Baghdad: Some groups of
Al Qaida terror network in Iraq have started leaving the country towards other
hot spots in Africa like Sudan and Somalia, security sources tell Gulf News.
A key reason behind the
change in strategy by the so-called Al Qaida Organisation in Mesopotamia is the
intensity of the latest military strikes launched by Iraqi and US forces
against the network, which has been the major challenge to restoring the
stability of Iraq, the sources said.
"Our intelligence
information indicates the withdrawal of certain groups of Al Qaida from Iraq
because of the military strikes. Many of them have escaped through the borders
with Syria and Iran to hotter zones such as Somalia and Sudan," Major
General Hussain Ali Kamal, head of the Investigation and Information Agency at
the Interior Ministry, told Gulf News.
"I believe this is the beginning of the complete withdrawal of Al Qaida
from Iraqi territory."
A source at Iraqi
Ministry of National Security said that documents and letters found in hideouts
of "some elements of Al Qaida" during search operations in Sunni
suburbs in Baghdad, which were previously under the control of Al Qaida,
"prove these elements left Iraq for Somalia and Sudan".
The information, which
could not be confirmed by independent sources, could represent a victory for
the Iraqi government, headed by Nouri Al Maliki.
The number of bloody
attacks by Al Qaida has declined remarkably in Baghdad in the past 12 months,
an indication the terror network faces a difficult situation on the ground,
said Major General Abdul Jalil Khalaf, former police commander in Basra
province.
"This also
highlights the increasingly improving performance of the Iraqi armed forces and
the speed by which they can operate in different places," Khalaf told Gulf
News.
Khalaf, who is said to be considered for a top post at the Ministry of Defence,
said the recent campaign against the Shiite militias in Basra negatively
affected Al Qaida.
"Al Qaida began to
lose a lot of sympathy on the Sunni streets after realising that Al Maliki
government launched a war against the Shiites fighters, believed to be backed
by Iran."
The latest political
rapprochement between Iraq and other Arab states has also led to the weakening
Al Qaida and "its gradual withdrawal from Iraq", he explained. But
Khalaf warned that Al Qaida will not withdraw fully from Iraq. "This will
take years," he said.
"Our intelligence
information indicates the withdrawal of certain groups of Al Qaida from Iraq
because of the military strikes. Many of them have escaped through the borders
with Syria and Iran to hotter zones such as Somalia and Sudan," Major
General Hussain Ali Kamal, head of the Investigation and Information Agency at
the Interior Ministry, told Gulf News.
"I believe this is the beginning of the complete withdrawal of Al Qaida
from Iraqi territory."
A source at Iraqi
Ministry of National Security said that documents and letters found in hideouts
of "some elements of Al Qaida" during search operations in Sunni
suburbs in Baghdad, which were previously under the control of Al Qaida,
"prove these elements left Iraq for Somalia and Sudan".
The information, which
could not be confirmed by independent sources, could represent a victory for
the Iraqi government, headed by Nouri Al Maliki.
The number of bloody
attacks by Al Qaida has declined remarkably in Baghdad in the past 12 months,
an indication the terror network faces a difficult situation on the ground,
said Major General Abdul Jalil Khalaf, former police commander in Basra
province.
"This also
highlights the increasingly improving performance of the Iraqi armed forces and
the speed by which they can operate in different places," Khalaf told Gulf
News.
Khalaf, who is said to be considered for a top post at the Ministry of Defence,
said the recent campaign against the Shiite militias in Basra negatively
affected Al Qaida.
"Al Qaida began to
lose a lot of sympathy on the Sunni streets after realising that Al Maliki
government launched a war against the Shiites fighters, believed to be backed
by Iran."
The latest political
rapprochement between Iraq and other Arab states has also led to the weakening
Al Qaida and "its gradual withdrawal from Iraq", he explained. But
Khalaf warned that Al Qaida will not withdraw fully from Iraq. "This will
take years," he said.