Al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri killed
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Ayman al-Zawahiri with Bin Laden.
WASHINGTON — U.S. President Joe Biden announced Monday evening that al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri had been killed in a drone strike in Kabul, Afghanistan over the weekend.
“I authorized a precision strike that would remove him from the battlefield,” Biden said in live remarks from the Blue Room Balcony at the White House.
“There were no civilian casualties.”
Al-Zawahiri, 71, became head of al-Qaeda in 2011 after its longtime leader Osama bin Laden was shot and killed by U.S. forces in Abbottabad, Pakistan during a raid.Biden’s announcement came nearly a year after the U.S. military completed a withdrawal from Afghanistan that it invaded in response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks carried out in 2001 by al-Qaeda operatives against targets on American soil, which killed nearly 3,000 people.
“He was deeply involved in the planning of 9/11,” Biden said of al-Zawahiri.
“He coordinated al-Qaeda’s branches and all around the world, including setting priorities for providing operational guidance that called for and inspired attacks against U.S. targets.”
A senior administration official briefed reporters that the drone strike was conducted in Kabul on Sunday morning with hellfire missiles that targeted and killed al-Zawahiri, who was standing on the balcony of a safe house.
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Preparation for the operation was said to have taken months. Biden gave the final authorization on July 25 while quarantined at the White House due to a COVID-19 infection, according to the official.
Over 929,000 people have died in the post-9/11 wars due to direct war violence, and several times as many due to the reverberating effects of war, showed figures from the Costs of War Project at Brown University.
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The U.S. federal price tag for the post-9/11 wars is over 8 trillion U.S. dollars, which have also been accompanied by violations of human rights and civil liberties in the United States and abroad, the project found. – Xinhua