A United States drone strike killed Al-Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahiri at a hideout in Kabul, President Joe Biden said Monday, declaring that âjustice had been deliveredâ to the families of the 9/11 attacks.
Zawahiriâs assassination is the biggest blow to Al-Qaeda since US special forces killed Osama bin Laden in 2011, and calls into question the Talibanâs promise not to harbour militant groups.
It was the first known over-the-horizon strike by the US on a target in Afghanistan since Washington withdrew its forces from the country on August 31 last year, days after the Taliban swept back to power.
âJustice has been delivered and this terrorist leader is no more,â Biden said in a sombre televised address, adding he hoped Zawahiriâs death would bring âclosureâ to families of the 3,000 people killed in the US on September 11, 2001.
Zawahiri was believed to be the mastermind who steered Al-Qaedaâs operations â including the 9/11 attacks â as well as bin Ladenâs personal doctor.
A senior administration official said the 71-year-old Egyptian was on the balcony of a three-storey house in the Afghan capital when targeted with two Hellfire missiles after dawn Sunday.
âWe identified Zawahiri on multiple occasions for sustained periods of time on the balcony where he was ultimately struck,â the official said.
The house is in Sherpur, one of Kabulâs most affluent neighbourhoods, with several villas occupied by high-ranking Taliban officials and commanders.
The interior ministry previously denied reports of a drone strike circulating on social media, telling AFP a rocket struck âan empty houseâ in Kabul, causing no casualties.
Early Tuesday, however, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid tweeted that an âaerial attackâ was carried out.
âThe nature of the incident was not revealed at first,â he said.
âThe security and intelligence agencies of the Islamic Emirate investigated the incident and found in their preliminary investigations that the attack was carried out by American drones.â
âGrossly violatedâ
Although Biden did not mention the Taliban in his televised address, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said âby hosting and shelteringâ Zawahiri, the Islamist group had âgrossly violated the Doha Agreementâ which paved the way for Americaâs withdrawal.
Zabihullah, in turn, accused Washington of breaking the 2020 deal.
âSuch actions are a repetition of the failed experiences of the past 20 years and are against the interests of the United States of America, Afghanistan, and the region,â he said.
Zawahiri, who grew up in a comfortable Cairo household before turning to violent radicalism, had been on the run since the 9/11 attacks.
He took over Al-Qaeda after bin Laden was killed, and had a $25 million US bounty on his head.
News of his death comes a month before the first anniversary of the final withdrawal of US troops from Afghanistan, leaving the country in the hands of the Taliban insurgency that fought Western forces for two decades.
Under the Doha deal, the Taliban promised not to allow Afghanistan to be used again as a launchpad for international jihadism, but experts believe the group never broke ties with Al-Qaeda.
âWhat we know is that the senior Haqqani Taliban were aware of his presence in Kabul,â the senior US official said.
Afghan Interior Minister Sirajuddin Haqqani also heads the feared Haqqani Network, a brutal subset of the Taliban blamed for some of the worst violence of the past 20 years and which has been described by US officials as a âveritable armâ of Pakistani intelligence.
In Sherpur, locals told AFP they long thought the targeted house â surrounded by high walls and barbed wire, with green tarpaulin covering the balcony where Zawahiri was believed to have been killed â was empty.
âWe have not seen anybody living there for almost a year,â said an employee of a nearby office.
âIt has always been in dark, with not a single bulb lit.â
Doctor turned jihadist
Zawahiri lacked the potent charisma that helped bin Laden rally jihadists around the world but willingly channelled his analytical skills into the Al-Qaeda cause.
Still, the group is believed to have been degraded since the US invasion of Afghanistan, and the White House official said Zawahiri was âone of the last remaining figures who carried this kind of significanceâ.
The organisation is âat a crossroadsâ, said Soufan Center researcher Colin Clarke.
âDespite Zawahiriâs leadership, which minimised AQâs losses while rebuilding, the group still faces serious challenges going forward. For one, thereâs the question of who will lead Al-Qaeda after Zawahiriâs gone.â
Zawahiriâs father was a renowned physician and his grandfather a prayer leader at Cairoâs Al-Azhar institute, the highest authority for Sunni Muslims.
He became involved with Egyptâs radical Islamist community at a young age and published several books which came for many to symbolise the movement.
He left Egypt in the mid-1980s, heading for Pakistanâs northwestern city of Peshawar where the resistance to the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan was based.
Thousands of Islamist fighters were flooding into Afghanistan at the time, setting the stage for Zawahiriâs first meeting with bin Laden.
In 1998 he became one of five signatories to bin Ladenâs âfatwaâ calling for attacks against Americans.
Jihadist monitor SITE said some militants were questioning the veracity of the report he had been killed, while others believed Zawahiri had achieved his desire of âmartyrdom.â