ISIS 'emir of suicide bombers' killed in coalition airstrike, U.S. says
(CNN)Senior
ISIS leader Tariq al-Harzi -- a man known as the "emir of suicide
bombers" -- was killed by a coalition airstrike in Syria last month, a
U.S. official said Thursday.
Al-Harzi
played a key logistical role for ISIS, overseeing efforts to get
jihadists and weapons into Iraq and Syria to fuel the militant
organization's war machine, according to U.S. authorities.
The
Tunisian, believed to be one of the first foreign fighters to join
ISIS, also helped organize the Sunni extremist group's devastating use
of suicide and vehicle-borne bombs in Iraq, the U.S. Department of
Defense said.
"This was a big get,"
said Mike Rogers, a CNN national security commentator and former
chairman of the U.S. House Intelligence Committee. "It will be very
disruptive to their operation for at least some period of time."
$3 million reward
Al-Harzi was killed in Shaddadi, Syria, on June 16, said Capt. Jeff Davis, a spokesman for the Department of Defense.
The
ISIS leader had been on the U.S. Designated Terrorist List since last
year and the State Department had offered a $3 million reward for
information on him.
The Pentagon said
last month that al-Harzi's brother, who was also an ISIS operative, was
killed in a U.S. airstrike in Mosul, Iraq, on June 15.
The
brother, Ali Awni al-Harzi, was seen as an intermediary between ISIS
and jihadists in North Africa. The U.S. government labeled him "a person
of interest" in the deadly attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi,
Libya, on Sept 11, 2012.
Role beyond Iraq and Syria
But Tariq al-Harzi was a more prominent figure in ISIS.
He
was believed to be in charge of the terrorist group's operations beyond
Iraq and Syria -- operations that have become much more significant in
recent months as ISIS has established a foothold in Libya and gained
affiliates in Nigeria and Egypt, among other places.

The ISIS terror threat 72 photos
He organized the procurement and shipping of weapons to Syria from Libya, the Pentagon said.
According to a jihadist profile, Tariq al-Harzi was freed from Abu Ghraib prison during an ISIS raid in July 2013.
The United States has targeted other senior ISIS leaders. In May, an Army Delta Force raid in eastern Syria killed Abu Sayyaf, who U.S. officials said was in charge of oil and gas financing for the militant group, as well as other operations.
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