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02/06/2010 | Was Mustafa Abu Yazid al Qaeda's #3?

Bill Roggio

As reports of the death of al Qaeda leader Mustafa Abu Yazid continue to break, US administration and intelligence officials, and the media, are eager to declare that he was al Qaeda's third in command.

 

But do you rememberback on Dec. 12, 2009, when Abu Yahya al Libi was reported killed and officials were quick to declare him al Qaeda's #3? We do. And we also addressed the issue of al Qaeda's #3 then. Here is the post, republished in full. The same logic applies to Yazid; he was one of the most important leaders in al Qaeda but that doesn't mean he was #3, or that the position even exists:
It is always interesting to watch the press coverage when the rumors begin to fly after a senior al Qaeda leader is thought to have been killed in a US airstrike inside Pakistan. Invariably, after it is determined that Osama bin Laden and Ayman al Zawahiri were not killed in the attack, a news organization or two almost always identifies the thought-to-be-slain al Qaeda leader as the Number Three, or the third in the chain of command. This happened yesterday, when Abu Yahya al Libi was rumored to have been killed (that rumor was incorrect, as Saleh al Somali, al Qaeda's external operations chief, was later identified as the operative thought to have been killed). Here is how CBS News described al Libi:
Earlier, Pakistan media had incorrectly reported that the strike killed al Qaeda's number 3 in command, Abu Yahya al-Libi.

This isn't to single out CBS News; it won't be the first or last organization to do this. Previously, news organizations ihave dentified Abu Hamza Rabia (operations chief, killed in December 2005), Abu Laith al Libi (military commander, killed in January 2008), Osama al Kini (external operations chief, killed in January 2009), and a host of al Qaeda leaders as the number 3 after their deaths. While each of these men were top al Qaeda leaders, identifying them as the third in command (a position that many intelligence officials I speak to do not believe even exists) does little to further the understanding of al Qaeda's network.

The Long War Journal (Estados Unidos)

 


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