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For U.S. counter-terrorism efforts, it was a busy weekend, which produced an important victory.
Four vans with tinted windows converged in a comfortable Tripoli neighborhood as a leader of Al Qaeda returned home on Saturday from early morning prayers. As his wife watched with alarm from a window, the men — armed with silencer-equipped weapons, some masked and some not — smashed his car window. Within moments, they were gone, taking with them one of America’s most wanted terror suspects. […]
The seizure of Nazih Abdul-Hamed al-Ruqai, better known as Abu Anas al-Libi, from outside his home in Tripoli, where he was living largely in the open, represented a long-sought victory for the United States.
If his name sounds familiar, there’s a good reason: Abu Anas al-Libi is believed to be responsible for the bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998.
Note, while we’ve grown accustomed to hearing about counter-terrorism missions involving drone strikes in remote areas, this was a very different kind of mission. There were no drones, pilots, or missiles; there were four vans with no license plates who stopped the suspect’s vehicle, grabbed him, and sped away. The alleged terrorist isn’t dead; he will instead be interrogated and be brought to trial.








