While President Obama has overseen a largely secret war that has
killed dozens of top al Qaeda commanders since 2009, one master
terrorist has managed to elude U.S. forces: Nasser al-Wuhayshi.
Today,
Wuhayshi is a top target for the United States, after intelligence
agencies monitored a conference call last week that served as a virtual
board meeting for al Qaeda’s central leadership and the group's global
affiliates—and in which the Yemeni-born jihadist was promoted to the position of general manager
for al Qaeda operations. At the request of its sources, The Daily Beast
is withholding details about the technology al Qaeda used to conduct
the conference call. U.S. intelligence officers say Wuhayshi is leading
an attack plan that could call on resources from al Qaeda’s franchises
across North Africa, the Middle East, and Southwest Asia.
Known at
times as Abu-Bashir, Wuhayshi was one of Osama bin Laden’s closest
associates, a top lieutenant who worked with the terror ringleader in
the 1990s. When al Qaeda took up residence in Afghanistan, Wuhayshi was
picked to lead of one of the group’s four training camps in Tarnak
Farms, where bin Laden himself often stayed. In his 2010 memoir, Guarding bin Laden: My Life in al Qaeda,
former bodyguard Nasser al-Bahri wrote that Wuhayshi would often stay
with bin Laden in the mornings as he worked in his Tarnak Farms office
in the months and years before the September 11, 2001, attacks on the
U.S.
Wuhayshi, who had studied Islam in Yemen, was sometimes
referred to as bin Laden’s personal secretary during that period. When
U.S.-led forces struck Afghanistan, al-Bahri said Wuhayshi and Ayman
al-Zawahiri, bin Laden’s deputy at the time and now the leader of al
Qaeda, stuck with bin Laden when he was on the run. “During his flight
to the caves in Tora Bora, where he would face 12 days of bombardment
from the Americans, bin Laden only wanted a tiny number of his most
faithful followers with him, to minimize the risk of being spotted,”
al-Bahri wrote. “Ayman al-Zawahiri, Nasser al-Wuhayshi, and Hamza
al-Ghamdi stayed with him, along with a handful of Saudi guards.”
When
al Qaeda’s senior leadership fled the country, Zawahiri and bin Laden
holed up in Pakistan. But al-Wuhayshi and others traveled to Iran,
according to al-Bahri. While in Iran, al-Bahri wrote that the al Qaeda
leaders initially received assistance from Sunni Muslims in the province
of Baluchistan, who helped them escape to countries around the gulf
region. However, Iranian authorities kept al Qaeda officials in
“assigned residences in an area that was under surveillance.” While
another al Qaeda leader in Iran, Saif al-Adel, was free to marry an
Iranian woman and even publish pieces online, Wuhayshi was not so lucky.
The Iranians extradited Wuhayshi to Yemen, where he was arrested and
sent to prison.
According to Gregory Johnsen’s 2012 book, The Last Refuge: Yemen, al Qaeda, and America’s War in Arabia,
Wuhayshi emerged as something of a spiritual leader to al Qaeda
militants in the prison. By 2006, the cell had a plan. Wuhayshi and
others began to dig a tunnel out of the prison—to a nearby mosque.
Johnsen writes that Wuhayshi and al Qaeda operatives would often loudly
recite passages from the Quran to disguise the sound of their makeshift
shovels and picks. On February 3, 2006, Wuhayshi and 22 other prisoners
emerged from the tunnel and into the neighboring mosque, according to
Johnsen, and then filed out into the street in twos and threes.
The jailbreak proved to be the genesis of al Qaeda’s branch in Yemen, now known as al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.
In 2007, Wuhayshi was elected as the group’s leader, but he was ready
to move on. According to an August 2010 letter found during the U.S.
raid on bin Laden’s headquarters in Abbottabad, Pakistan, bin Laden
politely rejected Wuhayshi’s request for Anwar al-Awlaki, who became the
first American-born member of al Qaeda to be targeted in a drone
strike, to be promoted to be the leader of the Yemen affiliate.
“How
excellent would it be if you ask brother Basir [Wuhayshi] to send us
the résumé, in detail and lengthy, of brother Anwar al-‘Awlaqi, as well
as the facts he relied on when recommending him, while informing him
that his recommendation is considered,” bin Laden wrote, in the letter
to Attiya Abdul Rahman, an al Qaeda leader who was killed in an August
2011 drone strike. “However, we would like to be reassured more. For
example, we here become reassured of the people when they go to the line
and get examined there.”
One U.S. intelligence official told The
Daily Beast that Wuhayshi had designs on a more senior role in al
Qaeda. The letter that prompted bin Laden’s response has not been
declassified.
After bin Laden’s death in 2011, Wuhayshi and his
affiliate became one of the first groups within al Qaeda to endorse
Zawahiri for the top position. Bruce Riedel,
an expert on al Qaeda at the Brookings Institution and a former senior
CIA analyst, said Wuhayshi had a connection with the Egyptian-born
commander. “He has been loyal to Zawahiri,” Riedel said. “They were
quick to endorse him in 2011. I don’t know the grounds for it, those
incidents back in Afghanistan before 9/11, but there was a bond between
the two of them,” he said.
That
bond appears to have paid off. In the virtual meeting the U.S.
monitored last week among al Qaeda leaders, Zawahiri promoted Wuhayshi
to the post of “Ma’sul al-Amm,” an Arabic phrase that translates to
“general manager.” It means Wuhayshi now will be able to call on the
resources of al Qaeda’s affiliates throughout the Muslim world,
according to one U.S. intelligence official. It also means the U.S.
military and the CIA will be redoubling their efforts to find him.
news.yahoo.com
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