<http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,7374-2117134,00.html>
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,7374-2117134,00.html 









The Times

April 04, 2006

 


Most wanted terrorist 'kicked out as leader' for bloody tactics


By Richard Beeston, Diplomatic Editor













Al-Zarqawi is one of the most wanted men in the world. The bounty now stands
at $25 million (AFP/GETTY IMAGES)



 


 


 

ABU MUSAB AL-ZARQAWI, the most feared commander in the Iraqi insurgency, may
have been forced to surrender his leadership by rival groups, angered by his
bloody tactics and the interference of foreign fighters in the Iraqi
conflict. 

According to Huthayfah Azzam, the son of Abdullah Azzam, al-Zarqawi’s former
mentor, the notorious commander of al-Qaeda in Iraq was stripped of his
political duties at a meeting two weeks ago. 

“The Iraqi resistance high command asked al-Zarqawi to give up his political
role and replaced him with an Iraqi because of several mistakes,” said Mr
Azzam in an interview with al-Arabiya, the Arabic news channel.
“Al-Zarqawi’s role has been limited to military action,” he said. 

The fugitive al-Qaeda leader, who has a $25 million American bounty on his
head, is credited with masterminding some of the bloodiest episodes in the
Iraqi war, including suicide bombings against the United Nations, Shia
Muslims and US forces and the videotaped execution of Western and other
hostages. 

But his tactics have alienated many Iraqis, even those sympathetic to the
insurgency. Mr Azzam, whose father is known as the “prince of the
Mujahidin”, said that he was accused of “creating an independent group” in
Iraq, “making political mistakes” and hijacking the Iraqi insurgency for his
own cause. 

The claims could not be confirmed, but they did add to mounting evidence
that al-Zarqawi has been increasingly isolated over the past months because
of his ruthless tactics. 

In January al-Zarqawi’s al-Qaeda group announced that it was joining five
other insurgent organisations to form a body called the “Mujahidin Shura
Council”. Since then al-Qaeda in Iraq, once the most vocal terrorist group
in the world, has stopped issuing its own statements. Now the council
appears to have demoted al-Zarqawi and replaced him with a relative unknown,
Abdullah bin Rashid al-Baghdadi. 

As for al-Zarqawi, a former petty criminal turned jihad warlord, he has not
been heard of in public for three months. 

The first hint that he had become too extreme even for al-Qaeda came in a
letter written by Ayman al-Zawahiri, Osama bin Laden’s No 2, which was sent
to al-Zarqawi last summer and warned the 39-year-old Jordanian to change his
tactics. 

In the letter, which was intercepted by the Americans and made public,
al-Zawahiri tells his young protégé that executing victims and posting the
images on the internet had earned him the title “Sheikh of the
Slaughterers”. 

“Among the things which the feelings of the Muslim populace who support you
will never find acceptable are the scenes of slaughtering hostages,” the
letter said. 

Then, in November, al-Zar qawi caused revulsion across the region when he
orchestrated triple suicide bomb attacks against hotels in Amman, killing 60
people, including guests attending a Palestinian wedding. Members of his own
family, including his brother and cousins, publicly disowned him along with
members of influential Arab tribes. 

Al-Zarqawi then faced a humiliating climbdown in December when he was forced
to drop his opposition to general elections in a clear ideological split
with the mainstream Sunni Arab population in Iraq, which participated in the
polls.Certainly today al-Zarqawi is no longer regarded by the authorities in
Baghdad as the main threat to the country’s stability. 

“Al-Zarqawi is finished,” said Bayan Jabor, the Iraqi Interior Minister,
last week. 

“He has only a few supporters left in (the western city of) Ramadi.” 

But Western military intelligence sources cautioned that it was far too soon
to be writing off such an important figure in the shadowy world of the Iraqi
insurgency. Last year, rumours circulated that al-Zarqawi had been badly
injured and was dying after a clash with US troops. He later resurfaced
still very much in control of his dedicated group of fighters. 

While he may have lost some support among Iraqis he remains a very
experienced commander, a hero among many Islamic militants in the Arab world
and a formidable opponent, who at one point controlled large swaths of
central and western Iraq. 

THE MAKING OF A MUSLIM MILITANT

*  Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, 39, grew up in Zarqa, an industrial city north of
Amman, Jordan. He left Jordan in the l980s to join the Mujahidin in
Afghanistan fighting the Russians 

*  He was arrested in Jordan in 1992 and was jailed for seven years for
plotting against the government 

*  In early 2000 al-Zarqawi travelled to Peshawar, in Pakistan, where he
allegedly first met Osama bin Laden 

*  He is believed to have masterminded the suicide bombings in Amman on
November 9, 2005, and he might also have been behind the Madrid train
bombings of March 11, 2004. He has also claimed credit for attacks in Iraq
and the beheading of the American hostage Nicholas Berg 

*  According to a report in 2005, al-Zarqawi was captured by Iraqi forces in
2004 and released because they did not recognise him 

*  The bounty on him is now $25 million


 

 



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