Now, a lot of you might not be as familiar with al Qaeda's Fazul Mohammed as some of the other higher ups but this is the guy in Somalia who the U.S. alone has taken more than one pot shot with cruise missiles over the past 4 years...well, there are now unconfirmed reports that Fazul Mohammed was killed in a checkpoint firefight in Somalia. Fazul Mohammed is also the al Qaeda figure who was integral in the bombings of the Kenya and Tanzania embassies of America.
From the report at The Long War Journal:
Somali officials claimed today that Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, al Qaeda's leader in East Africa and a senior Shabaab commander, was killed at a Somali military checkpoint in Mogadishu earlier this week. The report is unconfirmed. Fazul is one of the most wanted terrorists in East Africa for his role in attacks on US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania as well as his role within Shabaab.
News of Fazul's reported death came from Kenya's top police official, who said Somali officials claimed the terrorist was one of two killed on June 11.
"We have received that communication from authorities in Somalia. We have been told that there were two terrorists who were killed in Somalia on Wednesday last week," Kenyan Police Commissioner Mathew Iteere told AFP. The identity of one of the two dead Shabaab leaders had "been given as Fazul Mohammed."
"TFG forces have confirmed they gunned him down at a roadblock on Wednesday," Iteere later told The Nation.
Fazul was carrying "a South African passport in the name of Daniel Robinson" and was carrying more than $40,000 in cash, Sky News reported. "The passport, issued April 13, 2009, indicated that its bearer left South Africa for Tanzania on March 19 and was granted a visa there."
An unnamed Shabaab leader told AFP that Fazul was killed.
Now, I'm not going to put much stock in anything that comes out of Somalia as being true or accurate so I wouldn't doubt it for a minute that this information is false or erroneous but I do find the info that he was carrying a South African passport as interesting - in other words, I am encouraged that the report is that detailed.
If this is true, it's going to be a big downer to al Shabaab and al Qaeda in general - al Qaeda has bin Laden dead, al Awlawki in Yemen dodging hellfires weekly now and now this leader in eastern Africa is dead - it would definitely leave some vacuums in the upper levels. Let's hope, for once, that the Somalis are right about something.
Al Qaeda's East Africa chief Fazul Mohammed killed in Somalia: report
Somali officials claimed today that Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, al Qaeda's leader in East Africa and a senior Shabaab commander, was killed at a Somali military checkpoint in Mogadishu earlier this week. The report is unconfirmed. Fazul is one of the most wanted terrorists in East Africa for his role in attacks on US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania as well as his role within Shabaab.
News of Fazul's reported death came from Kenya's top police official, who said Somali officials claimed the terrorist was one of two killed on June 11.
"We have received that communication from authorities in Somalia. We have been told that there were two terrorists who were killed in Somalia on Wednesday last week," Kenyan Police Commissioner Mathew Iteere told AFP. The identity of one of the two dead Shabaab leaders had "been given as Fazul Mohammed."
"TFG forces have confirmed they gunned him down at a roadblock on Wednesday," Iteere later told The Nation.
Fazul was carrying "a South African passport in the name of Daniel Robinson" and was carrying more than $40,000 in cash, Sky News reported. "The passport, issued April 13, 2009, indicated that its bearer left South Africa for Tanzania on March 19 and was granted a visa there."
An unnamed Shabaab leader told AFP that Fazul was killed.
"One of the men that was killed near Mogadishu was Fazul Abdullah, may Allah bless his soul. He is not dead as thousands like him are still in the fight against the enemy of Allah," the Shabaab commander said.
Neither Shabaab nor al Qaeda has released an official martyrdom statement announcing Fazul's death.
A US intelligence official who tracks al Qaeda in East Africa told The Long War Journal he was aware of the report and is awaiting confirmation of Fazul's death.
If Fazul is confirmed killed, he would be the last of the three al Qaeda operatives wanted for the 1998 suicide attacks on the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. In September 2009, US Special Operations Forces killed Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan during a raid south of Mogadishu. And in early 2007, Abu Tahla al Sudani was killed during fighting with Ethiopian forces.
Fazul, a 21-year veteran of al Qaeda, is considered one of the terror group's top commanders in eastern Africa. Also, he is one of several non-Somalis to hold top leadership positions in Shabaab. A senior US intelligence official described Fazul as one of al Qaeda's "most dangerous and most capable leaders."
"He has been at the top of our list for some time," the official told The Long War Journal.
Fazul joined al Qaeda after traveling to Pakistan in 1990. He was a member of the al Qaeda team that participated in the Battle of Mogadishu in October 1993. Two US Black Hawk helicopters were shot down and 18 US soldiers were killed during the heavy street fighting.
He was responsible for planning the 1998 bombings of the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, as well as the November 2002 attacks in Mombasa, Kenya in which a car bomb struck a hotel and missiles were fired at an Israeli airliner. He also served as the intelligence chief for the Islamic Courts during its reign in 2006. Fazul went on to serve as the operations chief for al Qaeda in East Africa.
In November 2009, Osama bin Laden named Fazul as the head of al Qaeda in East Africa. He replaced Nabhan, who was killed by US special operations forces. Fazul's promotion was announced at a ceremony held by Shabaab and attended by top Shabaab leaders, including Sheikh Mukhtar Abu Zubayr, the terror group's spiritual leader.
"I will honestly perform my duties following my appointment to this new big position by Sheikh Osama bin Laden," Fazul told those in attendance.
The US has targeted Fazul in several strikes since 2006. Fazul was previously thought to have been killed in a US naval strike in 2007, after Ethiopia invaded Somalia to bring down the Islamic Courts, Shabaab's predecessor. The US Navy targeted Fazul in a naval battle off the coast of Puntland in June 2007. A large group of Yemenis, Afghans, Central Asians, Arabs, and Somalis were reported to be accompanying Fazul.
The following year, in August 2008, Fazul narrowly escaped a raid in Kenya.
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