NATO says senior Al-Qaeda militant killed in Afghanistan

KABUL: NATO said that Al-Qaeda's second in command in Afghanistan had been killed in an air strike near the Pakistani border.The US-led International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan said...

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AFP
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NATO says senior Al-Qaeda militant killed in Afghanistan
KABUL: NATO said that Al-Qaeda's second in command in Afghanistan had been killed in an air strike near the Pakistani border.

The US-led International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan said Saudi-born Sakhr al-Taifi, also known as Mushtaq and Nasim, commanded foreign fighters and directed attacks on NATO and Afghan troops.

It described him as Al-Qaeda's "second highest leader in Afghanistan", saying he frequently travelled between Afghanistan and Pakistan, "carrying out commands from senior Al-Qaeda leadership".

He also supplied weapons and equipment to insurgents, and managed the transport of insurgent fighters into Afghanistan, the military said.

NATO said he was killed in an air strike on Sunday with "one additional Al-Qaeda terrorist in Watahpur district, Kunar province" which borders Pakistan.

The United States announced last year that it would focus military operations in Afghanistan towards the eastern provinces, which border Pakistan's lawless tribal belt where US officials say Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked militants have sanctuary.

According to a bin Laden letter released by the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point in the United States, he recommended that Al-Qaeda fighters head to Kunar to escape US drone strikes concentrated in the Pakistani tribal district of Waziristan.

He said Kunar was fortified "due to its rougher terrain and the many mountains, rivers, and trees and it can accommodate hundreds of the brothers without being spotted by the enemy," according to one of the letters released by West Point.