Al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri, in an online audio message,
pledged allegiance to the new head of the Afghan Taliban, in a move that
could bolster his accession after the death of Taliban founder Mullah
Mohammad Omar."We pledge our allegiance ... [to the] commander of
the faithful, Mullah Mohammad Akhtar Mansour, may God protect him,"
said Ayman al-Zawahiri, believed to be hiding in a border area between
Afghanistan and Pakistan that is a militant bastion.
The authenticity of the recording could not be immediately verified, but it had all the stamps of an al-Qaeda video.
Divisions within the Taliban insurgent movement have emerged since the news last month of the death of Mullah Omar.
The
swift announcement that Mansour, Omar's longtime deputy, would be the
new leader has riled many senior Taliban figures, and Omar's family said
this month that it did not endorse the move.
Mansour's position
could be shored up by the vote of confidence by al-Qaeda, the global
militant group that has maintained ties with the Taliban for almost two
decades since the tenure of its founder and late leader Osama bin Laden.
"As
leader of the al-Qaeda organisation for jihad, I offer our pledge of
allegiance, renewing the path of Sheikh Osama and the devoted martyrs in
their pledge to the commander of the faithful, the holy warrior Mullah
Omar," Zawahiri added.
Reiterating support for the Taliban is also
a tacit rejection of Islamic State, the new ultra-radical Sunni Muslim
movement that is ensconced in Iraq and Syria and has gained the support
of a few Afghan insurgent commanders.
Al-Qaeda is being challenged
by Islamic State (ISIS) for leadership of the global jihadist movement,
as determined backers of ISIS have cropped up in Libya and Yemen this
year.
Al-Qaeda was set up by Arab fighters who flocked to
Afghanistan to fight Soviet occupation forces in the 1980s. It thrived
under the Taliban's 1996-2001 rule in Afghanistan before the US invasion
that followed al-Qaeda's September 11 2001 attacks on New York and
Washington drove both groups underground.
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