US forces in Iraq capture terror leader ( 2003-10-15 09:56) (Agencies)
American forces in Iraq have captured one of the most senior members of Ansar
al-Islam, an extremist group suspected of having ties to Osama bin Laden's
al-Qaida network, U.S. defense officials said Tuesday.
The arrest of Aso Hawleri, also known as Asad Muhammad Hasan, late last week
in the northern city of Mosul has not been announced. Larry Di Rita, chief
spokesman for Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, told reporters, "I'm not in
a position to confirm" Hawleri's capture.
Hawleri was taken by soldiers of the 101st Airborne Division, said a defense
official, who discussed the matter on condition of anonymity.
The capture netted a number of other people besides Hawleri, the official
said, adding that there apparently was not a gunfight.
No other details were immediately available.
The officials said Hawleri is thought to be the third-ranking official in
Ansar al-Islam, most of whose fighters were believed to have fled their
stronghold in northern Iraq before U.S. forces invaded in March. U.S. and
Kurdish forces destroyed the group's main base in the early weeks of the war.
Ansar had taken control of a slice of the Kurdish-controlled area near the
Iranian border, enforcing a version of Islam only slightly less stringent than
the Taliban in Afghanistan in mountain strongholds outside areas of Iraq
controlled by government forces.
In an analytical report in December 2001, Iraq expert Michael Rubin of the
Washington Institute for Near East Policy wrote that Hawleri had led the Second
Soran Unit, the largest single military unit within an Iraqi opposition group
called the Islamic Unity Movement. In 2001 the Second Soran Unit merged with the
Tawhid Islamic Front to form Jund al-Islam, later called Ansar al-Islam,
according to Rubin, who says the group received funds from bin Laden and trained
in Afghanistan.
Tactics of Ansar have included suicide bombings, car bombs, assassinations
and raids on militiamen and politicians of the secular Kurdish government. The
group has killed scores of people over the last two years.
U.S. officials say Ansar sent about a dozen people through al-Qaida camps in
Afghanistan in 1999 and 2000 and experimented with biotoxin ricin in 2002.
In late August, Army Gen. John Abizaid, overall commander in Iraq, told
reporters that elements of Ansar al-Islam had migrated south into the Baghdad
area and presented an increased terrorist threat.
It remains unclear whether Ansar has played a role in any of the recent
terror-style bombings in Iraq, including the Aug. 19 bombing of the U.N.
headquarters in Baghdad that killed 22 people.
Ansar's spiritual leader, Mullah Krekar, was taken into custody in the
Netherlands in September 2002 and later was deported to Norway. He was released
from a Norwegian jail last April after a court found insufficient grounds to
hold him on terrorism charges. Police dropped the charges in July, but are
investigating him on allegations he financed terrorist activities.