, and had a $25 million US bounty on his head.

News of his death comes a month before the first anniversary of the final withdrawal of US troops from Afghanistan, leaving the country in the hands of the Taliban insurgency that fought Western forces since the US-led invasion in 2001.

AFP
 
Pakistan were Taliban's cheer leaders not long ago. If Imran comes back to power he will be a huge supporter of Taliban like he did before. Taliban and Pakistan are friends.

There is no such things as friends in this day and age and nothing is as clear as black and white. We have multiple shades of grey within.

Take for example the Pakistan military establishment. There are those who are Al Qaeda/Taliban sympathizers within and then there are those who are staunchly pro US. Same with Taliban. Its all about who is going to fill the pockets. This is not ideological anymore. These so-called mujahideen stopped being mujahideen after the Afghan war ended. Now they are paid guns. India has hired them for conducting multiple terrorist attacks in Pakistan just like Pakistan used them to create turmoil in Kashmir/Mumbai, etc.

IK just wants peace with them. His stance is, we wont allow our land and air to conduct attacks on other countries and risk problems with them. He is not a supporter of them. It is very very important to make that delineation. I know Indians like to toot the horn of "Taliban Khan" but nothing is farther from the truth. He just wants Pakistan to be left alone and out of it and have peaceful relations with whoever is in power there.

Its none of our business what Afghanistanis do inside their country. Why should we bother and go fight someone else's war there? Of course this stance is conveniently used as Pro Taliban.
 
The US drone which killed al-Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahri in Kabul used Pakistani airspace to carry out its mission, security analysts said.

Islamabad certainly gave Washington permission, they said, and could well have provided human intelligence confirming Zawahri’s whereabouts.

“The drone definitely entered Pakistani airspace over Balochistan and entered Afghanistan,” said Abdul Basit, a research fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore.

He said the operation was probably conducted according to the terms of a 2003 agreement under which Pakistan provided an air corridor for US military flights to and from Afghanistan while it occupied the country.

“The 2003 agreement expired” when US forces left Afghanistan in August last year, “but it was kept intact to keep the airspace open for the US,” Basit said.

Military operations analyst Jonathan Schroden agreed that the drone traversed Pakistani airspace.

He said the MQ-9 Reaper which fired the missiles at the terrorist kingpin probably took off from a US airbase in a Gulf Arab country, flew across the Arabian Sea, and entered Pakistani airspace.

It would not have had to be refuelled at a Pakistani airbase because “they can range from the Gulf”, he said.

In the absence of any confirmation about operational details from Washington, Basit and some other analysts said it was unclear whether the Pakistani military’s Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) agency provided vital information about Zawahri.

In his statement confirming the al-Qaeda chief’s assassination, US President Joe Biden referred only to cooperation by “key allies and partners”.

However, given the ISI’s extensive network in Afghanistan, particularly within the Taliban, and the fact that US intelligence resources have been greatly depleted since its military pull-out last August, analysts see Pakistan’s involvement as more likely than not.

“It’s entirely possible and it wouldn’t surprise me” because “Pakistan has been looking for ways to repair its relationship with the US after the Taliban takeover”, said Schroden, who is director of the countering threats and special operations programmes at CNA Corporation, a security think tank based in Virginia in the US.

Analysts pointed to a telephone call last week in which Pakistan’s army chief of staff General Qamar Javed Bajwa – widely acknowledged to be the country’s most powerful man – spoke to US deputy secretary of state Wendy Sherman.

The Pakistani military said Bajwa called Sherman to lobby for Washington’s support in persuading the International Monetary Fund to urgently release a tranche of financial assistance needed by Islamabad to avoid a default on its foreign debt.

Despite the military’s long-standing dominance of Pakistan’s affairs, however, the Bajwa-Sherman call was seen as highly unusual by Pakistani politicians and analysts alike, and is now being viewed as a possible precursor to the drone strike on Zawahri.

“The real story isn’t about General Bajwa discussing the economy with the US government. The real story is: what’s the quid pro quo?” said Faran Jeffrey, deputy director and head of the South Asia terrorism desk at the Britain-based Islamic Theology of Counter Terrorism.

US kills al-Qaeda chief Zawahiri in Kabul drone strike
2 Aug 2022

Zawahri was killed early on Sunday while living with his family in a Kabul home owned by a close aide of Sirajuddin Haqqani, interior minister of the Taliban’s regime and head of the so-called Haqqani Network terrorist faction.

The neighbourhood where it is located is home to many Taliban leadership figures.

The Haqqani Network has historically been seen as close to Pakistan’s security agencies – in 2011, it was described as “a veritable arm of the ISI” by Admiral Mike Mullen, the then chairman of the US joint chiefs of staff.

However, relations between Pakistan’s military and the Taliban – including the Haqqanis – have markedly deteriorated since they seized power in Afghanistan a year ago.

Islamabad is angry that the Taliban regime has not taken action against the 3,000-5,000 Pakistani Taliban insurgents reported by the United Nations to have taken refuge in Afghanistan.

The Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) intensified its cross-border attacks against Pakistani security forces soon after the Taliban took power in Kabul.

After the Taliban regime repeatedly refused to intervene, Pakistan’s military used Chinese-made Wing Loong II drones to attack TTP camps inside Afghanistan in April.

The Taliban subsequently persuaded the TTP to agree to an open-ended ceasefire and engage Pakistani representatives in talks mediated by Sirajuddin Haqqani.

The latest round, involving a delegation of Pakistani Islamic scholars, ended in failure last week.

Analysts said talks held in Washington in early May between ISI chief Lieutenant General Nadeem Anjum and top US officials, including national security adviser Jake Sullivan, were the likely point at which the two sides agreed to restore their covert cooperation on counterterrorism.

https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/poli...airspace-drone-killed-al-qaeda-chief-ayman-al
 
Reading this, I picture Pakistan now as the seedy, sleazy, street informer who the hero cops approach to get information on the villain. They rough up the street informer, who then negotiates "Maybe I know something, maybe I dont know something" and then the hero cops put a couple of $200 bills in his pocket and he just starts singing and actually takes them to the bad guy's hideout.

Thats Pakistan right now, right there!
 
Reading this, I picture Pakistan now as the seedy, sleazy, street informer who the hero cops approach to get information on the villain. They rough up the street informer, who then negotiates "Maybe I know something, maybe I dont know something" and then the hero cops put a couple of $200 bills in his pocket and he just starts singing and actually takes them to the bad guy's hideout.

Thats Pakistan right now, right there!

"Beggars cannot be choosers"
 
"Beggars cannot be choosers"

Thats what Shehbaz the inept, inefficient, unintelligent, moronic Crime Minister would like us to think.
But he is way out of his depth. This is high stakes intelligence, and we are the kings of it. We are not beggards but sleazy, unethical, corrupt pimps who deal in information and services and we flip when we want. We use them to get funding and we sell whoever we have to down the river.

This aint exactly begging. We render services, evil as they may be, and we get paid for them. Only our military establishment can do it though since they hold all the cards and all the strings.
 
If it entered over Baluchistan, is it the same time when Pak’s Army crash happened as well?

Pakistan always has something going on in secrecy with America.
 
If it entered over Baluchistan, is it the same time when Pak’s Army crash happened as well?

Pakistan always has something going on in secrecy with America.
The speculation regarding that is definitely making the rounds.
 
Pakistan were Taliban's cheer leaders not long ago. If Imran comes back to power he will be a huge supporter of Taliban like he did before. Taliban and Pakistan are friends.

That is because huge swathes of Pakistan believe in similar philosophy to the Taliban regardless of religon. Family structure is still very old fashioned with males seen as providers, and women responsible for the home. Imran is also descended from Pashtun territories and those people put their own values above money.
 
Pakistan on Thursday categorically rejected reports that Pakistan’s airspace had been used by a US drone strike in Kabul killing al-Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahiri.

“I would refer you to the statement that we have issued (earlier) on this incident, and that is our stated position. There is no evidence of this action having been undertaken using Pakistan’s airspace, so this is something that I can add to that,” said the spokesman at the Foreign Office during the weekly media briefing.

In its earlier statement on August 2, the spokesman issued a vague statement on the US drone strike, saying that Pakistan stands by countering terrorism in accordance with international law and relevant UN resolutions. There was no mention of Ayman al-Zahawiri and he had made no mention of Pakistan’s airspace not being used.

The first rejection of Pakistan’s airspace having been used came from the Minister of Interior, Rana Sanullah, on Wednesday. “As I said, our statement contains what we had to say. Our (earlier) statement needs to be mentioned in its totality. We said that Pakistan stands by countering terrorism in accordance with international law and relevant UN resolutions. So that’s a very clear statement”, he added.

While referring to various UN resolutions on countering terrorism, he pointed out that there are various international obligations under these resolutions. “Regarding al-Qaeda, I think it is clear that it is a terrorist entity, which is listed under the UN Security Council sanctions regime and states are under obligation to take actions that are prescribed by the UN Security Council. As you know, Pakistan has in the past, taken resolute actions and supported the efforts of the international community in fighting terrorism and particularly, you know, some of the notable success against al-Qaeda was possible because of Pakistan’s role and contribution,” he said.

TheNews
 
Former Information Minister and PTI leader Fawad Chaudhry on Saturday asked the concerned ministries to clarify if Pakistani airspace was used for conducting a drone strike in Afghanistan that killed al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri, ARY NEWS reported.

In a message from his Twitter handle, Fawad Chaudhry said that there is no question that Pakistani soil was used for the Afghanistan attack, however, he said that the question is if Pakistani airspace was used for the purpose or not?

“Repeatedly saying that Pakistani soil was not used is an ambiguous statement,” he said and demanded of the concerned ministries to respond to the matter.

A report on Wednesday quoted diplomatic sources saying that no evidence was found for the use of Pakistani airspace by the US for carrying out the drone strike that killed Al-Qaeda’s Ayman al-Zawahiri.

Diplomatic sources told ARY News that they could not reveal the strategy of the Pakistani government, however, the concerned authority was looking into different aspects of Zawahiri’s killing.

On Monday, President Joe Biden announced that the United States had killed Al-Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahiri, one of the world’s most wanted terrorists and suspected mastermind of the September 11.

In a televised address, Biden said the strike in Kabul, Afghanistan had been carried out on Saturday. “I gave the final approval to go get him,” he said, adding that there had been no civilian casualties.

“Justice has been delivered and this terrorist leader is no more,” Biden said.

A senior administration official said Ayman al-Zawahiri had been killed on the balcony of a house in Kabul in a drone strike, and that there had been no US boots on the ground in Afghanistan.

ARY
 
If it entered over Baluchistan, is it the same time when Pak’s Army crash happened as well?

Pakistan always has something going on in secrecy with America.

I don't think it's a coincidence that the General visits America with a begging bowl and then a couple of days later a terrorist is killed by the Americans using a drone.

It seems that the Pakistani Army is controlled by the US of A
 
Obama is suffering in the polls and bang, Osama is located in Pakistan snd terminated.
Biden is doing poorly and bang a terrorist leader is filled by a US drone.

I always suspected that the US knew exactly where Osama was hiding or allowed him to hide there.
Now I'm 99.9pct convinced
 
I don't think it's a coincidence that the General visits America with a begging bowl and then a couple of days later a terrorist is killed by the Americans using a drone.

It seems that the Pakistani Army is controlled by the US of A

Yeah it’s upto Pakistani citizens now though, I mean IK couldn’t have shown a clearer picture , this is the best way he has shown the truth to the entire nation and if they still don’t change the narrative this will be on them.
 
A prominent Afghan cleric who supported the Taliban and was in favour of female education has been killed.

Sheikh Rahimullah Haqqani reportedly died in a suicide bomb blast in Kabul.

Speaking to Reuters, Taliban sources say the religious leader was targeted by a man who detonated explosives hidden in an artificial plastic limb.

It is not currently clear who is responsible for the killing, but he had previously been targeted by the Islamic State (IS) group.

According to local reports, the attack took place at an Islamic seminary in the Afghan capital.

Sheikh Haqqani was a supporter of Afghanistan's Taliban government and a prominent critic of the jihadist militant group Islamic State Kohrasan Province (IS-K), a regional affiliate of IS that operates in Afghanistan and opposes the Taliban's rule.


He is one of the highest profile figures to have been killed in the country since the Taliban returned to power last year.

"It's a very huge loss for the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan," a senior Taliban official told Reuters news agency, adding that authorities were investigating who was behind the attack.

Despite sharing the same name, he was not related to Afghanistan's Haqqani militant group network.

The religious leader had previously issued a fatwa, or religious decree, in support of female education - a contentious issue inside Afghanistan.

In an interview with the BBC's Secunder Kermani earlier this year, he argued that Afghan women and girls should be able to access education: "There is no justification in the sharia [law] to say female education is not allowed. No justification at all."

He added: "All the religious books have stated female education is permissible and obligatory, because, for example, if a woman gets sick, in an Islamic environment like Afghanistan or Pakistan, and needs treatment, it's much better if she's treated by a female doctor."

In all but a handful of provinces in the country, girls' secondary schools have been ordered to remain closed by the Taliban.

Sheikh Haqqani had previously survived two assassination attempts, most recently in 2020 when IS claimed responsibility for an explosion at a religious school in the Pakistani city of Peshawar that killed at least seven people.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-62508070
 
The Taliban have not found the body of Ayman al-Zawahiri and are continuing investigations, group spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid said on Thursday, after the United States said they killed the Al Qaeda leader in an airstrike in Kabul last month.

The United States killed Zawahiri with a missile fired from a drone while he stood on a balcony at his hideout in July, US officials said, in the biggest blow to Al Qaeda since US Navy SEALS shot dead Osama bin Laden more than a decade ago.

His death in Kabul raised questions about whether he received sanctuary from the Taliban, who had assured the United States as part of a 2020 agreement on the withdrawal of US-led forces that they would not harbour other militant groups.

Zawahiri, an Egyptian doctor, was closely involved in the September 11, 2001 attacks on the US and was one of the world’s most wanted men.

US officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity, had said the United States carried out a drone strike in the Afghan capital Kabul on the morning of July 31.

“Now justice has been delivered, and this terrorist leader is no more,” Biden had said in remarks from the White House. “We never back down.”

The senior US official had said finding Zawahiri was the result of persistent counterterrorism work. The United States identified this year that Zawahiri’s wife, daughter and her children had relocated to a safe house in Kabul, then identified that Zawahiri was there as well, the official had added.

“Once Zawahiri arrived at the location, we are not aware of him ever leaving the safe house,” the official had said.“ He was identified multiple times on the balcony, where he was ultimately struck. He continued to produce videos from the house and some may be released after his death.“

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken had said the Taliban had “grossly violated” the agreement by hosting and sheltering Zawahiri.

With other senior Al Qaeda members, Zawahiri is believed to have plotted the October 12, 2000, attack on the USS Cole naval vessel in Yemen which killed 17 US sailors and injured more than 30 others, the Rewards for Justice website said.

He was indicted in the United States for his role in the August 7, 1998, bombings of the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania that killed 224 people and wounded more than 5,000 others.

Both bin laden and Zawahiri eluded capture when US-led forces toppled Afghanistan’s Taliban government in late 2001 following the Sept 11 attacks on the United States.

DAWN
 
The Foreign Office (FO) on Sunday rejected the Afghan Taliban’s claims about Pakistani airspace being used for the US strike that killed Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri.

The FO’s response came after, earlier in the day, Afghan Defence Minister Mohammad Yaqoob Mujahid accused Pakistan of providing airspace for US drones to enter his country, saying the incursions were a continuation of Washington’s “invasion”.

Mujahid’s comments came less than a month after US President Joe Biden announced al-Zawahiri’s killing in a drone strike in Kabul.

US drones continued to be seen flying over Kabul even now, Mujahid said.

“Our information shows that they (US drones) are entering into Afghanistan from Pakistan, using the airspace of Pakistan,” Mujahid told reporters when asked where the drones were coming from.

“We demand that Pakistan should not allow its airspace to be used against us.”

Deploying these drones into Afghanistan is “still a clear invasion of Afghanistan and its airspace by the Americans”, Mujahid said.

“They are doing this shamelessly. We condemn this illegal act and demand that the Americans put an end to it.”

The drone attack in July that killed Zawahiri, Al Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden’s successor, was the first known strike by the US on a target in Afghanistan since Washington withdrew its forces from the country on August 31 last year.

Mujahid said the authorities were investigating Biden’s claims of killing Zawahiri. “We will share the details when it is complete,” he said.

Responding to the Taliban claims, FO Spokesperson Asim Iftikhar Ahmad issued a press release, saying that Pakistan had noted Mujahid’s allegation’s with “deep concern”.

“In the absence of any evidence, as acknowledged by the afghan minister himself, such conjectural allegations are highly regrettable and defy the norms of responsible diplomatic conduct.

“Pakistan reaffirms its belief in the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all states and condemns terrorism in all its forms and manifestations,” the press release reads.

The FO urged Afghan authorities to “ensure the fulfilment” of international commitments made by Afghanistan to not allow the use of its territory for terrorism against any country.

Border tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan have risen since the Taliban seized power last year, with Islamabad claiming militant groups are carrying out regular attacks from the neighbouring country.

DAWN
 
Pakistan has termed the recent remarks of the Afghan deputy foreign minister as ‘against the spirit of friendly relations’, and highlighted the need for interim Afghan authorities to take necessary steps to address international expectations and concerns.

The views were expressed by Foreign Office Spokesperson Asim Iftikhar at the weekly media briefing here on Friday, in response to a question regarding the statement of Sher Abbas Stanikzai, a week after PM Shehbaz Sharif shared the concern of the international community regarding threats posed by terrorist groups operating from the neighbouring country, during an address to the UN General Assembly.

The PM’s speech, however provoked a sharp rebuke from the Taliban, with Stanikzai claiming on Sept 27 that Islamabad was “receiving millions of dollars” from Washington to allow American drones to conduct flights over Afghanistan.

“How long can we tolerate this?” he asked a gathering in Kabul. “If we rise against this, no one will be able to stop us.”

Jauhar given ‘look after’ charge of foreign ministry

In response to the question about his comment, the FO spokesman said: “This is very unfortunate and unacceptable. We have noted with concern, these recent remarks. We consider such statements as against the spirit of friendly relations between our two brotherly countries. Pakistan’s role in facilitating peace in Afghanistan, and our efforts to strengthen bilateral ties are well known, and they are acknowledged widely.”

“We believe that for the success of positive engagement, it is important that the interim Afghan authorities take necessary steps to address international expectations and concerns. For its part, Pakistan will continue to pursue positive engagement with Afghanistan for peace, prosperity, and progress of the two countries and the wider region.”

About the accusation of interference in Afghanistan’s internal issues, the FO spokesman said, “Obviously there is no interference in Afghanistan’s internal affairs. To the contrary, our Afghan friends are well aware of Pakistan’s support and advocacy for Afghanistan, for the international community to engage positively and constructively with Afghanistan, given the serious challenges, the economic situation and the humanitarian situation that is faced by the Afghan people.

DAWN
 
Al Qaeda has released a 35-minute recording the group claims was narrated by its leader Ayman al-Zawahiri, who was believed to have been killed in a U.S. raid in August 2022, SITE intelligence group said on Friday.

The recording was undated and the transcript did not clearly point towards a time frame for when it could have been made.

Express Tribune
 
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