In May 2007, al-Masri released a video promising Americans that
al-Qaeda troops had been training through the winter and were ready to begin a fresh summer offensive in
Afghanistan. In December, al-Masri was said to have claimed responsibility for the
assassination of Benazir Bhutto, telling Adnkronos International that "we terminated the most precious American asset which vowed to defeat
mujahideen". The
Asia Times Online also reported that it had received a claim of responsibility from al-Masri by telephone. al-Masri allowed himself to be interviewed on
Geo Television in July 2008 following the
Danish embassy bombing, which he claimed were carried out by a Saudi follower of al-Qaeda. Pakistan's
DAWN reported him killed on 13 August 2008, in an airstrike in
Bajaur.
Tehrik-i-Taliban spokesman
Maulvi Omar, himself captured five days after the attack, denied the claim that al-Masri had been killed. Others suggested that the report of his death was a Pakistani attempt to refute recent American accusations that sections of the
ISI were still assisting al-Qaeda. On 9 February 2009, the Indian government received a video from al-Yazid in which he reiterated the promise of Pakistani retaliation if India launched a
first strike. This video took everyone by surprise as he was presumed to be dead. ==Confirmed death==