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Senior al Qaeda leader Mustafa Abu al-Yazid, who was reported to have been killed last month, speaks in this image taken from internet video footage. Al Qaeda issued new threats against Denmark in an Internet video released on September 5, 2008, saying an attack on the Danish Embassy in Pakistan is just the start of its retaliation for perceived insults to the Prophet Mohammad.
A member of the anti-Al-Qaeda "Sahwa" (Awakening) group also known as "Sons of Iraq" keeps watch in the Faduat Arab neighbourhood in downtown Baghdad on September 4, 2008. The US military will next month transfer responsibility for paying 100,000 mostly Sunni fighters battling Al-Qaeda to Baghdad's Shiite-led government, the military told AFP today. The government of Iraq and coalition forces have agreed in principle to transfer all 100,000 "Sons of Iraq" from October 1, US military spokesman Major John Hall told.
A member of the anti-Al-Qaeda "Sahwa" (Awakening) group also known as "Sons of Iraq" keeps watch in the Faduat Arab neighbourhood in downtown Baghdad on September 4, 2008. The US military will next month transfer responsibility for paying 100,000 mostly Sunni fighters battling Al-Qaeda to Baghdad's Shiite-led government, the military told AFP today. The government of Iraq and coalition forces have agreed in principle to transfer all 100,000 "Sons of Iraq" from October 1, US military spokesman Major John Hall told.
A member (R) of the anti-Al-Qaeda "Sahwa" (Awakening) group also known as "Sons of Iraq" requests documents from a driver in the Faduat Arab neighbourhood in downtown Baghdad on September 4, 2008. The US military will next month transfer responsibility for paying 100,000 mostly Sunni fighters battling Al-Qaeda to Baghdad's Shiite-led government, the military told AFP today. The government of Iraq and coalition forces have agreed in principle to transfer all 100,000 "Sons of Iraq" from October 1, US military spokesman Major John Hall told.
Iraqi security forces arrest a man suspected of being Al-Qaeda activist in Baghdad's Shiite-Sunni Jihad neighbourhood, formerly controlled by Al-Qaeda, on August 23, 2008. Some 240 Shiite families who left the mixed neighbourhood in 2006 following attacks by Al-Qaeda militants on Shiite residents returned home today under the protection of US and Iraqi security personnel to find an improved security situation in the area.
Iraqi security forces arrest a man suspected of being Al-Qaeda activist in Baghdad's Shiite-Sunni Jihad neighbourhood, formerly controlled by Al-Qaeda, on August 23, 2008. Some 240 Shiite families who left the mixed neighbourhood in 2006 following attacks by Al-Qaeda militants on Shiite residents returned home today under the protection of US and Iraqi security personnel to find an improved security situation in the area.
A portrait of Osama bin Laden, leader of Al-Qaida terrorist organization, painted at the back of a truck with description "Lion of Islam", travels in Islamabad, Pakistan on Friday, Aug 1, 2008. Pakistan's government said it needs to purge Taliban sympathizers from the country's main intelligence agency.
An undated photo published by the al Qaeda-linked group 'Yemen Soldiers Brigades' July 27, 2008 shows Ahmed bin Saeed al-Mashjari (R) identifying him as alleged suicide driver in the car bomb attack on a police station that killed two people and injured 18 others in Yemen's south-eastern province of Hadramout province on July 25. The group has claimed responsibility for the attack and said it was in retaliation for the killing of al Qaeda militants in Yemen.
Georgian soldiers detain a US soldier acting as an "al-Qaeda terrorist" during a joint exercise with U.S. servicemen at the Vaziani base outside Tbilisi on July 24, 2008. Approximately 1200 US and 600 Georgian soldiers are participating in the joint peackeeping training activities that run until July 31.
Iraqi police detain a man they say is an al Qaeda decision-maker during their joint operation with U.S. soldiers from the Second Stryker Cavalry Regiment near Muqtadiyah in Diyala province July 24, 2008. Sunni Islamist al Qaeda has sought to stoke tensions in Iraq's ethnically and religiously mixed northern cities, such as Diyala and Mosul, after military campaigns pushed its militants out of former strongholds in western Anbar province and Baghdad.
A handcuffed suspected al-Qaida member, left, and a neighbor, right, perform their afternoon prayers while being detained by U.S. troops during Operation Wolfpack Catseye near Qara Tappah, about 75 miles northeast of Baghdad in Iraq's volatile Diyala province on Monday, July 21, 2008. U.S. Army troops from Third Squadron, Second Stryker Cavalry Regiment fanned out near the Iranian border to root out al-Qaida leadership and deny them safe haven as part of a renewed push to secure the Diyala province.
A handcuffed suspected al-Qaida member, center, sits between U.S. Army soldiers inside an armored Stryker vehicle during Operation Wolfpack Catseyenear Qara Tappah, about 75 miles northeast of Baghdad in Iraq's volatile Diyala province on Monday, July 21, 2008. U.S. Army troops from Third Squadron, Second Stryker Cavalry Regiment fanned out near the Iranian border to root out al-Qaida leadership and deny them safe haven as part of a renewed push to secure the Diyala province.
Aafia Siddiqui, whom police say a possible al-Qaida associate, covers her face along with her son as they were shown to the media in Ghazni, Afghanistan, Friday, July 18,2008. Aafia Siddiqui, an MIT-educated Pakistani woman once identified as a possible al-Qaida associate, has been brought to New York to face charges she tried to kill U.S. agents and military officers during an interrogation in Afghanistan, federal prosecutors said.
Aafia Siddiqui, whom police say a possible al-Qaida associate, is seen in the custody of Counter Terrrorism Department of Ghazni province in Ghazni City, Afghanistan, on Thursday, July 17, 2008. Aafia Siddiqui, an MIT-educated Pakistani woman once identified as a possible al-Qaida associate, has been brought to New York to face charges she tried to kill U.S. agents and military officers during an interrogation in Afghanistan, federal prosecutors said.
A man suspected of belonging to a network financing Al-Qaeda linked terrorist groups is led away after being arrested in Huelva on July 1, 2008. Spanish police on tuesday arrested three Algerian-born men, two in Huelva and one in Azkoitia accused of financing terrorist organisations "directly" linked to Al Qaeda.
A Yemeni security guard (R) stands next to suspected Al-Qaeda members during a new hearing in their case at the state security court in Sanaa on June 28, 2008. A new hearing in the appeal of the 36 suspected members of the Al-Qaeda cell, accused of planning attacks in Yemen, took place this morning.
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the accused al Qaeda mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks, is pictured in this March 1, 2003 handout photo taken during his arrest in Rawalpindi, Pakistan. Mohammed and four accused co-conspirators appeared in court at the Guantanamo Bay U.S. naval base in Cuba for the first time on charges that could result in their execution.
A picture of al Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden is seen in the headquarters of the hardline Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) as plainclothes police search for members of FPI in Jakarta June 4, 2008. Indonesian police said they had detained 57 members of the hardline Islamic group for questioning on Wednesday morning following an attack on an interfaith rally in Jakarta on Sunday.