Islamabad: Al Qaeda has confirmed one of its commanders died last month in an American drone strike in Pakistan, a program that is a major source of tension stalling the relationship between Washington and Islamabad.
The death of Badr Mansoor in the strike along the border with Afghanistan is significant because he was believed to be behind many of the suicide attacks that have killed scores of Pakistani civilians in recent years.
It could also be used by supporters of the campaign in Washington and Islamabad as an example of how drone attacks benefit both countries. The US-based SITE monitoring service said today that the confirmation of Mansoor`s death came in a video statement by Ahmad Farooq, al Qaeda`s head of media and preaching in Pakistan. The video has been released on an internet jihadist forum.
Faced with strong public anger over the drone attacks, Pakistani officials publicly condemn them as an unacceptable violations of sovereignty that boost support for extremism. But privately, the program has long had some level of official sanction and even cooperation.
Local Taliban fighters had previously said Mansoor was killed in the February 9 strike but there was no confirmation from the US or Pakistan.
A militant video eulogizing the dead is considered the most reliable way of knowing when a top commander has been killed.
In the nine-minute video, which featured photos of Mansoor alive and dead, Farooq accused Pakistan of collaborating with the strikes, emphasising its apparent hypocrisy.
"America is now more eagerly attacking the Pakistani government`s targets," he said. "The drone program is being run with the full consent, permission and cooperation of the Pakistani government." The strikes, which began in earnest in 2008, have killed scores of militants, including foreign al Qaeda members involved in plotting attacks on the West.
Their frequency increased in 2010 and they hit militants widely seen as being proxies of the Pakistani army, causing friction in U.S-Pakistan ties.
Amid the tensions, the number of attacks dropped in 2011 and even more since November, when US aircraft mistakenly killed 24 Pakistani troops on the Afghan border.
Pakistan blocked US supply routes into Afghanistan in protest and said it was renegotiating its ties with Washington as a result.
The issue of drone strikes, their frequency, targeting and whether Pakistan should be informed ahead of them is key to ongoing, back-channel negotiations to restart that relationship, which is important for America`s hopes of withdrawing from Afghanistan.
PTI