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Yemen: Abdulmutallab Met With Radical Cleric al-Awlaki

LEE KEATH   01/ 7/10 05:03 PM ET   AP

Awlaki

SAN'A, Yemen — Yemen on Thursday provided the most comprehensive account yet of contacts between al-Qaida and the Nigerian accused of trying to blow up a U.S. airliner, saying he may have met with a radical U.S.-born cleric who previously had contact with the alleged Fort Hood shooter.

In the weeks before the attempted airliner attack, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab met with al-Qaida operatives in a remote mountainous region that was later hit in an airstrike that targeted a gathering of the group's top leaders, Yemen's deputy prime minister said.

The account by Rashad al-Alimi, who oversees security issues in the government, filled in some of the blanks in Abdulmutallab's movements before his failed attempt to detonate explosives on a Christmas Day flight to Detroit.

But al-Alimi also raised new questions. He contended that Abdulmutallab was recruited by al-Qaida in Britain and that the 23-year-old received the explosives in Nigeria. U.S. officials say Abdulmutallab told FBI investigators that al-Qaida operatives in Yemen gave him the material and trained him in how to use it.

In a speech Thursday, President Barack Obama outlined three broad areas where U.S. agencies fell short in addressing the threat, failing to "connect the dots" that would have revealed Abdulmutallab was planning an attack. He also announced steps to prevent such failure again.

Abdulmutallab came to Yemen in August, ostensibly to study Arabic at a San'a language institute where he previously studied from 2004-2005. But he disappeared in September, and his whereabouts were unknown until he left the country Dec. 4.

Al-Alimi said that at some point during that period, the Nigerian met with al-Qaida in a sparsely populated area of Shabwa province amid high mountains some 200 miles southeast of the capital.

Among those he may have met with was the U.S.-born radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, who has also been linked to the gunman who killed 13 people at Fort Hood in November.

"There is no doubt that he met and had contacts with al-Qaida elements in Shabwa ... perhaps with al-Awlaki," al-Alimi told reporters.

The Awlak tribe, to which the cleric belongs, dominates much of the area.

The 38-year-old cleric, born in New Mexico to Yemeni parents, is a popular figure among al-Qaida sympathizers, known for his English-language Internet sermons that preach jihad, or holy, against the West. A decade ago, while preaching at U.S. mosques, he associated with two of the 9/11 hijackers.

Al-Awlaki also exchanged dozens of e-mails with U.S. Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan in the months before Hasan allegedly carried out the Nov. 5 mass shooting at the Fort Hood, Texas Army post.

Later, al-Awlaki praised the attack on his Web site, which has since been shut down.

While Yemen calls al-Awlaki a spiritual adviser to al-Qaida militants, President Obama's top counterterrorism adviser, John Brennan, last week said he is "clearly a part of al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula" trying to instigate terrorism.

On Dec. 24, the day before Abdulmutallab's alleged bombing attempt, Yemeni warplanes raided the Shabwa site, targeting a gathering of al-Qaida leaders that may have included al-Awlaki, as well as the head of al-Qaida's offshoot in Yemen and his deputy, al-Alimi said.

Al-Alimi said security forces tracked the group's leader, Naser Abdel Karim al-Wahishi, and his deputy Saeed al-Shihri, after the strike and they were in a "weak state." He would not clarify if that meant they were wounded, and said he could not confirm if they are alive. At least 30 militants were killed in the strike, Yemeni officials said.

The assault was one of a series of heavy airstrikes and raids Yemeni forces carried out last month. They were the biggest strikes in years by Yemen against al-Qaida in a new intensified alliance with the United States to uproot the terror group's offshoot here.

In the past week, Yemen has beefed up its ground forces in several provinces, setting up checkpoints and conducting searches. On Thursday, the Interior Ministry announced it had arrested a 25-year-old al-Qaida member in Marib, a province neighboring Shabwa that is also a stronghold for the terror group. The ministry did not identify the suspect and gave no details on his capture.

Hundreds of al-Qaida fighters are believed to operating in Yemen, many finding refuge with tribes disgruntled with the government, which has little control outside the capital and is burdened with crises.

Abdulmutallab first came to Yemen in 2004 and stayed for a year to study Arabic at the San'a school. He then moved to Britain, where he lived until 2008.

Al-Alimi insisted that Yemen's investigations have shown that during Abdulmutallab's first stint in Yemen, "he did not have any tendency or behavior indicating extremist ideas."

"During the period he was living in Britain, I believe he was recruited by radical groups in Britain," he said.

Officials in Britain have said he met with extremist there, but he was not seen as a threat.

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SAN'A, Yemen — Yemen on Thursday provided the most comprehensive account yet of contacts between al-Qaida and the Nigerian accused of trying to blow up a U.S. airliner, saying he may have met wi...
SAN'A, Yemen — Yemen on Thursday provided the most comprehensive account yet of contacts between al-Qaida and the Nigerian accused of trying to blow up a U.S. airliner, saying he may have met wi...
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02:45 PM on 01/07/2010
Al-Awlaki must be arrested ASAP and interrogated. He knows a lot and must be made to talk, and plenty.
01:24 PM on 01/07/2010
Another day, another CIA plant exposed.
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02:08 PM on 01/07/2010
Riiight.

Not to belabor the point, but the guy SET HIS GENITALS ON FIRE.

I'm sure (or at least I hope) we have some very smooth CIA recruiters with silver tongues. But I very much doubt that we have anyone that good.

Good rule of thumb: burning your genitals off is something a zealot might do for God and maybe, country. It's not something you do so you can play secret agent man for some foreign power. And that's not even factoring in the treatment he'll likely face at the hands of Bubba, the head of the Aryan Brotherhood in prison.

If we have a CIA agent good enough to get a kid to sign up for burning off his family jewels, getting, ahem, "loved" regularly in the prison shower, etc, all for good ol' Uncle Sam...

Well, let me just say that I'm ready to nominate that agent for greatest motivation speaker this country has *ever* produced...
02:57 PM on 01/07/2010
audadvnc is that one alcoholic who doesn't want to remain
anonymous. LOL.
11:43 AM on 01/07/2010
Since it has become clear that they had plenty of evidence against the underwear bomber but chose not to arrest him until he entered the USA (if that story is true) and they had evidence of the al Qaida meeting in the remote part of Yemen.

All that goes to confirm my suspicion al Alwaki is a CIA plant.

Maybe I shouldn't be voicing my suspicions?
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10:48 AM on 01/07/2010
That 'radical cleric' dude looks like Adrien Brody. :)
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avshanbh
09:53 AM on 01/07/2010
I think it's time to target this guy and either arrest him or take him out before he turns into next Bin Laden.
02:02 PM on 01/08/2010
Awlaki/Yemen IS the new Bin Laden/Afghanistan. The only difference between Hasan/Ft Hood and Flight 253 is that Awlaki didn't have to buy the guns, train him, or buy his airline tickets. Talk about not connecting dots.
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dwill123
flexing the "golden pipes" on the day's issues
09:42 AM on 01/07/2010
Time for a CIA (or Predator drone) "special mission"
01:26 PM on 01/07/2010
Of course, according to Al Qaida's press release, the crotch bomber was a retaliatory strike for the US Predator drone attack on Yemeni civilians in December. Consider drone strikes as Al Qaida recruitment tools.
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dwill123
flexing the "golden pipes" on the day's issues
03:07 PM on 01/07/2010
Hey you're right. Let's just wait for them to take a couple of airliners out and then maybe they'll come to the table and tell us what's on their mind.
07:04 PM on 01/07/2010
Then use them even more. And you can feel free to leave the USA. In fact, leave this existence completely.
02:05 PM on 01/08/2010
Forget the Predator or failed airstrikes. If McCain were in charge, that training base would have been cleared with a daisy cutters, Awlaki would be in Gitmo or waiting in the afterlife for Hasan the week after Fort Hood, Al Queda in Yemen would be out of business and Detroit plot would never have happened.
09:31 AM on 01/07/2010
All of this indicates that what's going on here is a war against America by this group of foreigners. This is different than what we've experienced in the past when we've gone to war against definable countries but it is war nevertheless, not a series of mere criminal undertakings.

As such, these people should be treated as Prisoners of War or Enemy Combatants and dealt with accordingly. They should not be treated as common criminals who are processed through our criminal justice system.
09:43 AM on 01/07/2010
The reason they will be tried in our courts is to screwWithCheney. And he is responding by sending those men over here. That's why Pakistan gets drones and America get thePolice.
11:46 AM on 01/07/2010
You know, we went through 8 years of that nonsense.

And now we have a President and Attorney General who know and respect the law. And our Freedoms as Americans.

Bush/Cheney and their crew were clueless. And what they did was wrong. wrong, wrong.

Why anyone would want to go back to that ignorance is well beyond me.

So aside from the legal arguments:

Get a clue: IT DIDN"T WORK
01:10 PM on 01/07/2010
So what you're saying is that, in WWII, the Germans and Italians and Japanese that we captured while at war should have been tried in regular criminal courts, right?
02:34 PM on 01/08/2010
We have a president and attorney general who approved FBI and Army Ft Hood investigations which both concluded the Major Hasan acted alone without outside direction or encouragement. They concluded there was no evidence of ties to terrorist organizations like Al Queda or terrorists like Awlaki who might have justified the shootings. The e-mails were all "innocent" and the FBI confirmed that $20-$30,000 sent to Pakistan did not go to terrorist organiations. Given what we know now about Awlaki, Al Queda, and Yemen, isn't it time to revisit those conclusions?
09:18 AM on 01/07/2010
This "story" is based on the words "perhaps with al-Awlaki" by some Yemeni military person. This is the most embarrassing excuse for journalism - and most obvious attempt at propaganda - I've seen in a good while.

And if the two did meet, so what? People seem to be obsessed with connecting everything to this figure. It's only making him more of a celebrity. But I suppose when we extra-judicially assass!nate him, these stories will help in obfuscating the illegality of our crime.

Wow.
09:28 AM on 01/07/2010
Why would it be illegal to send a drone his way? I for one would celebrate.
07:07 PM on 01/07/2010
Send two of 'em. With our compliments.
09:41 AM on 01/07/2010
Yeah, we don't want to try to connect the dots until after something happens. Why rush things.
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den1953
The best politicians are for free!
08:58 AM on 01/07/2010
So if the CIA can locate this cleric and capture him he'll sing like a bird it is more then just he met with the two man that attempted harm if he is using the internet he should be able to be found!