Assassination plots Egypt In 1981, Al-Zawahiri was one of hundreds arrested following the
assassination of President Anwar Sadat. Initially, the plan was derailed when authorities were alerted to Al-Jihad's plan by the arrest of an operative carrying crucial information, in February 1981. President
Sadat ordered the roundup of more than 1,500 people, including many Al-Jihad members, but missed a cell in the military led by Lieutenant
Khalid Islambouli, who succeeded in assassinating Sadat during a military parade that October. His lawyer,
Montasser el-Zayat, said that al-Zawahiri was tortured in prison. In his book,
Al-Zawahiri as I Knew Him, Al-Zayat maintains that under torture by the Egyptian police, following his arrest in connection with the murder of Sadat in 1981, Al-Zawahiri revealed the hiding place of
Essam al-Qamari, a key member of the Maadi cell of al-Jihad, which led to Al-Qamari's "arrest and eventual execution." He was released from prison in 1984. In 1993, al-Zawahiri's and Egyptian Islamic Jihad's (
EIJ) connection with
Iran may have led to a suicide bombing in an attempt on the life of
Egyptian Interior Minister Hasan al-Alfi, the man heading the effort to quash the campaign of Islamist killings in Egypt. It failed, as did an attempt to assassinate Egyptian prime minister
Atef Sidqi three months later. The bombing of Sidqi's car injured 21 Egyptians and killed a schoolgirl, Shayma Abdel-Halim. It followed two years of killings by another Islamist group,
al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya, that had killed over 200 people. Her funeral became a public spectacle, with her coffin carried through the streets of
Cairo and crowds shouting, "Terrorism is the enemy of God!" The police arrested 280 more of al-Jihad's members and executed six. For their leading role in anti-Egyptian Government attacks in the 1990s, al-Zawahiri and his brother Muhammad al-Zawahiri were sentenced to death in the 1999 Egyptian case of the
Returnees from Albania. On December 27, 2007, al-Zawahiri was also implicated in the assassination of former Pakistani Prime Minister
Benazir Bhutto.
Sudan In 1994, the sons of
Ahmad Salama Mabruk and
Mohammed Sharaf were executed under al-Zawahiri's leadership for betraying
Egyptian Islamic Jihad; the militants were ordered to leave the Sudan.
United States 's bounty flyer offering US$ for information about al-Zawahiri In 1998, Ayman al-Zawahiri was listed as under indictment in the United States for his role in the
1998 U.S. embassy bombings: a series of attacks on August 7, 1998, in which hundreds of people were killed in simultaneous
truck bomb explosions at the United States
embassies in the major East African cities of
Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and
Nairobi, Kenya. In 2000, the
USS Cole bombing encouraged several members to depart.
Mohammed Atef escaped to Kandahar, al-Zawahiri to Kabul, and Bin Laden also fled to Kabul, later joining Atef when he realised no American reprisal attacks were forthcoming. On October 10, 2001, al-Zawahiri appeared on the initial list of the U.S.
Federal Bureau of Investigation's top 22
Most Wanted Terrorists, which was released to the public by U.S. President
George W. Bush. In early November 2001, the
Taliban government announced they were bestowing official Afghan
citizenship on him, as well as Bin Laden, Mohammed Atef,
Saif al-Adl, and Shaykh
Asim Abdulrahman.
Organizations Egyptian Islamic Jihad Al-Zawahiri began reconstituting the Egyptian Islamic Jihad (EIJ) along with other exiled militants. In Peshwar, al-Zawahiri was thought to have become
radicalized by other Al-Jihad members, abandoning his old strategy of a swift coup d'état to change society from above, and embracing the idea of
takfir. In 1991, EIJ broke with al-Zumur, and al-Zawahiri grabbed "the reins of power" to become EIJ leader. Ayman al-Zawahiri was previously the second and last "
emir" of the
Egyptian Islamic Jihad, having succeeded
Abbud al-Zumar in the latter role when Egyptian authorities sentenced al-Zumar to
life imprisonment. Ayman al-Zawahiri eventually became one of
Egyptian Islamic Jihad's leading organizers and recruiters. Al-Zawahiri's hope was to recruit military officers and accumulate weapons, waiting for the right moment to launch "a complete overthrow of the existing order."
Chief strategist of Al-Jihad was Aboud al-Zumar, a colonel in the military intelligence whose plan was to kill the main leaders of the country, capture the headquarters of the army and
State Security, the telephone exchange building, and of course the radio and television building, where news of the Islamic revolution would then be broadcast, unleashing – he expected – "a popular uprising against secular authority all over the country." Al-Zawahiri carried two false passports, a Swiss one in the name of Amin Uthman and a Dutch one in the name of Mohmud Hifnawi. British journalist
Jason Burke wrote: "Al-Zawahiri ran his own operation during the Afghan war, bringing in and training volunteers from the Middle East. Some of the $500 million the
CIA poured into Afghanistan reached his group." Former
FBI agent
Ali Soufan mentioned in his book
The Black Banners that Ayman al-Zawahiri is suspected of ordering Azzam's assassination in 1989.
Al-Qaeda According to reports by a former al-Qaeda member, al-Zawahiri worked in the al-Qaeda organization since its inception and was a senior member of the group's
shura council. He was often described as a "lieutenant" to Osama bin Laden, though bin Laden's chosen biographer has referred to him as the "real brains" of al-Qaeda. On February 23, 1998, al-Zawahiri issued a joint
fatwa with
Osama bin Laden under the title "
World Islamic Front Against Jews and Crusaders". Al-Zawahiri, not bin Laden, is thought to have been the actual author of the fatwa. Bin Laden and al-Zawahiri organized an al-Qaeda congress on June 24, 1998. A week prior to the beginning of the conference, a group of well-armed assistants to al-Zawahiri had left by jeeps in the direction of Herat. Following the instructions of their patron, in the town of Koh-i-Doshakh, they met three unknown Slavic-looking men who had arrived from Russia via Iran. After their arrival in Kandahar, they split up. One of the Russians was directly escorted to al-Zawahiri and he did not participate in the conference. Western
military intelligence succeeded in acquiring photographs of him, but he disappeared for six years. According to Axis Globe, in 2004, when Qatar and the U.S. investigated Russian embassy officials whom the United Arab Emirates had arrested in connection to the murder of
Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev in Qatar, computer software precisely established that a man who had walked to the Russian embassy in Doha was the same one who visited al-Zawahiri prior to the Al-Qaida conference. Al-Zawahiri was placed under
international sanctions in 1999 by the United Nations'
Al-Qaida and Taliban Sanctions Committee as a member of the
Salafi-jihadist group
al-Qaeda. In June 2001, al-Zawahiri formally merged the
Egyptian Islamic Jihad into al-Qaeda. In late 2001, a computer was seized that was stolen from an office used by al-Qaeda immediately after the fall of Kabul in November. This computer was mainly used by al-Zawahiri and contained the fraudulent letter used to arrange the meeting between two al-Qaeda attackers posing as journalists and Ahmad Shah Massoud. The journalists who conducted the interview
assassinated Massoud on September 9, 2001.
Emergence as al-Qaeda's chief commander In late 2004 bin Laden named al-Zawahiri officially as his deputy. On April 30, 2009, the
U.S. State Department reported that al-Zawahiri had emerged as
al-Qaeda's operational and strategic commander, and that Osama bin Laden was now only the ideological figurehead of the organization. Following the death of bin Laden, former U.S. Deputy National Security Advisor for Combating Terrorism
Juan Zarate said that al-Zawahiri would "clearly assume the mantle of leadership" of al-Qaeda. Rashad Mohammad Ismail (AKA "Abu Al-Fida"), a leading member of
al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, stated that al-Zawahiri was the best candidate.
Hamid Mir is reported to have said that he believed that Ayman al-Zawahiri was the operational head of al-Qaeda, and that "[h]e is the person who can do the things that happened on September 11."
Formal appointment Al-Zawahiri became the leader of
al-Qaeda following the May 2, 2011
killing of Osama bin Laden. His succession to that role was announced on several of their websites on June 16, 2011. On the same day, al-Qaeda renewed its position that Israel was an illegitimate state and that it would not accept any compromise on
Palestine. The delayed announcement led some analysts to speculate that there was quarreling within al-Qaeda: "It doesn't suggest a vast reservoir of accumulated goodwill for him," said one celebrity journalist on
CNN. Both
U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mike Mullen maintain that the delay didn't signal any kind of dispute within al-Qaeda, and Mullen reiterated U.S. death threats toward al-Zawahiri. According to US officials within the
Obama administration and Robert Gates, al-Zawahiri would find the leadership difficult as, while intelligent, he lacks combat experience and the charisma of
Osama bin Laden. In April 2008, al-Zawahiri blamed Iranian state media and
Al-Manar for perpetuating the "lie" that "there are no heroes among the Sunnis who can hurt America as no-one else did in history" in order
to discredit the Al Qaeda network. Al-Zawahiri was referring to some
9/11 conspiracy theories that claim that Al Qaeda was not responsible for the 9/11 attacks. On the seventh anniversary of the attacks of September 11, 2001, al-Zawahiri released a 90-minute tape in which he
blasted "the guardian of Muslims in Tehran" for recognizing "the two
hireling governments" in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Activities in Russia At some point in 1994, al-Zawahiri was said to have "become
a phantom" but is thought to have traveled widely to "Switzerland and
Sarajevo". A fake passport he was using shows that he traveled to
Malaysia,
Taiwan, Singapore, and Hong Kong. On December 1, 1996,
Ahmad Salama Mabruk and
Mahmud Hisham al-Hennawi – both carrying false passports – accompanied al-Zawahiri on a trip to
Chechnya, where they hoped to re-establish the faltering Jihad. Their leader was traveling under the
pseudonym Abdullah Imam Mohammed Amin, and trading on his medical credentials for legitimacy. The group switched vehicles three times, but were arrested within hours of entering Russian territory and spent five months in a
Makhachkala prison awaiting trial. The trio pleaded innocence, maintaining their disguise while other al-Jihad members from
Bavari-C sent the Russian authorities pleas for leniency for their "merchant" colleagues who had been wrongly arrested. Russian Member of Parliament
Nadyr Khachiliev echoed the pleas for their speedy release as al-Jihad members
Ibrahim Eidarous and
Tharwat Salah Shehata traveled to
Dagestan to plead for their release. Shehata received permission to visit the prisoners. He is believed to have smuggled $3000 to them, which was later confiscated, and to have given them a letter which the Russians didn't bother to translate. Shehata was sent on to Chechnya where he met with
Ibn Khattab. There have been doubts as to the true nature of al-Zawahiri's encounter with the Russians in 1996.
Jamestown Foundation scholar
Evgenii Novikov has argued that it seems unlikely that the Russians would not have been able to determine who he was, given Russia's well-trained Arabists and the suspicious acts of Muslims crossing borders illegally with multiple Arabic false identities and encrypted documents. Assassinated former
FSB secret service officer Alexander Litvinenko alleged, among other things, that during this time al-Zawahiri was trained by the FSB and that he was not the only link between al-Qaeda and the FSB. Former
KGB officer,
Voice of America commentator and writer
Konstantin Preobrazhenskiy supported Litvinenko's claim. He said that Litvinenko "was responsible for securing the secrecy of Al-Zawahiri's arrival in Russia, who was trained by FSB instructors in
Dagestan,
Northern Caucasus, during 1996–1997."
Activities in Egypt Al-Zawahiri was convicted of dealing in weapons and received a three-year sentence, which he completed in 1984, shortly after his conviction. Al-Zawahiri learned of a "
Nonviolence Initiative" organized in Egypt to end the
terror campaign that had killed hundreds and resulting government crackdown that had imprisoned thousands. Al-Zawahiri angrily opposed this "surrender" in letters to the London newspaper
Al-Sharq al-Awsat. Together with members of
al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya, he helped organize a massive attack on tourists at the
Temple of Hatshepsut to
sabotage the initiative by provoking the government into
repression. The attack by six men dressed in police uniforms succeeded in machine-gunning and hacking to death 58 foreign tourists and four
Egyptians, including "a five-year-old British child and four Japanese couples on their honeymoons," and devastated the Egyptian tourist industry for a number of years. Nonetheless, the Egyptian reaction was not what al-Zawahiri had hoped for. The attack so stunned and angered Egyptian society that Islamists denied responsibility. Al-Zawahiri blamed the police for the killing, but also held the tourists responsible for their own deaths for coming to Egypt, Al-Zawahiri was
sentenced to death in absentia in 1999 by an Egyptian
military tribunal.
Activities and whereabouts after the September 11 attacks In December 2001, al-Zawahiri published a book entitled
Fursan Rayat al Nabi (''Knights Under the Prophet's Banner'') which outlined ideologies of al-Qaeda. English translations of this book were published; excerpts are available online. sits with his adviser al-Zawahiri during an interview with Pakistani journalist
Hamid Mir, in November 2001. Following the
U.S. invasion of Afghanistan, al-Zawahiri's whereabouts were unknown, but he was generally thought to be in tribal Pakistan. Although he released
videos of himself frequently, al-Zawahiri did not appear alongside bin Laden in any of them after 2003. In 2003, it was rumored that he was under arrest in Iran, although this was later discovered to be false. On January 13, 2006, the
Central Intelligence Agency, aided by Pakistan's ISI, launched an
airstrike on Damadola, a Pakistani village near the Afghan border where they believed al-Zawahiri was located. The airstrike was supposed to kill al-Zawahiri and this was reported in international news over the following days. Many victims of the airstrike were buried unidentified. Anonymous U.S. government officials claimed that some terrorists were killed and the Bajaur tribal area government confirmed that at least four terrorists were among the dead. Anti-American protests broke out around the country and the
Pakistani government condemned the U.S. attack and the loss of
innocent life. On August 1, 2008,
CBS News reported that it had obtained a copy of an intercepted letter dated July 29, 2008, from unnamed sources in Pakistan, which urgently requested a doctor to treat al-Zawahiri. The letter indicated that al-Zawahiri was critically injured in a US missile strike at Azam Warsak village in South Waziristan on July 28 that also reportedly killed al Qaeda explosives expert
Abu Khabab al-Masri. Taliban Mehsud spokesman
Maulvi Umar told the
Associated Press on August 2, 2008, that the report of al-Zawahiri's injury was false. In early September 2008, Pakistan Army claimed that they "almost" captured al-Zawahiri after getting information that he and his wife were in the
Mohmand Agency, in northwest Pakistan. After raiding the area, officials didn't find him. == General Emir of al-Qaeda ==