Asia-Pacific Region Intelligence Center
Who's who in al-Qaeda 본문
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Few details about key figures have been officially released. BBC News online pieces together what little is known about some of the key al-Qaeda suspects. |
1.At Large(잡히지 않은 알 카에다 지도부)
(1)Osama Bin Laden(오사마 빈 라덴)
Who is Osama Bin Laden? | ||
He is accused of being behind a number of atrocities, including the 1998 bombing of two US embassies in East Africa and - most notoriously - the attacks on New York and Washington on 11 September 2001. Since then, his al-Qaeda network has been linked indirectly to bombings on the island of Bali in Indonesia and its capital Jakarta, as well as with devastating suicide attacks in Casablanca, Riyadh and Istanbul. President Bush said in his State of the Union address in January 2004: "We are tracking al-Qaeda around the world, and nearly two-thirds of their known leaders have now been captured or killed." However, a US intelligence report released in July 2007 said al-Qaeda leaders had regrouped in Pakistani tribal areas, and that the network posed a greater threat than at any time since September 2001. US officials said they believed Bin Laden was in Pakistan, and that the US would be prepared to send forces in to eliminate him. Pakistan responded angrily, challenging the US to prove he was there. Successive operations involving coalition troops inside Afghanistan, and Pakistani forces along their side of the border, have so far failed to track down the al-Qaeda leader, and his precise whereabouts remain a mystery.
Mild-mannered and polite
Those who have met Bin Laden describe him as a mild-mannered man, who is generally polite and hospitable to strangers, yet he has become the most hated and implacable opponent of the US and all it stands for. Born in Saudi Arabia in 1957 to a wealthy Yemeni father and a Syrian mother, he had a comfortable childhood. |
Like his father, who had made his fortune from the construction business and had close ties with the Saudi royal family, the young Bin Laden had religious leanings.
At school and university, he was a member of the Muslim Brotherhood.
When the Soviets invaded Afghanistan in 1979, he went to Pakistan, where he met Afghan rebel leaders resisting the occupation.
Later, he returned to Saudi Arabia to collect money and supplies for the Afghan resistance, the mujahideen.
He made further trips, delivering aid and arms, and eventually joining the fight against the Soviets.
Rebel commander
As a wealthy Saudi, he stood out and acquired a following.
Egyptians, Lebanese, Turks and others - numbering thousands in Bin Laden's estimate - joined their Afghan Muslim brothers in the struggle against a Soviet ideology that spurned religion
Bin Laden opened a guesthouse in Peshawar - a stopping-off point for Arab mujahideen fighters. Eventually, their numbers became so large he built camps for them inside Afghanistan.
He gave the umbrella group for his guesthouse and camps a name: al-Qaeda, Arabic for "the base".
As a military commander, Bin Laden was respected for his organisational skills, his bravery and, above all, for his ability to survive.
American backing
The Afghan jihad against the Soviet army was backed by American dollars and had the blessing of the governments of Saudi Arabia and Pakistan.
![]() Bin Laden is accused of involvement in the 1998 US embassy bombings |
But Bin Laden quickly became disillusioned by the lack of recognition for his achievements.
This turned to anger when the Saudis turned down his offer to provide an army of mujahideen to defend the kingdom after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait.
Instead, half a million US soldiers were invited on to Saudi soil - a historic betrayal in Bin Laden's eyes.
Bin Laden became an out-and-out opponent of the Saudi regime and began to direct his efforts against the US and its allies in the Middle East.
In 1991, he was expelled from the country because of his anti-government activities.
Period of radicalisation
He spent the next five years in Sudan, where he used his money to fund a number of infrastructure projects for the Islamist government in Khartoum.
The Saudi government is reported to have sought reconciliation but, when this failed, it froze his bank accounts and stripped him of his Saudi citizenship.
The US put pressure on Sudan's government to expel him, prompting Bin Laden's return to Afghanistan where he became increasingly messianic and radical.
By the mid-1990s, he was calling for a global war against Americans and Jews and in 1998, he issued his famous fatwa (religious ruling), amounting to a declaration of war against the US.
Two simultaneous bomb attacks against US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania followed a few months later.
Bin Laden never acknowledged responsibility, but several of those arrested for their part in the bombings named him as a backer.
Islamic front
Al-Qaeda's motivations and aims are varied, but include avenging perceived wrongs against Muslims, imposing a single Islamic political leadership over the Muslim world, and driving Americans and other non-Muslims from Saudi Arabia, the home of Islam's holiest sites.
After the 2001 attacks Bin Laden made a number of recorded statements, but these are now much less frequent.
He made several audio statements in early 2006 referring to contemporary events, and another appeared on a website in July 2007, though it was not clear whether it was recorded recently.
However, he has not appeared on video since October 2004. This is thought to be a security precaution or because of poor health.
But many analysts believe that even if Bin Laden were to die or be killed, his organisation has taken on a life of its own, and would continue to inspire Islamic militancy around the world.
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He is believed by some experts to have been the "operational brains" behind the 11 September 2001 attacks in the United States.
He was number two - behind only Bin Laden - in the 22 Most Wanted Terrorists List announced by the US government in 2001 and has a $25m bounty on his head. Some experts even suggest Zawahiri's Egyptian Islamic Jihad virtually took over al-Qaeda, when the two groups forged a coalition in the late 1990s. He was reportedly last seen in the eastern Afghan town of Khost in October 2001, and went into hiding after the US-led attack overthrew the Taleban. Various sources have said he may have escaped to North Africa or the Middle East, but US officials believe he is still hiding in the Afghan-Pakistan border area. 'Surrounded' Often seen beside Bin Laden in videos released to Arab television networks, Zawahiri was also thought to have served as the al-Qaeda leader's personal physician.
CIA officials said an audio tape aired on Arab television station in March 2004 - urging Pakistanis to overthrow President Pervez Musharraf - was probably the voice of Zawahiri. It came days after a major operation against al-Qaeda militants was launched by Pakistani troops in the South Waziristan tribal area, on the Afghan border. Initial speculation was that Zawahiri had been among al-Qaeda leaders surrounded by thousands of soldiers but he was never captured, and the army later conceded that many suspects may have escaped through a network of secret tunnels. Giles Foden, author of a book on the 1998 US embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania, says even labelling Zawahiri as Bin Laden's right-hand man may understate his importance. He says some analysts believe Zawahiri has been controlling much of al-Qaeda's finance operations since the end of the war in Afghanistan. Zawahiri is named in European legislation on financial sanctions against the Taleban and in documents produced by the US sanctions body, the US Treasury's office for foreign assets control.
Distinguished family Born in Egypt in 1951, Ayman al-Zawahiri, comes from a middle class family of doctors and scholars. His grandfather, Rabi'a al-Zawahiri, was the grand imam of Cairo's al-Azhar university, a centre of Islamic learning in the Arab world. He was already involved in Egypt's radical Muslim community when he was arrested at the age of 15 for being a member of the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood - the Arab world's oldest fundamentalist group. He graduated from Cairo University's medical school in 1974 and obtained a masters degree in surgery four years later. His father, who died in 1995, was a pharmacology professor at the same school. Zawahiri's wife and children were reportedly killed in a US air strike in Afghanistan in late November or early December 2001. Radical youth Zawahiri was tried along with scores of radical Islamists for their part in the 1981 assassination of President Anwar Sadat during a Cairo military parade. He was convicted and served a three-year sentence for illegal possession of arms. After his release, he left for Saudi Arabia. Soon afterwards he headed for Peshawar and later to neighbouring Afghanistan, where he established a faction of the Egyptian Islamic Jihad group. Zawahiri was in Afghanistan during the Soviet occupation in 1970s and 1980s, working as a doctor. In 1997, the US state department named him as leader of the Vanguards of Conquest group - a faction of Islamic Jihad thought to have been behind the massacre of foreign tourists in Luxor the same year. Two years later, he was sentenced to death in absentia by an Egyptian court for activities linked to Islamic Jihad. Zawahiri reportedly spent six months in the Russian custody for his alleged extremist activities in the southern republic of Dagestan. But he was released as his name was not known to Russia's secret services. Western targets Zawahiri is believed to have lived in Denmark and Switzerland in the early 1990s, sometimes travelling on a false passport. Giles Foden says Zawahiri's freewheeling role across western Europe during the early 1990s raises questions about the security and asylum policies of a number of European nations and about their refusal to act on information provided by the Egyptian government. Zawahiri appeared in a video alongside Bin Laden threatening retaliation against the United States for the detention of the Egyptian Sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman in connection with the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. Then, in 1998, he was the second of five signatories to Bin Laden's notorious 1998 "fatwa" calling for attacks against US civilians. He is also listed on the US government's indictment sheet for the 1998 US embassy bombings. He was one of the figures whose satellite telephone conversations were used as proof that Bin Laden was behind the plot. (3) Abu Hamza al-Muhajir
In a website statement, the al-Qaeda in Iraq group said Abu Hamza al-Muhajir was "knowledgeable" and had a history of fighting a holy war. Muhajir was not among the names al-Qaeda analysts had expected as a probable successor, and is thought to be a pseudonym. The US military has said it believes him to be an Egyptian militant based in Baghdad, Abu Ayyub al-Masri. He is understood to have trained in Afghanistan and helped Zarqawi form the first al-Qaeda cell in Baghdad.
(4)Sheikh Said A Saudi, Said is Bin Laden's brother-in-law and al-Qaeda's financial controller. He first linked up with Bin Laden in Sudan during the late 1990s. US investigators believe he wired money to Mohammed Atta, alleged ringleader of the hijackers, shortly before the 11 September attacks on New York and Washington. (5)Saif al-Adel
He is believed to have assumed many of the late Mohammed Atef's duties in al-Qaeda. He was a colonel in the Egyptian army but joined the mujahideen fighting to expel the Soviets from Afghanistan. He is also suspected of teaching militants to use explosives and training some of the 11 September hijackers. He has been linked to the bombings of US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998. The US further accuses him of training the Somali fighters who killed 18 US servicemen in Mogadishu in 1993. In 1987, Egypt accused Adel - whose real name is Muhammad Ibrahim Makkawi - of trying to establish a military wing of the militant Islamic group al-Jihad, and of trying to overthrow the government. (6)Abu Mohammed al-Masri Also Egyptian, he is frequently believed to use the name Abdullah Ahmed Abdullah and to be about 40 years old. He ran al-Qaeda training camps in Afghanistan, including the al-Farooq camp near Kandahar. He is also believed to have been involved in the East Africa embassy bombings. The US has put a bounty of $5m on his head. (7)Sulaiman Abu Ghaith
A former religious studies teacher, he left Kuwait in 2000. He was stripped of his citizenship after an appearance on Qatar-based al-Jazeera television in which he vowed retaliation for US air strikes against Afghanistan. Bin Laden can be seen poking fun at him in one of the videotapes released since 11 September. In July 2003, a Kuwaiti minister said the Iranian government had offered to extradite Abu Ghaith to Kuwait, but that Kuwait had refused to take him. It is unclear whether he is currently in Iranian custody, or indeed in Iran at all. (8)Thirwat Salah Shirhata Also Egyptian, Shirhata is al-Zawahiri's deputy in the Egyptian Islamic Jihad group. He has received two death sentences in absentia in Egypt for alleged terrorist activities.
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2.IN CUSTODY(검거하여 구금 중인 알카에다 지도부)
(1)Abu Faraj al-Libbi
Abu Faraj al-Libbi was arrested in Pakistan along with five other al-Qaeda suspects in May 2005, after a gun battle in Waziristan, North-West Frontier Province.
![]() Pakistan said it had seized al-Libbi after a gun battle |
He is a Libyan who is described as the mastermind of two failed attempts to assassinate Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf.
He is thought to have used Pakistan as his base, and from there was reportedly in contact with militants in the UK. Following his arrest, he was handed over by Pakistan to US custody.
(2)Khalid Sheikh Mohammed
Sheikh Mohammed, accused of masterminding the 11 September 2001 attacks, has been sent to Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.
![]() Sheikh Mohammed was captured in Pakistan in 2003 |
He had been in US custody at an undisclosed location from March 2003, when he was captured in a safe house in Pakistan.
A Kuwaiti from the Baluchistan region of Pakistan, Sheikh Mohammed grew up in a religious family and claims to have joined the Muslim Brotherhood at the age of 16.
After attending college in the United States, he went to Afghanistan to participate in the anti-Soviet jihad. It was there that he is believed first to have met Osama Bin Laden.
According to Sheikh Mohammed, he himself first pitched the idea of the aerial-style attacks on the US, calling for the hijacking of 10 jetliners on both coasts of the US and crashing nine of them.
He features prominently in the US 9/11 Commission Report on how the attacks were carried out, and its authors drew heavily on his statements during interrogations.
Testimony from Sheikh Mohammed was also used by defence lawyers for Zacarias Moussaoui, who was jailed for life in 2006 for his role in the 11 September attacks.
Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf alleges in his memoirs, published in September 2006, that Sheikh Mohammed either killed or at the least took part in the murder of US reporter Daniel Pearl in 2002.
Gen Musharraf also links Sheikh Mohammed to a foiled plot to attack Heathrow Airport in the UK with hijacked planes and claims the Kuwaiti helped lay the groundwork for the 7 July 2005 attacks in London.
(3)Abu Zubaydah
Abu Zubaydah, who is thought to have served as Bin Laden's field commander, was captured in Pakistan in March 2002 and has now been sent to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
![]() Abu Zubaydah: Captured in Pakistan |
Zubaydah, who is believed to have been born to Palestinian parents in Saudi Arabia, is also known as Zayn al-Abidin Mohammed Husain and Abd al-Hadi al-Wahab but has used dozens of other aliases.
He has strong connections with Jordanian and Palestinian groups and was sentenced to death in his absence by a Jordanian court for his role in a thwarted plot to bomb hotels there during millennium celebrations.
US officials believe he is also connected to a plan to blow up the US embassy in Sarajevo, and a plot to attack the US embassy in Paris.
According to a Senate report, Zubaydah has told US interrogators that while he believed some al-Qaeda members had good personal relationships with Iraqi government officials he was unaware of any real relationship between Baghdad and the network.
(4)Ramzi Binalshibh
Captured in Pakistan in September 2002, the Yemeni national is said to have become a key member of the al-Qaeda cell in Hamburg, Germany, after seeking asylum there in the late 1990s.
![]() Ramzi Binalshibh: Captured in Karachi |
According to officials, he met Mohammed Atta, the leader of the Hamburg cell and one of the alleged masterminds of the 11 September attacks, through a local mosque in 1997.
Intelligence officials say Binalshibh may also have been involved in the attacks on the USS Cole and a Tunisian synagogue.
He has been sent to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
(5)Abd al-Hadi al-Iraqi
Believed to have been a senior al-Qaeda operational commander planning attacks around the world.
![]() Abd al-Hadi al-Iraqi: Arrested in late 2006 |
The US said he was on his way to Iraq to take over al-Qaeda operations when he was arrested. His detention was announced by the US on 27 April 2007.
Formerly a major in the Iraqi army in the 1980s, he fought and ran training camps in Afghanistan.
Believed to be a key contact between Osama Bin Laden and killed Iraqi al-Qaeda leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
Reports said Abd al-Hadi al-Iraqi was also involved in plots to assassinate Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf.
(6)Mohammed Haydar Zammar
Zammar is believed to have been in Hamburg with Mohammed Atta and other members of his cell - including hijackers Marwan al-Shehhi and Ziad Jarrah.
![]() Mohammed Haydar Zammar: Sent to Syria |
A German citizen, he was arrested in Morocco after he left Germany in the wake of the 11 September attacks. Moroccan authorities later sent him to Syria.
Syrian interrogation is reported to have provided US investigators with details about the attack and plans for more possible al-Qaeda operations, according to reports.
(7)Ali Abdul Rahman al-Ghamdi
Described as al-Qaeda's top leader in Saudi Arabia, Ghamdi is suspected of masterminding the deadly 2003 bombings in Riyadh.
He surrendered to the Saudi authorities shortly after the attacks. His reasons for doing so remain unclear, although it is thought his family had come under immense pressure to reveal his whereabouts.
He was born in 1974 and is said to have gained battlefield experience in Afghanistan and Chechnya. He is also believed to have been present at the beginning of the battle for the Afghan cave compound at Tora Bora in late 2001 - where Osama Bin Laden is alleged to have hidden.
(8)Mohamedou Ould Slahi
Slahi is alleged to have played a key role in the recruitment of Atta's cell in Hamburg.
A Mauritanian who lived in Germany through much of the 1990s, Slahi was turned over to the United States by the government of Mauritania after 11 September on suspicion of involvement in a plot to bomb Los Angeles International Airport during the 2000 millennium celebrations.
He is believed to be held in Guantanamo Bay.
(9)Mohsen F
In November 2002, security officials in Kuwait arrested the man thought to be a senior member of al-Qaeda.
Identified only as Mohsen F, a 21-year-old Kuwaiti national, local press said he had been plotting to blow up a hotel in the Yemeni capital, Sana'a.
(1)Zacarias Moussaoui
In May 2006 Zacarias Moussaoui, a French citizen of Moroccan origin, was sentenced by a US court to life in prison without possibility of parole for his role in the 11 September 2001 attacks.
![]() Moussaoui has been sentenced to life in prison without parole |
The US government sought the death penalty for Moussaoui, the only person in the US charged over 9/11, but defence lawyers successfully argued for life imprisonment.
Moussaoui has lodged an appeal against the sentence. His lawyers asked the appeal court to review the trial and to reconsider a ruling that refused him leave to withdraw his guilty plea after sentencing.
Moussaoui was arrested on immigration charges at a flight simulator school in Minnesota in August 2001.
Although he was in jail at the time of the 11 September attacks, prosecutors said he told lies to allow the plot to continue. His defence said he should not be executed because he played a limited role and was mentally ill.
(2)Mounir al-Motassadek
In 2003, Mounir al-Motassadek, a Moroccan, was the first person in the world to be convicted in connection with the 11 September attacks. But he appealed and in 2004 Germany's Supreme Court threw the verdict out and ordered a retrial.
![]() Motassadek's conviction was struck down over access to evidence |
Before the retrial in Hamburg the US justice department provided summaries from the interrogation of Binalshibh and other suspects, but did not allow them to testify.
At the retrial Motassadek was cleared of knowing about the 9/11 plot but was jailed instead for seven years for membership of a terrorist organisation.
However an appeal by prosecutors resulted in the Moroccan being found guilty of being an accessory to the 9/11 murders. A lower court will decide on his sentence.
Throughout proceedings Motassadek insisted he was innocent - that he knew nothing about the attacks, and knew the hijackers only socially.
(3)Richard Reid
British-born Richard Reid was sentenced to life in prison in January 2003 after being found guilty of trying to blow up an airliner with explosives hidden in his shoes.
![]() Richard Reid: Admitted trying to blow up a plane |
Speaking during sentencing, Reid told the court: "I admit my actions... I do not apologise for my actions and I am still at war with your country."
Reid was arrested after a disturbance on an American Airlines Paris-to-Miami flight on 22 December 2001.
Despite Reid's pledges of support to Bin Laden, his defence team made the case that he was acting alone and was not truly affiliated with al-Qaeda.
(4)Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri
A Yemeni court in September 2004 sentenced Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri to death over the bomb attack on the USS Cole, which killed 17 sailors in 2000.
However, he remains in US custody, in an undisclosed location and was tried in absentia.
The Saudi-born militant was arrested in the United Arab Emirates in October 2002 and handed over to Washington.
He was believed to have been the leader of the network's operations in the Gulf.
Nashiri, also known as Abu Asim al-Makki, has also been linked by the US to the 1998 bombings of American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.
After the Cole attack, he is said to have travelled to Afghanistan, escaping via Pakistan to Yemen after the US-led invasion that ousted the Taleban.
(1)Abu Musab al-Zarqawi
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a Jordanian also known as Ahmed al-Khalayleh, was killed in a US air strike on a safe house near the Iraqi city of Baquba in June 2006.
He stood accused of spearheading al-Qaeda's campaign against the US occupation of Iraq.
![]() Jordanian Abu Musab al-Zarqawi is a top terror suspect in Iraq |
His name was linked to the deadly suicide bombings targeting Iraqi Shia Muslims and security services. He was also suspected of direct involvement in the kidnappings and execution of foreign workers in Iraq.
A $25m bounty was placed on his head, although some experts believe that much terrorist activity in Iraq - while inspired by him - was taking place independently of him.
US forces said in April 2005 they had come close to capturing him in Iraq.
Zarqawi was tried in absentia and sentenced to death for planning attacks in his native Jordan. Intelligence officers in Morocco and Turkey also implicated him in high-profile suicide attacks there during 2003.
He is thought to have travelled extensively after 9/11, reportedly spending time in Iran, Pakistan, Syria, Lebanon and Turkey.
(2)Amjad Farooqi
![]() Farooqi allegedly trained and sheltered several al-Qaeda suspects |
Pakistani security services allege he organised two failed assassination attempts on President Pervez Musharraf.
He was also wanted in connection with the kidnapping and killing of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl.
He was reportedly killed in a shoot-out with security forces in southern Pakistan in September 2004.
(3)Mohammed Atef
![]() Mohammed Atef died in an air strike near Kabul |
Before joining forces with Bin Laden, Atef was an Egyptian policeman and member of Egyptian Islamic Jihad.
The US Defence Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, said that he was believed to have been killed in the US bombing campaign in Afghanistan in November 2001.
(4)Ali Qaed Senyan al-Harthi
![]() Ali Qaed Senyan al-Harthi: 'Killed in Yemen' |
He was a prime target in the US counter-terrorism campaign because of his suspected involvement in the October 2000 bombing of the USS Cole ship in Yemen's Aden harbour.
(5)Abu Hazim al-Shair
US intelligence officials had identified Abu Hazim al-Shair, once one of Osama bin Laden's bodyguards, as al-Qaeda's new chief of operations for the Gulf states.
The 30-year-old Yemeni was believed to live in Saudi Arabia, and featured high on the list of 19 most-wanted al-Qaeda operatives in the country.
Thought to have been a key planner in the May 2003 bombings of Western residential compounds in Riyadh, he was reported to have been killed in the east of the city during in an exchange of fire with Saudi security forces in March 2004.
Omar al-Farouq
An Iraqi citizen brought up in Kuwait, Omar al-Farouq was one of four suspected militants who escaped from a US detention centre in Bagram, Afghanistan, in July 2005.
Osama Bin Laden's top lieutenant in South East Asia, Farouq had been arrested in June 2002 in a village near Jakarta in Indonesia on suspicion of planning attacks against US embassies in the region.
He is also believed to have been a key link between al-Qaeda and militant Islamic group Jemaah Islamiyah, blamed for bombings in Indonesia including the Bali attacks of 12 October 2002 in which more than 200 people were killed.
Farouq taunted his pursuers in a video released on an Islamist website in February 2006, but was tracked down to a hide-out in the southern Iraqi city of Basra.
On 25 September 2006, security sources said he was surrounded there by at least 200 British troops and was killed in an exchange of fire.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_depth/2780525.stm
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