• This person is expected to lead Al Qaeda after Ayman al-Zawahiri.

    International
    This person is expected to lead Al Qaeda after Ayman al-Zawahiri.





    Digital Desk: Following a successful
    drone attack in Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan, the United States has
    murdered Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri. The terrorist organisation has
    suffered its greatest setback since the death of its founder Osama bin Laden in
    2011. In a televised speech on Tuesday morning (India time), US President Joe
    Biden declared that "justice has been delivered" and expressed the
    hope that Zawahiri's demise will provide "closure" to the families of
    the 3,000 Americans slain on 9/11. The commander of Al-Qaeda, who is one of the
    most sought terrorists in the world, planned the attacks of September 11, 2001.



    Zawahiri has
    served as Al Qaeda's leader since taking over for bin Laden in 2011. In light
    of Zawahiri's death, the terrorist organisation now confronts a serious
    succession issue.



    The next in line
    to lead is Saif al-Adel, according to the Middle East Institute. According to
    US intelligence sources, the former Egyptian army officer joined the
    predecessor terrorist organisation Maktab al-Khidmat in the 1980s and later
    became a founding member of Al Qaeda.



    During this time,
    he met bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri and joined their organisation, Egyptian
    Islamic Jihad (EIJ). In the 1980s, he also engaged in combat with Russian
    forces in Afghanistan.



    Saif al-Adel, who
    formerly oversaw security for Osama Bin Laden, has been on the FBI's
    most-wanted list since 2001; the reward for information leading to his capture
    has now been raised to $10 million. Al-Adel is wanted in relation to
    "conspiracy to kill United States citizens, to murder, to destroy
    structures and property of the United States, and to destroy the national
    defence Utilities of the United States," according to the agency's page on
    him.



    Since 1993, when Saif al-Adel was in
    charge of the tragic "Black Hawk Down" incident, which resulted in
    the deaths of 18 Americans, when US forces and helicopters were ambushed in
    Mogadishu, Somalia, US forces have been searching for him. At the time, Al-Adel
    was thirty.



    Al-Adel has reportedly emerged as a
    significant strategist following the murder of bin Laden, according to several
    news outlets. Making him the leader of the terrorist organisation, according to
    the Middle East Institute, will be challenging given his presence in Iran,
    where he has been based ever since the "Black Hawk Down" incident.



    The institute also noted that at least three al-Qaeda affiliates
    are known to have questioned the veracity of Saif al-orders Adel's in recent
    years.