2 al Qaeda operatives killed in latest drone strike in South Waziristan

The US killed two foreign al Qaeda fighters, including an “explosives expert,” in a drone strike today in Pakistan’s Taliban-controlled tribal agency of South Waziristan. The strike is the second by the US in three days.

The CIA-operated, remotely piloted Predators or the more deadly Reapers fired two missiles at a compound in the Babarghar area of South Waziristan. The airstrike leveled the compound and killed seven “militants,” including two Arab al Qaeda operatives and four Uzbeks, and wounded five more, according to Dawn.

The two Arabs were identified as Sheikh Abu Waqas, a Yemeni explosives expert, and Abu Majid al Iraqi. The four Uzbeks, who were likely from the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, an al Qaeda ally, were not identified. The strike took place as the foreign fighters were having dinner with members of the Movement of the Taliban in Pakistan, according to Dawn.

The US conducted one other strike in Babarghar this year; Wali Mohammed, who was a suicide attack planner for the Movement of the Taliban in Pakistan, was reported to have been killed in the strike along with nine other fighters and seven civilians.

The Babarghar area is administered by Hafiz Gul Bahadar, a top Taliban leader in the region who is not part of Hakeemullah Mehsud’s Movement of the Taliban in Pakistan.

Background on Bahadar and his ties to terrorist groups

Bahadar, the senior Taliban leader in North Waziristan, is known to shelter top al Qaeda leaders and is one of the most powerful Taliban commanders in Pakistan’s tribal areas. His forces fight US and Afghan forces in Afghanistan. Bahadar is also allied with and shelters the Punjabi Taliban and other terrorist groups.

Bahadar has long been described by Pakistani officials as a “good Taliban leader” as he does not openly attack the Pakistani state and wages jihad against the US and NATO in Afghanistan. The Pakistani government and military have long rebuffed US pleas to conduct an operation against Bahadar and the allied Haqqani Network.

Bahadar and the Taliban maintain a “peace agreement” with the Pakistani military that allows him to run a state within a state in the remote tribal agency. Bahadar and his commanders have set up a parallel administration, complete with courts, recruiting centers, prisons, training camps, and the ability to levy taxes.

The peace agreement allows North Waziristan to serve as a base for the Movement of the Taliban in Pakistan and nonaligned Taliban groups, as well as the Haqqani Network, al Qaeda, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, the Islamic Jihad Group, and a host of Pakistani terror groups such as Jaish-e-Mohammed, Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, Lashkar-e-Taiba, and the Punjabi Taliban.

Bahadar wields considerable power in North Waziristan. In July 2011, a spokesman for Bahadar claimed that there were no “militants” in North Waziristan, and that Bahadar’s Taliban faction has lived up to its terms of a peace agreement with the Pakistani military. But, as documented here at The Long War Journal numerous times, Bahadar provides support and shelter for top al Qaeda leaders as well as terrorists from a number of Pakistani and Central Asian terror groups, including the Movement of the Taliban in Pakistan.

Bahadar’s Taliban subgroup is a member of the Shura-e-Murakeba, an al Qaeda and Afghan Taliban-brokered alliance that includes the Haqqani Network, the Movement of the Taliban in Pakistan, and the Mullah Nazir Group in South Waziristan.

In June 2012, Bahadar suspended polio vaccination programs in North Waziristan in protest against the US drone strikes in North Waziristan. Bahadar has objected to the US drone strikes in the past. On Nov. 12, 2011, Bahadar suspended meetings with the government and threatened to attack the Pakistani state if it continued to allow the US to conduct attacks in areas under his control.

The US has conducted numerous airstrikes against terrorist targets in areas under Bahadar’s control. Of the 334 drone strikes that have taken place in Pakistan’s tribal areas, 92 of the strikes, or nearly 28 percent, have occurred in areas directly under the control of Bahadar. [See LWJ report, Charting the data for US airstrikes in Pakistan, 2004 – 2013, for information on US airstrikes.]

Second strike in three days

Today’s strike in South Waziristan is the second in Pakistan’s tribal areas in three days. The last strike, in North Waziristan, broke a 26-day pause in the attacks in Pakistan. The US has launched nine drone strikes in Pakistan so far this year.

Four senior and midlevel al Qaeda and Taliban leaders are reported to have been killed in the eight strikes since the beginning of 2013. The US killed Mullah Nazir, the leader of a Taliban group in South Waziristan who was closely allied with Bahadar, al Qaeda, and the Afghan Taliban, in a strike on Jan. 3. In a second strike on Jan. 3, the US killed Faisal Khan, a Movement of the Taliban in Pakistan commander. In one of two strikes on Jan. 6, the US killed Wali Mohammed, a Taliban commander who is said to have directed suicide operations for the Movement of the Taliban in Pakistan. And in one of the two strikes on Jan. 8, an al Qaeda leader known as Sheikh Yasin Al Kuwaiti is reported to have been killed.

Last year, the US launched 46 strikes in Pakistan, according to data compiled by The Long War Journal. In 2011, the US launched 64 strikes; in 2010, when the program was at its peak, there were 117 strikes.

The program was ramped up by President George W. Bush in the summer of 2008 (35 strikes were launched that year) and continued under President Barack Obama after he took office in 2009 (53 strikes that year). From 2004-2007, only 10 strikes were recorded. Although some of al Qaeda’s top leaders have been killed in drone strikes since the program began in 2004, al Qaeda has been able to replace those lost in the attacks. [For data on the strikes, see LWJ reports, Charting the data for US airstrikes in Pakistan, 2004 – 2013; and Senior al Qaeda and Taliban leaders killed in US airstrikes in Pakistan, 2004 – 2013.]

The US has targeted al Qaeda’s top leaders and its external operations network, and the assortment of Taliban and Pakistani jihadist groups operating in the region. The strikes have largely been confined to a small kill box consisting of North and South Waziristan. Of the 334 strikes recorded since 2004, 317, or 95%, have taken place in the two tribal agencies.

Bill Roggio is a Senior Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and the Editor of FDD's Long War Journal.

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7 Comments

  • pathanoo says:

    LOVE YOU, DRONES!!!!!!!

  • gb says:

    Bill,
    Will you be starting a new set of graphics for the newly minted covert drone campaign in Northern Afrika, or will they be rolled into a more general worldwide covert drone campaign? 🙂

  • Gerald says:

    I don’t care what the Congress says, IslamicTerrorists are legitimate targets despite their nationalities. All of them are dedicated to the destruction of non Islamic cultures by any means. Drone strikes have proven to be one the most effective means of thinning their command ranks and should continue.

  • Maverick says:

    The drones must continue. It’s music to my ears

  • Leroy marnolejo says:

    Hide and seek!!!!!

  • Nick_Hentoff says:

    The problem with applauding the drone program because of its successes is that you are begging the question of whether they are killing who they are supposed to be killing. How does the CIA determine whether someone is a “terrorist?” They won’t tell us and so we still don’t know why a sixteen-year old American citizen was targeted and killed by a drone strike in Yemen.
    If you examine the files of the Gitmo detainees released by Wikileaks you’ll find that the ‘evidence’ that was used to continue detentions for some of the detainees was extremely weak and based largely on second and third hand hearsay. Is that the same level of evidence they are using to target drone strikes?
    The question of how the CIA decides who to kill, and the burden of proof they use before placing someone on the kill list, is important. The head of one of the US Fusion Centers recently likened street criminals to terrorists and street crime to terrorism. If we continue down this road we will eventually be dealing with a government that feels it can use extra-judicial killings against any enemy of the state, with the state unilaterally deciding who its enemies are.

  • Bill Roggio says:

    Nick_Hentoff,
    Anwar al Awlaki’s son wasn’t the target of that drone strike, the target was an AQAP media emir. It just so happened Awlaki’s son was there. Interesting in itself, isn’t it? BTW a Yemeni journalist said Awlaki’s son was seeking jihad. Teh guy is plugged in and I have no reason to doubt him.
    We’ve carefully examined the Gitmo files. Interestingly enough, many of the guys who are released return to the jihad, often to the same places and with the same groups that they have been linked to in those file. Perhaps the evidence isn’t as flimsy as you think it is.

Iraq

Islamic state

Syria

Aqap

Al shabaab

Boko Haram

Isis