Ayman al-Zawahiri: from Cairo physician to Al-Qaeda leader
KABUL: Al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri, who has been killed in a US drone strike in Afghanistan, was the key idealogue behind the global terror network for several decades, but never revived the status it had under charismatic founder Osama bin Laden.
The Egyptian eye doctor, 71, had a central role in Al-Qaeda’s signature attacks on US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998 and the attack on the United States itself on September 11, 2001, that left almost 3,000 dead.
But during the decade that he presided over the group following a US raid that killed bin Laden in 2011, it never recovered its prominence, as the so-called Islamic State group took the lead in the militant movement, seizing large swathes of territory in Iraq and Syria and declaring a caliphate.
But even as some analysts said Zawahiri was increasingly aged and slow, he appeared to be seeking to rebuild the group anew in partnership with the Taliban since they seized control of Afghanistan last August.
“Justice has been delivered and this terrorist leader is no more,” President Joe Biden said as he announced Zawahiri’s death in a US drone strike in Kabul, where he had apparently moved after hiding for years on the Afghan-Pakistan border.
Bin Laden’s doctor
Zawahiri grew up in a comfortable household in Cairo before he turned to dissident politics.
He became involved with Egypt’s far-right religious community at a young age and was reportedly arrested at 15 for joining the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood.
He was jailed for three years in Egypt for militancy and was implicated in the 1981 assassination of president Anwar Sadat and the massacre of foreign tourists in the city of Luxor in 1997.
He then linked up with bin Laden in Afghanistan, becoming Al-Qaeda’s main strategist — and, underscoring their closeness, serving as bin Laden’s personal doctor.
He was one of five signatories to bin Laden’s 1998 “fatwa” calling for attacks against Americans, and he began appearing regularly at the Al-Qaeda leader’s side.
It was often up to Zawahiri — identifiable by a prominent lump on his forehead — to motivate the group’s followers with his hectoring video appearances, jabbing his finger and staring from behind heavy-rimmed glasses.
Like bin Laden, he vanished after the September 11, 2001 attacks, surviving repeated attempts on his life and re-emerging after reports that he had already died.
But he stayed in US sights, with a $25 million bounty on his head for the 1998 Africa attacks.
Overshadowed by Islamic State
Zawahiri took command of Al-Qaeda in 2011 after US Navy SEALs swooped on bin Laden’s home and killed him at point-blank range.
The new leader remained at large around the Afghan-Pakistan border, with a much-diminished organization, overshadowed by the Islamic State.
Yet Al-Qaeda was able to maintain a security threat through potent franchises in Yemen, Africa and East Asia.
Analysts described Zawahiri’s leadership as more of an advisory board than a coherent, centralized command.
Analysts Colin Clarke and Asfandyar Mir wrote in Foreign Policy that while Zawahiri had “conjured less of a personality cult” than bin Laden, he was just as dangerous for the United States.
“While Al-Qaeda has not been able to replicate an assault like 9/11, that’s also a naive metric of success,” they said.
He never shied from publicly threatening his enemies, and maintained allies with those, like the Taliban, who were turned off by Islamic State’s tactics, which targeted fellow Muslims.
“Zawahiri’s call for unity and his general lack of interest in outbidding violence enabled Al-Qaeda to portray itself to its supporters and potential recruits as the more reliable jihadi front opposite the Islamic State,” Clarke and Mir wrote.
New life with the Taliban
The Taliban’s rise to control Afghanistan appeared to give the group a hope for a stronger future.
A United Nations report in July said that Zawahiri recently showed “increased comfort and ability to communicate” with close allies in the Taliban administration.
Zawahiri was unlikely to embark on international attacks in the short term to avoid embarrassing the new Kabul leadership, the report said.
Nevertheless, it said, “the international context is favourable to Al-Qaeda, which intends to be recognized again as the leader of global jihad.”
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