Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Attack that killed kids targeted al-Qaida leader

Officials: Military knew children were present but considered risk worth it

NBC video
Target: Abu Laith
June 19: Video taped in June 2004 shows Abu Laith al Libi and other al-Qaida members rejoicing after setting fire to an Afghan army post.

Nightly News

Terrorism video  
Chasing Bin Laden
Oct. 9: Rachel Maddow talks with the officer who led an elite, top-secret force on a mission to kill Osama Bin Laden after 9/11. His forces were once within 2,000 meters of Bin Laden before he escaped. He goes by the name Dalton Fury and his new book “Kill Bin Laden” has just been released.

Interactive
The war on terror
Learn about attacks, arrests and other major incidents in global terrorism since 1993. Click "Launch" to view.
Slide show
AP I CUB US Guantanamo Five Years
  Inside Guantanamo’s walls
A look at the controversial U.S.-run detention center in Cuba, home to prisoners accused of having ties to international terrorism.

more photos

NBC NEWS EXCLUSIVE
By By Jim Miklaszewski, Courtney Kube and Robert Windrem
NBC News
updated 9:12 p.m. ET June 19, 2007

U.S. special operations forces were targeting the leader of al-Qaida in Afghanistan — one of the organization's top commanders — when they launched an attack against a compound that killed seven children Sunday in Paktika province of eastern Afghanistan, U.S. officials tell NBC News.

According to several officials, and contrary to previous statements, the U.S. military knew there were children at the compound but considered the target of such high value it was worth the risk of potential collateral damage.

Those same officials tell NBC News the target of Sunday's attack was Abu Laith al Libi, the al-Qaida commander in Afghanistan and a top lieutenant of Osama bin Laden.  The sources report that although six sets of remains besides those of the seven children were recovered, it's not clear whether Abu Laith is among those killed.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement

Abu Laith, a physically imposing 40-year-old Libyan, is an outspoken leader of al-Qaida, appearing in videos and on the Internet. An October 2006 Defense Intelligence Agency analysis describes him this way: “Speaks Arabic with a Maghreb/Moroccan dialect; scars on back as if beaten by a belt or wire; senior Al Qaeda commander; expert in guerrilla warfare.”

Abu Laith is also believed to wear a dental bridge that could help in identifying him.

Visible leader
It was he in July 2002 who revealed that bin Laden was still alive, the first comments about the al-Qaida leader's health after the end of the Afghan conflict. Then, in June 2004, he was shown leading an attack on what appears to be an Afghan military outpost and calling for jihad while praising both the Taliban and bin Laden. He is known to operate on the Afghan side of the border, working with the remnants of the Taliban.

In some U.S. intelligence analyses, he is viewed as one of the organization's top commanders, ranking in the top five.

Military officials say special operations forces relied on a relatively new weapons system to carry out the attack — High Mobility Artillery Rockets, or HIMARS.  The rockets are fired high into the atmosphere from launchers on the ground.  Then, on the way down, they are guided to the target by either GPS or lasers.  The officials say as many of five of these HIMARS were used in the attack on the compound.  It was the same weapons system used recently in the killing of Mullah Dadullah, the Taliban’s military commander.  The rockets are now used as a complement to the Predator drones that have killed more than a dozen al-Qaida leaders since Sept 11, 2001.

Initial reports had U.S. jets targeting a compound that also contained a mosque and a madrassa, or Islamic school.

A coalition statement following the attack said "nefarious activity was occurring at the site" without describing either the activity or the level of al-Qaida present. Army Maj. Chris Belcher, a coalition spokesman, accused al-Qaida of using "the protective status of a mosque, as well as innocent civilians, to shield themselves."

Early reports indicated seven children at the madrassa and "several militants" were killed, and two militants detained, the statement said.


Sponsored links

Resource guide

Get Your 2008 Credit Score

Find a business to start

Try for Free

Search Jobs

Find Your Dream Home

$7 trades, no fee IRAs

Find your next car