War against al-Qaeda not won, says Saudi

SAUDI ARABIA: Saudi Arabia's interior minister said yesterday the kingdom's war against al-Qaeda was not over, even after the…

SAUDI ARABIA: Saudi Arabia's interior minister said yesterday the kingdom's war against al-Qaeda was not over, even after the death of top leaders of the group's Saudi wing.

"The battle with them is not finished," prince Nayef bin Abdul-Aziz told state-run television. "You never know, some new leaders might emerge," he added.

Saudi-born Osama bin Laden's group has been waging a violent campaign in the kingdom for nearly three years, aimed at toppling the pro-US monarchy and expelling Westerners from the birthplace of Islam.

Prince Nayef's brief remarks came in response to a question about the damage caused to al-Qaeda by the killing of five militants, including four who were on a most-wanted list of al-Qaeda-linked suspects, in a clash with security forces last month.

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The killings meant that almost all of 15 wanted men thought to be at large inside Saudi Arabia from a list of 36 that was issued last year had been killed or arrested.

Security analysts say the other 21 are outside the country, many believed to have joined insurgents in Iraq, and that some may be dead. Those killed last month included Fahd al-Juweir, who the government said was a leader of the Saudi wing of al-Qaeda.

Officials say about 150 foreigners and Saudis and more than 120 militants have died in attacks and clashes with police since May 2003, when al-Qaeda suicide bombers hit three Western housing compounds in Riyadh.