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Thursday, November 14, 2024

US drone kills ‘senior Al-Qaeda leader’

According to the US military, Al-Qaeda “uses Syria as a safe haven to rebuild, coordinate with external affiliates, and plan external operations,” and “uses Syria as a base for threats reaching into Syria, Iraq and beyond.”

The US Central Command (CENTCOM) has announced it used a Predator drone to kill Abdul Hamid al-Matar, described as ‘senior Al-Qaeda leader,’ in northwestern Syria. The US military claimed no civilians were hurt in the strike.

“We have no indications of civilian casualties as a result of the strike, which was conducted using an MQ-9 aircraft,” CENTCOM spokesman Major John Rigsbee said in a statement on Friday evening.

Though Rigsbee put the strike in “northwest” Syria, CENTCOM named Suluk – a town in the north, near the border with Turkey, as the location of the strike. According to the most recent maps of who controls what in Syria, Suluk is in the area controlled by Turkish-backed militants.

Read more: Al-Qaeda planning a chemical attack in Syria: Russian Intelligence

The “removal” of al-Matar will “disrupt the terrorist organization’s ability to further plot and carry out global attacks threatening US citizens, our partners, and innocent civilians,” CENTCOM claimed.

https://twitter.com/N0tWoofers/status/1451568525798264833

According to the US military, Al-Qaeda “uses Syria as a safe haven to rebuild, coordinate with external affiliates, and plan external operations,” and “uses Syria as a base for threats reaching into Syria, Iraq and beyond.”

Suluk, like other areas where Al-Qaeda is known to operate in Syria, is not under the control of Damascus. The area is controlled by militants historically backed by the US and its allies, such as NATO member Turkey.

Earlier this month, CENTCOM said another drone strike killed Al-Qaeda leader Salim Abu-Ahmad on a stretch of highway in Idlib province, also controlled by anti-government militants.

Read more: US blacklists 5 men in Turkey for helping Al-Qaeda

It was in Idlib that US commandos tracked down and killed the self-proclaimed ‘caliph’ of Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS), Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, in October 2019 – almost a year after all IS-claimed territory was declared liberated.

RT with additional input by GVS News Desk