Terrorism

US keeps up unrelenting pressure on al-Qaeda operatives, affiliates

By Samah Abdul Fattah

Smoke rises in Kabul on July 31, 2022, following a US drone strike that killed al-Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahiri. [AFP]

Smoke rises in Kabul on July 31, 2022, following a US drone strike that killed al-Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahiri. [AFP]

From the mountains of Afghanistan to Syria's battlegrounds, the United States relentlessly hunts al-Qaeda operatives, with precision strikes and local alliances steadily dismantling the extremist network's capabilities.

"The United States sensed the danger inherent in the spread of al-Qaeda's ideology and its offshoots early on," military analyst Yahya Mohammed Ali told Salaam Times affiliate Al-Fassel, noting it has played a pioneering role in confronting extremism.

US counterterrorism campaigns have yielded "successive successes," Ali said, built on what analysts identify as three core elements: targeted strikes, intelligence gathering and cooperation with regional forces.

From the 2011 raid that killed Osama bin Laden in his Pakistani hideout to a 2022 drone strike that eliminated his successor Ayman al-Zawahiri in Kabul, US capabilities have grown increasingly sophisticated.

US soldiers train with members of the Free Syrian Army (formerly Jaish Maghawir al-Thawra) near al-Tanf garrison on November 20. [Operation Inherent Resolve]

US soldiers train with members of the Free Syrian Army (formerly Jaish Maghawir al-Thawra) near al-Tanf garrison on November 20. [Operation Inherent Resolve]

The al-Zawahiri operation marked a milestone as "the first known over-the-horizon strike by the US on a target in Afghanistan since Washington withdrew its forces from the country," AFP reported.

Using advanced surveillance and a specialized Hellfire R9X missile to minimize civilian casualties, according to ABC News, the strike exemplified tactical finesse.

In September, the US military struck al-Qaeda affiliate Hurras al-Deen in northwest Syria, killing senior leader Marwan Bassam Abd-al-Rauf and eight others.

This followed the killing of another of the group's top-tier leaders, Abu-Abd al-Rahman al-Makki, barely a month earlier.

Beyond direct strikes

The US strategy extends beyond direct strikes, with military analyst Wael Abdul Muttalib noting that US forces train indigenous fighters -- the "owners of the land" -- to maintain security after US withdrawal.

In Iraq, this dual approach proved decisive. "In addition to numerous kinetic operations against al-Qaeda leadership, US leaders also partnered with local leaders to isolate them politically," said Anthony Pfaff, a scholar with the Atlantic Council.

"As a result, the United States and its Iraqi partners were able to drive al-Qaeda leadership from major urban areas," he added.

This template has shown similar success in Syria, where US forces work closely with Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). "The coordination between them has been striking and achieves operational objectives with precision," Abdul Muttalib said.

Technology remains a crucial force multiplier. Platforms like MQ-9 Reaper drones and sophisticated surveillance systems enable precise targeting and minimize risks.

"The armed forces have leveraged advanced technology not only to secure victories but also to preserve the lives of soldiers and reduce losses," Abdul Muttalib said.

While al-Qaeda's capability has deteriorated severely across Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria, Ali cautioned that sleeper cells persist, though they "no longer pose a real threat" in these regions.

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