The
Pentagon said Friday that it had killed ISIS' finance minister, Abd
al-Rahman Mustafa al-Qaduli, whom many analysts consider the group's No.
2 leader.
Those analysts
believe al-Qaduli would have been expected to take control of the
day-to-day running of ISIS, also called ISIL, if its leader, Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi, was killed or incapacitated.
The
U.S. operation was intended to capture him alive, a U.S. official told
CNN. Helicopters loaded with special operations forces swooped in on a
vehicle carrying al-Qaduli, but at the last moment something happened
that caused them to decide to fire on the vehicle instead. The official
would not say what it was that caused them to modify the plan.
Defense Secretary Ash Carter announced the death at a news conference Friday morning.
"We
are systematically eliminating ISIL's cabinet," Carter said, adding it
was "the second senior ISIL leader we've successfully targeted this
month."
Explaining
the significance of this particular figure, Carter noted, "We've taken
out the leader who oversees the funding for ISIL's operations, hurting
their ability to pay fighters and hire recruits."
Asked whether the U.S. was turning the
corner on the fight against ISIS, Carter responded, "We're certainly
gathering momentum and we're seeing that that momentum is having an
effect."
Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs Gen. Joseph Dunford, appearing alongside Carter, agreed that the
U.S.-led coalition was gaining momentum, but he cautioned: "By no means
would I say that we're about to break the back of ISIL or that the fight
is over."
Carter also connected
Friday's announcement to the terror attacks in Europe that ISIS has
undertaken, including a mass killing in Brussels on Tuesday.
"Like
Paris, Brussels is a strong reminder of why we need to hasten the
defeat of ISIL wherever it exists in the world," Carter said, stressing
the United States' commitment to Europe.
"Our
enemies are one and the same," he declared."And together we continue to
do more and more to bring the full weight of our vast military
capabilities to bear in accelerating the defeat of ISIL."
This
is not the first time al-Qaduli has been reported killed. In July, the
Iraqi Defense Ministry claimed a coalition air strike had killed him in
Tal Afar in northern Iraq.
At the
time U.S. Central Command, which oversees military operations in the
region, debunked the claim, saying it had "no information to
corroborate" that ISIS' second-in-command had been killed.
The
U.S. Treasury labeled al-Qaduli "a specially designated global
terrorist" in 2014. According to the Treasury, he also goes by 12
aliases, including Hajji Iman, a name Carter used when speaking to
reporters Friday.
The U.S. State
Department had offered a $7 million reward for information on al-Qaduli
-- the highest for any ISIS leader apart from al-Baghdadi, who is valued
at $10 million.
That sizable
bounty makes al-Qaduli the sixth-most-wanted terrorist in the world,
ranking only behind the likes of the heads of al Qaeda, ISIS and the
Taliban's Haqqani network.
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