Zawahiri's unconfirmed death raises speculation about next al-Qaeda leader
 
 
Al-Qaeda will most likely not announce the death of its leader Ayman al-Zawahiri for months to come, amid reports about Zawahiri's passing away.
The terrorist
organization was full of internal confusion in the past months, against the
background of deterioration in the health condition of its leader. 
Rita Katz, the
co-founder of Site Intelligence Group, broke news of Zawahiri's death after
months of illness. 
She said on Twitter
that al-Qaeda had not confirmed news of al-Zawahiri's death. Katz noted that
the terrorist organization confirms the death of its top commanders, only
months after their actual death. 
She said al-Qaeda had
never confirmed the death of Hamza bin Laden, even as U.S. Secretary of Defense
Mark Esper broke news of Hamza's death in August 2019. 
When al-Qaeda's
commander Azzam the American died in 2015, the organization kept news of his
death secret for five months. 
Observers expected
earlier Zawahiri's death to contribute to the gradual collapse of al-Qaeda. They
said this death would open the door for conflicts between the different
branches of al-Qaeda. 
The lack of a central
command in al-Qaeda will also contribute to the organization's collapse, the
observers said. 
Zawahiri's death also
opened the door for speculation about his possible successor. According to some
leaked documents, the members of al-Qaeda's Consultative Council had pledge
allegiance to Abul Nasr. 
However, this is
causing tensions inside the organization now because of news that Seif al-Adl,
another top commander of al-Qaeda, prepares to take over. 
 
          
     
                                
 
 


