More great news from the war on terror. The man responsible for Al Qaeda's global operations is in custody. US intelligence got him. Pakistan seizes 'al Qaeda No. 3' Wednesday, May 4, 2005 Posted: 12:46 PM EDT (1646 GMT) LAHORE, Pakistan (CNN) -- The alleged number three man in al Qaeda -- believed responsible for the terror group's global operations -- has been captured in Pakistan's frontier province with Afghanistan, Pakistani and U.S. officials have confirmed. U.S. President George W. Bush on Wednesday immediately hailed the arrest of Abu Faraj al-Libbi, and that of 10 other suspected al Qaeda members, as a "critical victory in the war on terror." Pakistan's information minister, Pakistani intelligence officials and U.S. counterterrorism authorities told CNN that al-Libbi and three other al Qaeda suspects were arrested Monday in Mardan, a city in a northwest Pakistani province on the border of Afghanistan. That frontier province, U.S. intelligence reports have consistently said, is where it is also believed that al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and his top deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri, are currently hiding. Al-Libbi -- who is blamed for masterminding two assassination attempts against Pakistan's President Gen. Pervez Musharraf -- is a Libyan and has a $1 million bounty on his head. "He was the most wanted man in Pakistan and he's a big catch," said Pakistani Information Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmad in an interview with CNN. "It's a good sign and we are going in the right direction." Bush said at a conference he was holding on Social Security that "al-Libbi was a top general for bin Laden. He was a major facilitator and a chief planner for the al Qaeda network. "His arrest removes a dangerous enemy who was a direct threat for America." Bush praised the Pakistani government for its "strong cooperation in the war on terror." "We'll stay on the offensive until al Qaeda is defeated," the president added. In Washington, U.S. counterterrorism officials told CNN al-Libbi's capture was due to U.S. intelligence. The officials suggested that someone working for U.S. intelligence was providing information to the CIA. One U.S. intelligence official added that al-Libbi's capture was "very significant." Ahmad said there had not yet been any requests from the United States to interview al-Libbi. In a phone interview with the Arabic television network Al-Jazeera, Ahmad denied media reports that the raid that captured al-Libbi also netted documents that put authorities closer to capturing bin Laden. In another raid, this one early Wednesday in Bajore on the northwestern frontier near the Afghan border, intelligence officials and local police told CNN seven al Qaeda members were arrested. The operation began with a raid on a house by Pakistani army commandos, security agency officers and helicopters, officials said. Three of the men arrested are Afghan, three are Pakistani and one's nationality is not yet known, the officials added. U.S. counterterrorism officials believe al-Libbi took on the role of No. 3 in al Qaeda following the March 2003 capture of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. They said he was responsible for plotting attacks against the U.S. homeland. However, intelligence officials have said that al-Libbi has not had effective control over the Uzbek and Chechen factions of al Qaeda in Pakistan, as Sheikh Mohammed did, and that the Arab contingent of al Qaeda was not getting along with the other two groups. A close lieutenant of al-Libbi, who was among six suspects identified as Pakistan's "Most Wanted Terrorists" in a poster campaign last year, was picked up in December, the officials said. CNN's Syed Mohsin Naqvi, National Security Correspondent David Ensor in Washington and Senior International Correspondent Nic Robertson in London contributed to this report. http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/asiapcf/05/04/pakistan.arrest/index.html
I just caught that on foxnews....this sounds like great news. I hope they use any and all means to get info out of this prick.
Pakistan Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao said, "definitely interrogation is going to take place". I hope he gets the "Khalid Sheikh Mohammed treatment": Handed over to US authorities in March of 2003, and today the location where he is being held is "unknown". Muahahahahahahaha
awesome! i just hope it leads to something...and if it doesnt....just beat the life out of him on pay per view and find the next one
its funny how cnn.com has zoomed into the guys face to make him look more like a madman....hilarious media tricks
"zoomed in"? It's a bust shot. Are you upset that he looks bad? He looks like ****. The American/Pakistani forces and intelligence agents have caused the man to be on the run for so long that he has features such as sunked, tired looking eyes and a skin condition. Not exactly a picture of stability. Do you not think that Al Qaeda is a bunch of madmen? Newsflash, brah, THEY ARE! They are the scum of the earth, plain and simple.
well first of all i don't think that its a huge organization...i think its something made up for silly little people like you to understand as an "enemy".....i just think it was BinLaden in Afghan...he had his small group of guys working for him..other than that there is no Al_Queida organization...IMHO yes they are madman...obviously...anyone killing other innocent people is a madman... to me war sucks...and all i see is innocent people in Iraq being killed everyday...why?...for what?..freedom is a $hitty excuse....nobody from a foreign country should be involved in bringing "freedom" to another country...that's my view. though i don't know your education level but its also a psychy thing.. i was just pointing someting out... you are a blinded by your emotions...or just don't understand squat.
whoa...easy champ. he's blinded?? the facts are the facts. every intelligence report from every nation in the world says Al Qaeda is more than just a couple of guys throwing back suds in the desert with Osama. you can choose to believe whatever you want...but don't pretend you're better informed than international intelligence communities.
Hey Vincecarter! Do you like being an American? If you do you might want to thank the French for helping America win its independence from GB!
excluding the US intelligence community that is. Methinks that the distinction between being part of and being associated to some degree with al Qaeda is being blurred by GWB et. al. for their own political advantage. IOW Rove wants AQ to be an ill defined organization. When politically expedient before and after the war, AQ was and is made part of the Iraq problem,