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 Al Qaeda's leader in Iraq Abu
Musab al-Zarqawi is seen in an undated
photo. | BEIJING, Nov. 22
-- US officials doubted the notion that Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the most wanted
man in the Middle East, may have been killed in a raid in Iraq as tests
were underway to determine if the leader of al Qaeda was among those killed.
Eight insurgents and four Iraqi policemen died in the raid
by US and Iraqi forces, including three insurgents who blew themselves up to
avoid capture, officials said.
Iraq's foreign minister said yesterday that urgent DNA
tests were being carried out on the bodies of several people who died when US
and Iraqi forces stormed a house in the northern city of Mosul, to determine if
al-Zarqawi was among them.
The US administration, which had offered a $25m reward
for al-Zarqawi, played down the reports.
The U.S. ambassador to Iraq said he doubted that the dead
included al-Zarqawi.
"I don't believe that we got him. Of course, his days are
numbered, we are after him, we are getting ever closer," Zalmay Khalilzad told
reporters.
A US government official, who spoke in Washington on
condition of anonymity, confirmed that DNA from the eight insurgents who died in
the Saturday raid in Mosul had been taken for testing. Enditem
(Agencies) |