According to the Pakistani authorities, Nawab was one of the aliases of Abu Hamza Rabia. Musharraf, who was then on a visit to Kuwait, told pressmen on December3, 2005, that he was 200 per cent certain that Rabia was one of the five killed. Subsequently, he said that he was 500 per cent certain about the identity. US Drones had operated in the area even in the past. In May, 2005, a Drone missile attack was reported to have killed Al Qaeda bomb-maker Haitham al-Yemeni in NorthWaziristan.
Of the five claimed to have been killed on December 1, 2005, the dead bodies of only two have beenfound--both children related to the owner of the house which was attacked by the Drone. The bereaved father has strongly denied that Rabia or any other foreigner was staying in his house as alleged by the Pakistaniauthorities. He claimed that there were no other casualties. The Reuters news agency has quoted Haji Mohammad Siddiq, the owner of the house attacked by the Drone, as saying that his 17-year-old son and an eight-year-old nephew were killed in a missile attack, but denied that there were any militants present. "I don’t know anything about them – there were no foreigners in my house," Siddiq said. "I have nothing to do with foreigners or Al Qaeda. We were sleeping when I heard two explosions in my guest room. When I went there I saw that my son, Abdul Wasit, and my eight-year-old nephew, Noor Aziz, were dead."
The Pakistani authorities have not admitted the role of the CIA's Drone aircraft in the operation. They have projected the death of Rabia as due to an accidental explosion in the house, where, according to them, explosives were being stored. While junior US officials based in Afghanistan have been concurring with the Pakistani claim that Rabia was believed to have been killed and projecting him as the head of the international operational wing of Al Qaeda since the capture of Abu Faraj in May, 2005, senior US officials in Washington DC have been more guarded in their comments in view of the fact that no dead body has been found.
An unnamed junior US official has been quoted as saying: "Rabia, in his 30s, took over the number three spot, behind bin Laden and his Egyptian deputy Ayman al-Zawahiri, after the capture of Abu Faraj in Pakistan inMay. Rabia was involved in plots to attack the US and his death was a serious blow for AlQaeda. Rabia served in the leadership group as chief of international operations planning. His international portfolio included planning attacks against the United States."
However, in an interview to the Fox News TV Channel on December 4, 2005, Stephen Hadley, the US National Security Adviser(NSA), said: "The US is not in a position to confirm Rabia’s death. We have seen those reports out of Pakistan.Obviously, we’re looking into them. At this point, we are not in a position publicly to confirm that he isdead. Rabia was involved in planning two assassination plots against Musharraf.If he has been killed, that’s a good thing for the war on terror. Hamza Rabia is a bad guy."