An al-Qaeda cell leader who may have been training suicide bombers was among two insurgents killed in an air strike in northern Afghanistan at the weekend, Nato-led forces said today.
While the Osama bin Laden-led movement is widely believed to be funding and training the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan, the capture or killing of senior al-Qaeda figures is relatively uncommon.
The Nato-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said Abu Baqir, a Taliban sub-commander and al-Qaeda group leader, was killed when an alliance aircraft fired on a truck in northern Kunduz province.
ISAF said the air strike was called in after insurgents attacked a police station in Aliabad district.
"The air weapons team tracked the insurgents from the police station and, when they determined no civilians were in the area, they engaged the truck," ISAF said in a statement.
"The air weapons team killed two insurgents including Baqir, who was reportedly housing four potential suicide bombers for upcoming attacks on the city of Kunduz," it said.
When contacted, ISAF in Kabul had no more details immediately available.
Once a relatively peaceful area, Kunduz has been slowly drawn into the insurgency in recent months as the Taliban spread out of their traditional strongholds in Kandahar and Helmand provinces in the south.
Last October, White House national security adviser James Jones estimated there were fewer than 100 al-Qaeda militants operating in Afghanistan. He said the question of Afghanistan once again becoming a haven for al-Qaeda was "a hypothetical".
Apart from training and funding the Taliban in Afghanistan, al-Qaeda is also closely linked to the Haqqani network, operating mainly in the east of the country.
The Haqqani network has staged several high-profile attacks, including a failed assassination attempt against Afghan president Hamid Karzai in 2008. It also has close links with Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence spy agency.
Reuters