Saif al-Adel (born April 11, 1960 or 1963, Egypt) is an Egyptian militant Islamist who served as a high-ranking member of al-Qaeda and head of Osama bin Laden’s personal security force. He was indicted by the U.S. for his alleged participation in the bombing of U.S. embassies in East Africa in 1998.
Little is known about al-Adel’s early life, but he is believed to have served in the Egyptian army as a special forces officer. Before joining al-Qaeda, he was a member of the radical group Egyptian Islamic Jihad. According to the 1998 U.S. indictment in the embassy bombings case, al-Adel sat on al-Qaeda’s majlis al shura, or consultative council. This body discussed and approved all acts of terrorism carried out by the international al-Qaeda network. The indictment also charged al-Adel with providing military, explosives, and intelligence training to recruits for as long as a decade in al-Qaeda camps in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Sudan. He is thought to have trained several of the hijackers responsible for the September 11, 2001, attacks in the United States.
In addition to providing personal security for bin Laden, al-Adel also served on al-Qaeda’s military committee, reporting to the group’s commander, Muhammad Atef. It is believed that after Atef’s death in 2001, al-Adel succeeded him as head of al-Qaeda’s military planning. In late 2001 al-Adel fled Afghanistan for Iran, where he was detained by Iranian authorities. He spent most of the next decade under house arrest in Tehrān until a prisoner exchange between Iran and al-Qaeda led to his release in 2010. It is believed that after the death of bin Laden in 2011, al-Adel was elevated to one of the most senior leadership positions within al-Qaeda, perhaps serving as interim leader of the group.