Al-Qaeda appoints interim chief

Al-Qaeda has appointed an Egyptian militant as temporary leader and named a new head of operations following the killing of Osama…

Al-Qaeda has appointed an Egyptian militant as temporary leader and named a new head of operations following the killing of Osama bin Laden, al-Jazeera said today, citing Pakistani security sources.

The Arab satellite channel said Saif al-Adel was named interim leader and Mohammed Mustafa al-Yemeni, whose surname hints he is from Yemen, would direct operations.

"According to the sources, the decision (on the appointments) was made at a meeting on May 10th on the Afghanistan-Pakistan border," said the channel, which was the main conduit for bin Laden to release messages to the media.

US special forces killed the al-Qaeda leader bin Laden in his hideout outside the capital of Pakistan on May 2nd.

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"I think it's more for show than anything else. It is to illustrate to the world that they have a temporary leader," Dubai-based security analyst Theodore Karasik said of Adel.

"Adel clearly has operational experience but he does not have the intellectual or charismatic side that bin Laden had."

Adnan al-Khairi al-Masri was named al-Qaeda's general command head, while Mohammed Nasser al-Wahshi would be Africa chief, Mohammed Adam Khan, an Afghan, would be in charge in Pakistan and Afghanistan, and Fahd al-Iraqi would be responsible for the Afghan-Pakistani border region, Al-Jazeera added.

US prosecutors say Adel is one of al-Qaeda's leading military commanders and helped plan the 1998 bomb attacks on the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. They also say he set up al-Qaeda training camps in Sudan and Afghanistan in the 1990s.

But reports have suggested Adel viewed the September 11th attacks as a mistake and criticised bin Laden over them.

Reuters