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Militant Leader Zarqawi Killed


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Militant leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi has been killed, Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki has announced.

 

"We have eliminated Zarqawi," Mr Maliki said at a news conference in Baghdad, sparking sustained applause.

 

Zarqawi was considered the figurehead of the Sunni insurgency. He was leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq, blamed for killing thousands of Shias and US forces.

 

The US said he was killed in an air strike "approximately 8km (five miles) north of Baquba".

 

The head of US-led forces in Iraq, General George Casey, said the strike against an "isolated safe house" took place at 1815 (1415 GMT) on Wednesday.

 

"Iraqi police were first on the scene after the air strike," he said, followed shortly afterwards by coalition forces.

 

Jordanian-born Zarqawi was said to have been in a meeting with associates at the time. Several other people were reported to have been killed in the raid.

 

General Casey said Zarqawi's body was identified through fingerprints, facial recognition and known scars. He promised to give more details on the raid later on Thursday.

 

Reports say a statement on the internet attributed to an umbrella group for jihadi organisations including al-Qaeda in Iraq has confirmed Zarqawi's death.

 

Jordanian role

 

Zarqawi was not a global mastermind like al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden, says the BBC's security correspondent, Frank Gardner.

 

Instead he was a bloodthirsty and violent thug, who made enemies and several mistakes that might have contributed to his downfall.

 

These included ordering a triple suicide bombing against hotels in Amman, Jordan, last November, that killed 60 people, our correspondent says.

 

A Jordanian official told the Associated Press that Jordanian agents had contributed to the operation against Zarqawi.

 

The US ambassador to Iraq, Zalmay Khalilzad, said Zarqawi's death marked "a great success for Iraq and the global war on terror... Zarqawi was the godfather of sectarian killing and terror in Iraq".

 

But he cautioned that it would not end bloodshed in the country.

 

Violence continued on Thursday as 13 people were killed and 28 injured in a bomb on a Baghdad market, police said.

 

Millon-dollar bounty

 

Zarqawi was accused of leading the rash of kidnappings and beheadings of foreign workers.

 

It has been suggested that he appeared personally on one video posted on the internet, cutting off the head of an American hostage.

 

A video released in April showed Zarqawi shooting an automatic rifle and berating the US for its "arrogance". The video provided the most up-to-date picture of the fugitive.

 

Mr Maliki said intelligence from Iraqi people had helped track down Zarqawi, who had a $25m (£13m) price on his head - the same bounty as that offered by the US for Bin Laden.

 

"What happened today is a result of co-operation for which we have been asking from our masses and the citizens of our country," he said.

 

Shortly after the Zarqawi announcement, the Iraqi parliament approved Mr Maliki's nominees for the key posts of defence and interior ministers.

 

The two crucial roles had remained unfilled despite the formation of a coalition government last month.

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Guest alex

Quite a result. Will remain to be seen how much it effects the seemingly increasing spiral of attacks over there though.

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I'd expect retaliatory strikes to increase over the next month or so.

 

I'd also wonder exactly how effective cutting the heads off this hydra will be...

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Guest alex
I'd expect retaliatory strikes to increase over the next month or so.

 

I'd also wonder exactly how effective cutting the heads off this hydra will be...

146560[/snapback]

The attacks by the insurgents have been increasing of late anyway.

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  • 2 weeks later...

Its not on, they should have given him a warning shot first, let him have a chance to surrender and tell his side of the story. Who knows what terrible things instigated by the Americans caused him to do what he did. Wheres his human rights?

 

Someone think of the poor children now.

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