All the jihadist leaders killed by the US so far

Al Zawahiri, head of Al Qaeda
A drone attack
One of the most wanted terrorists
Who was Al-Zawahiri
Founding the Egyptian Islamic Jihad
His personality, described by his sister
Behind other terrorist attacks
Master mind behind 9/11
Osama bin Laden was the face but Al-Zawahiri was the brains
More experienced than Bin Laden
The 20th anniversary of September 11
A fundamental operation
The fight against terrorism
Abu Musab Al Zarqawi
Killed by a missile launched from a plane
Three years after the start of the Iraq war
Osama Bin Laden
Ten years of manhunt
Hamza Bin Laden
Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi
Together with three of his children
Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi
Maher Al Agal
Al Qaeda’s possible successor
Al-Zawahiri’s right hand man?
Al-Zawahiri’s son-in-law?
An endless fight
Al Zawahiri, head of Al Qaeda

Ayman Al-Zawahiri, the former right hand of Osama Bin Laden, had already escaped an attack on January 13, 2016. Sixteen years later, however, on July 31, 2022, his fate changed.

A drone attack

American intelligence found him in Kabul and, as reported by the New York Times, had followed his movements for months before launching a targeted attack with a drone on the house where he was hiding.

One of the most wanted terrorists

This was an important victory for the US because since the death of Osama Bin Laden, it was Ayman Al-Zawahiri who became the leader of Al Qaeda. He was one of the 22 most wanted terrorists in the world.

Who was Al-Zawahiri
Founding the Egyptian Islamic Jihad

While studying medicine, Al-Zawahiri became a member of the Muslim Brotherhood, which later contributed to the founding of the Egyptian Islamic Jihad (EIJ), believed to have been responsible for the death of President Anwar Sadat in 1981.

His personality, described by his sister

In 2011, his sister, Heba, offered the media a portrait of his brother's personality: “Ayman is not capable of compromise. He sees all white or all black. This is his problem. I don't know why he became so radical. He was a very shy boy. He prayed and studied.”

Behind other terrorist attacks

Shy or not, the rumors of his participation in attacks such as those of 1998 on the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, placed him at the center of the radar in the fight against terrorism.

Master mind behind 9/11

He was also considered the master mind of the 9/11 attacks in the United States, by some experts quoted in the New York Times.

Osama bin Laden was the face but Al-Zawahiri was the brains

They said that Bin Laden’s  charisma had associated the strategic importance of the figure of al-Zawahiri, capable, according to the foremost connoisseurs of the world of fundamentalism, of providing the tactical cunning necessary to plan attacks of such magnitude.

More experienced than Bin Laden

Dia'a Rashwan, in fact, had analyzed its importance in the pages of the New York Times, concluding: "He has more experience than Bin Laden, since the 1970s his name has often been associated with the various cases in which Islamic extremists have been involved.”

The 20th anniversary of September 11

On the day of the 20th anniversary of this tragedy, Al-Zawahiri appeared in a video message broadcast by the media arm of al-Qaeda, as-Sabah, appealing to all Muslims to launch attacks on Western forces.

A fundamental operation

Given the size and relevance of the figure of Ayman Al-Zawahiri in the world of terrorism, his elimination was an operation of primary importance, especially in light of the controversy following the withdrawal of US troops from Afghanistan.

"If you are a threat, the US will find you"

Speaking to the nation from the White House after the killing of the Al Qaeda leader, Biden issued a warning to those who intend to threaten America: "It doesn't matter how long it takes or where you hide. If you are a threat, the US will find you."

The fight against terrorism

Biden's words can be proved by the rest of "targeted killings" that the US has successfully carried out.

Abu Musab Al Zarqawi

In 2006, American forces killed the Jordanian terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the ferocious leader of al Qaeda in Iraq and the alleged brain behind the terrifying videos of the executions of Western hostages.

Killed by a missile launched from a plane

He was killed by a missile launched from an airplane against his hiding place in Baghdad.

Three years after the start of the Iraq war

The death of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi is part of the war in Iraq, a country responsible, according to the Bush administration, for being a base for terrorism and for hiding weapons of mass destruction.

Osama Bin Laden

During the Obama administration, Bin Laden was the leader of Al Qaeda and was hit during the night of May 1, 2011. He was killed in Abbottabad by American counter-terrorism forces in Pakistan after a ten-year hunt.

Ten years of manhunt

A single bullet launched by one of the Navy SEALS was enough to kill Bin Laden. The fact that he was in Pakistan caused a lot of controversy about how reliable the country could be as an ally in the fight against terrorism.

Hamza Bin Laden

In September 2019, President Donald Trump announced the death of Hamza Bin Laden, son of Osama and his apparent successor at the top of al Qaeda, during a raid in the region on the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Photo: NJ Department of Homeland Security, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi

Also in 2019, on the night of October 26, Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi died in northwestern Syria. He was the leader of Isis at the time, the Islamic caliphate formed between Iraq and Syria and considered the new base of anti-Western terrorism.

Together with three of his children

It was him who took his own life, detonating an explosive vest during the raid, after taking refuge in a tunnel. Three of his children,  who he had brought with him, also died.

Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi

The name of Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi Al Qurashi was also linked to ISIS. He was killed on February 3, 2022 in an American special force raid in Syria. He hid in his home (pictured) where he detonated a bomb with his whole family inside it.

Maher Al Agal

On July 12, 2022, another emblematic figure also lost his life near Jindires in Syria. Maher Al Agal was killed in a targeted attack launched with a drone. Agal was considered one of the five most important members of ISIS.

In the photo, the site of the attack.

Al Qaeda’s possible successor

After Al-Zawahiri’s death, newspapers around the world were already speculating on who could be the successor of al-Zawahiri at the top of Al Qaeda.

Al-Zawahiri’s right hand man?

Al Jazeera pointed to the interim appointment of Saif al Adel, al-Zawahiri's right-hand man, who could take on the role of the organization's new leader.

Al-Zawahiri’s son-in-law?

But Reuters suggested it could be Abd al-Rahman al-Maghrebi, the Moroccan son-in-law of the murdered terrorist, who over the years has already held positions of particular prestige within Al Qaeda.

An endless fight

The fact remains that Al-Zawahiri’s successful targeted killing is not the end on the war on terrorism, but rather just a chapter.

More for you