Saif al-Adel, an Iran-based Egyptian with a $10 million US bounty on his head, has become the head of Al-Qaeda following the July 2022 death of Ayman al-Zawahiri, the US State Department said Wednesday, according to AFP. Our assessment aligns with that of the UN — that Al-Qaeda's new de facto leader Saif al-Adel is based in Iran, a state department spokesperson said. The United Nations report released Tuesday said that the predominant view of member states is that Adel is now the group's leader, representing continuity for now. But the group has not formally declared him emir because of sensitivity to the concerns of the Taliban authorities in Afghanistan, who haven't wanted to acknowledge that Zawahiri was killed by a US rocket in a home in Kabul last year, according to the UN report. Shiite Iran In addition, the UN report said, the Sunni Islamist Al-Qaeda is sensitive to the issue of Adel residing in largely Shiite Iran. His location raises questions that have a bearing on Al-Qaeda's ambitions to assert leadership of a global movement in the face of challenges from ISIL, the UN report said, referring to another name for the rival Islamic State group. Adel, 62, is a former Egyptian special forces lieutenant-colonel and figure in the old guard of Al-Qaeda. 9/11 attack He helped build the group's operational capacity and trained some of the hijackers who took part in the September 11, 2001 attack on the United States, according to the US Counter Extremism Project. He has been in Iran since 2002 or 2003, at first under house arrest but later free enough to make trips to Pakistan, according to Ali Soufan, a former FBI counter-terrorism investigator. Saif is one of the most experienced professional soldiers in the worldwide jihadi movement, and his body bears the scars of battle, Soufan wrote in a 2021 article for the West Point Combating Terrorism Centre’s CTC Journal. When he acts, he does so with ruthless efficiency, he said. In November 1998, a US federal grand jury indicted and charged Adel for his role in the bombing of US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. The attacks killed 224 civilians and wounded over 5,000.