Harvest 2020: Successive setbacks and uncertain future awaits old al-Qaeda
The year 2020 was not good for the old al-Qaeda
organization, as it was affected by the loss of many of its main leaders due to
the successive and painful security strikes this year, which led to the
depletion of its capabilities amid the return of internal conflicts for
leadership.
The year was a nightmare for al-Qaeda due to the liquidation
of a large number of its leaders or the talk about the death of some of them,
the most prominent of which was the recent discussion of the death of the
organization’s leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri, which has not yet been confirmed, in
addition to the state of stagnation that the terrorist organization is
experiencing this year, unlike previous years.
Liquidation of leaders
The most prominent leader of the organization killed in 2020
was Qasim al-Rimi, nicknamed Abu al-Humayra al-Sanani, the leader of the
organization in the Arabian Peninsula, as he was killed in a special operation
in Yemen on February 6, 2020. Al-Qaeda announced after that the appointment of
Khaled Batarfi as his successor.
In mid-2020, and specifically in June, the French army
forces on the African coast, known as Barkhane forces, killed the
organization's leader in the Maghreb, Abdelmalek Droukdel, who founded several
terrorist organizations in Algeria, and a number of his closest associates
during an operation in northern Mali, with the support of local partners, and
they also managed to kill Tawfiq al-Shayeb, who was responsible for the
organization’s propaganda.
Five months after the killing of Droukdel, the organization
announced in November 2020 that the Algerian Mubarak Yazid, called Abu Obeida
Youssef al-Annabi, was appointed as his successor.
The liquidation of the al-Qaeda leaders did not stop.
Rather, in October 2020, the Afghan authorities managed to liquidate Abu Mohsen
al-Masri, a prominent leader in al-Qaeda, also known as Hussam Abdul-Raouf, who
is accused in the United States of providing a foreign terrorist organization
with equipment and resources, as well as planning to murder US citizens,
according to the FBI.
In addition, Ba Ag Musa was killed in November 2020, who was
responsible for several attacks against the Malian and international forces and
was considered one of the main jihadist military leaders in Mali, specifically
tasked with training new recruits. The French force in Africa’s Sahel and
Sahara region announced that it was able to identify a first-class operational
leader associated with al-Qaeda whose name has been mentioned in recent years
in several attacks in the region.
In the end, news has recently been raised about the death of
Zawahiri, the leader of the organization, which was a shocking matter for the
followers of al-Qaeda, as accounts affiliated with extremist base elements,
including the Guardians of Religion Organization, one of the branches of the
terrorist organization in Syria, announced the death of Ayman Al-Zawahiri,
confirming that Guardians of Religion had been cut off from communications with
Zawahiri some time ago, likely due to his death. It added that his last
instructions were to avoid direct military confrontation with Hayat Tahrir
al-Sham (HTS) in Syria, noting that the leader of the organization that
succeeded Osama bin Laden in 2011 has died from liver cancer.
No control
Al-Qaeda's central leadership is no longer a scanty version
of what it was in the past, although the name of al-Qaeda is still active,
thanks to the branches that bear its name and the groups that pledged
allegiance to it, but it does not control the operations or alliances of these
groups, which follow a local approach.
Regarding global reactions after the killing of many of the
organization’s leaders, outgoing US President Donald Trump commented on the
killing of Qassem al-Rimi by saying that the organization in Yemen committed
acts of violence against civilians and sought to implement and inspire its
supporters to carry out attacks against the United States and its forces,
confirming that his death will weaken the organization in the Arabian Peninsula
and throughout the world, indicating that this process brings the US
administration closer to eliminating the threat of these groups that threaten
US national security.
Meanwhile, Chris Miller, director of the US National
Counterterrorism Center, affirmed that the removal of Abu Mohsen al-Masry from
the battlefield represents a major setback for a terrorist organization that is
constantly suffering strategic losses.
The appointment of a leader of the organization in the
countries of the Maghreb five months after the killing of Abdelmalek Droukdel
indicates the organization's inability to find a successor, and an indication
of the existence of conflicts within it, despite its attempts to revive its terrorist
activity in the region, taking advantage of the deals to release foreign
prisoners through financial returns.



