US Syria Airstrike: Mystery Surrounds Fate of Abu Ghadiya

by Christina 123 | October 28, 2008 at 10:52 am
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MYSTERY continues over the US helicoptor raid inside the Syrian border on Sunday, when eight civilians were reported killed, including four children, at a farmhouse.  Unconfirmed US intelligence reports  claim that a smuggler of foreign fighters into Iraq had been killed.  Witnesses claim that two helicopters circled overhead while two others landed and carried out the assault.  Two other men are said to have been captured by US forces.

Abu Ghadiya, a top al-Queda figure, had been widely reported as dead two years ago.  However, the news now is that he was the person killed in the US strike on Sunday.

 

 

Mystery surrounds the fate of a top al-Qaeda operative reportedly targeted by an alleged US strike on Syria.

US officials have identified Syrian militant Abu Ghadiya as a key figure behind the smuggling of foreign fighters into Iraq.

They are reportedly claiming that his death in the raid will have a major impact on al-Qaeda's capabilities.

But this runs at odds with statements made by the militant's organisation, al-Qaeda in Iraq, which announced his death on jihadist web sites over two years ago.

According to an al-Qaeda obituary of the militant released in August 2006, Abu Ghadiya died on the Saudi-Iraqi border sometime after the US-Iraqi offensive on Fallujah in November 2004.

The group said he had been sent to the area to meet with a leader of al-Qaeda's Saudi branch.

Both men died in an airstrike which targeted a house they were meeting in, the group claimed.

Major target

But al-Qaeda's story is not accepted by the US.

Earlier this year it identified Abu Ghadiya as a major target and froze his assets over accusations that he was supplying al-Qaeda's Iraqi affiliate with money, weapons and foreign militants from Syria.

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A Syrian by birth, he is also believed to have played an important role in militant activities in Jordan and Lebanon.

In 2006 a Jordanian court sentenced Abu Ghadiya to death in absentia for plotting chemical attacks in the kingdom.

Also known as Badran Turki Hishan al-Mazidih, Abu Ghadiya is said to be from Damascus, where he graduated as a dentist before heading for Afghanistan in the 1990s.

It was there that he met is thought to have met Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the future leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq.

Abu Ghadiya became a key aide to Zarqawi and followed him to Iraq following the US-led 2003 invasion, where he is thought to have helped him found the Tawhid and Jihad Group, the precursor to al-Qaeda in Iraq.

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Barbara McPherson
Barbara McPherson
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 11:43 on October 28th, 2008

Christina 123, I like this story. It's good stuff.  maybe it's not mystery surrounding the invasion of Syria as a shroud of lies.

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Christina 123

Thank you, Barbara!  It could be of course, a case of "well they would say that, wouldn't they?"

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

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