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SR-25
06-08-2006, 08:33 AM
How They Got Zarqawi:The Manhunt That Snared Him
Intelligence breakthroughs and a hot tip about a meeting spelled his doom

Posted Thursday, Jun. 08, 2006
In the end, the savagery of Musab al-Zarqawi may have earned him too many enemies. The terrorist responsible for some of the most gruesome killings in Iraq was killed in a joint U.S.-Iraqi military operation Wednesday, after the U.S. and its allies had finally located him. A well-placed intelligence source in Jordan told TIME that the CIA was tipped off after Jordanian intelligence learned of a meeting that Zarqawi planned to hold in the town of Baquba, north of Baghdad. His safe house was targeted in an air attack, and, says the same source, the Jordanian-born leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq was killed in the bombing. A senior Jordanian official confirmed that "there was a Jordanian security role in this." The official said he believed the breakthrough was a result of "cumulative intelligence," including from the recent arrest last month of a senior operative in the group Al-Qaeda in Iraq. U.S. officials have said fingerprint and photographic evidence confirm Zarqawi's identity. Jihadi Web sites are also reported to have announced his death.

The takedown was largely a military effort. But a U.S. official told TIME that American intelligence operatives played an important role in determining that Sheik Abd-al-Rahman, Zarqawi's spiritual adviser was a key link who could lead to Zarqawi himself. "Intelligence was useful in identifying this individual and his importance to Zarqawi," said the official. "It's as though you had identified Frank Nitti with the knowledge that eventually he would lead you to Al Capone. This was the culmination of a huge amount of effort."

The ability of the U.S. and its allies to isolate and eliminate Zarqawi may be a reflection of the Qaeda leader's growing isolation within Iraq. Six weeks ago, Zarqawi released an unprecedented video showing himself walking around Iraq, unmasked and in daylight, firing weapons and boasting of his continued primacy in the fight against the U.S. But that video itself may have been a response to growing rumors that the 38-year-old Jordanian was being marginalized within the insurgency out of concern by other leaders that his televised beheadings of helpless hostages was alienating even many Iraqis sympathetic to the insurgency, and that his strategy of mass-murder of Shi'ites in the hope of provoking a civil war was a road to disaster. Even other leaders of al-Qaeda had publicly questioned some of these tactics, while some of the more nationalist leaders of the insurgency who had been quietly negotiating with the U.S. and Iraqi government had made no secret of their animosity toward Zarqawi and the al-Qaeda agenda. The announcement, just a day before Zarqawi's death, that the new Iraqi government would release some 2,500 Sunnis imprisoned for assisting the insurgency, suggests that rapprochement between the government and the Sunni nationalist element of the insurgency may be accelerating, which was bad news for Zarqawi.

The fact that intelligence agencies were suddenly able to pinpoint the location of a man who had eluded capture for three years, during which his terror operations left thousands of Iraqis dead, suggests that some of those close enough to know Zarqawi's whereabouts may have been ready to shop him to his enemies. Not necessarily, of course: The intel services could have simply gotten lucky, or Zarqawi could have made a mistake. Either way, a key agent in the chaos gripping Iraq has now been taken out of the equation. "It is wonderful," said the Jordanian official. "Another window of hope that things hopefully, Inshallah, will be on track."

With reporting by Timothy Burger/Washington and Saad Hattar/Amman

http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1201981,00.html

SB 405
06-08-2006, 08:47 AM
Good to hear but these guys are like Cockroaches. One goes down and a hundred are ready to take his place. I also worry that within a month something major will go down because of this dude getting greased. On a lighter note,does this mean everytime the news talks about this story we are going to be subject to watching that terrorist training film time and time again showing those guys on the monkey bars and popping up out of that hole?:rolleyes: What's the old saying...if I had a dime for everytime I've watched the video.

Sheriff
06-08-2006, 09:40 AM
On a lighter note,does this mean everytime the news talks about this story we are going to be subject to watching that terrorist training film time and time again showing those guys on the monkey bars and popping up out of that hole?:rolleyes: What's the old saying...if I had a dime for everytime I've watched the video.

LOL how true! :lol:

junebughunter
06-13-2006, 12:35 PM
How you identify somebody after dropping several 500 lb "bunker buster" bombs on them is beyond me. As happy and rejoiceful as some people seem to be. I can't help but feel a little saddened that killing somebody is considered "progress"

I suppose I'm glad the earth is a slightly better place now though...

johnnyd
06-13-2006, 03:32 PM
It's progress when we do it but barbarian when anyone else does it. That's how it's alway been, how it'll always be. I think real progress would be if society understood that.

SB 405
06-13-2006, 03:36 PM
To quote Jeff Foxworthy...."he needed killin"

Mac
06-13-2006, 03:59 PM
To quote Jeff Foxworthy...."he needed killin"
Well said! :badgrin: Call it barbaric if you wish, but there are definitely certain people on this earth who "need killin'".

SB 405
06-13-2006, 04:12 PM
Barbaric is the only language these people understand. They need to realize that when they show video of them "loppin" off peoples heads a price must be paid.

Cameron
06-13-2006, 04:41 PM
Have you all seen the videos of the American hostages having their heads cut off?

Saying "their heads were cut off" sounds too clean. I watched one of these videos yesterday. It was honestly the most horrific thing I've ever seen on-screen.

Basically, these people had their heads sawed off with small pocketknives. It was very messy, and it took several minutes to accomplish. During which time the hostages were screaming...

This is how Al-Zaqawri's al-qaeda executed the American hostages.

He was a terrible, monstrous man. The world is a better place without him. Maybe someone else will take his place, who knows? But at least one horrible, sadistic, sick person is gone.

makakona
06-13-2006, 04:51 PM
yeah, it was a good thing we never got a hold of dear old adolf. for all the lampshades he made out of people, he was quite the painter and did his best to save the poor cattle from being slaughtered for food. what a guy, sad to see him go.

are you SERIOUS?! while i would rather he were alive and in custody, the world is far better off without some people running amuck. quick death was too good for a monster like him. he deserved to rot away. he was a despicable excuse for a human and i'm quite glad he won't be able to run his pathetic show anymore. it's horrifically sad to me that people think he was better off alive and free than dead. what has the world come to...

Cameron
06-13-2006, 05:25 PM
Makakona, that was extremely well-said. :smile:

For those who say that Al-Zarquawi should have been captured alive... just think what that would have entailed.

U.S. servicemen would have had to enter his house...

Do you honestly think al-Zarqawi would have just put his hands up and surrendered? Hell, no! Taking him at gunpoint would have inevitably cost the life of one of our soldiers.

Al-Zarqawi is not worth the life of an American soldier. The 500-pound bombs were entirely appropriate and really, a pretty easy way to go, compared with the Americans whose necks were sawed open by his goons.

Mac
06-13-2006, 05:35 PM
After seeing the stunts that Saddam Hussein has staged after he was taken into custody, I will wholeheartedly offer my opinion that the world would have been much better off if somebody just would have dropped a couple frag and WP grenades into the hole he was found hiding in and sealed it back up. He is still openly defiant toward the rest of the world, strongly proclaims that the court has no authority over him, and has had several of the attorneys and judges related to his case killed. Al-Zarqawi, if taken alive, would have done the same thing that Hussein is doing, and would still be running his organization from behind the scenes. "Alive and in-custody" means they get a second chance - that's more than they gave any of their victims, and more than they deserve.

makakona
06-13-2006, 09:04 PM
good point, mac. just because i'd rather he be alive and in custody doesn't mean i think he should be living life the way hussein is. ;) i can be a bleeding heart about a lot of things, but mass murderers ain't one of 'em. forget a fair trial... everyone knows what sadaam did, let's keep moving...

redhead
06-13-2006, 09:15 PM
quick death was too good for a monster like him. he deserved to rot away.
Loss of human life is sad, but humans and monsters who are off based religous zealots deserve to get to their 72 virgins as soon as possible. The US Military stated (http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/meast/06/12/zarqawi.autopsy.ap/index.html[/url) that he suffered for 52 minutes. To me, that is good news.

BTW- I do agree with your post 100% just wanted to show that he did suffer some.