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Yemen Airstrike: 6 Al-Qaeda Operatives Killed In Yemen

AHMED AL-HAJ   01/15/10 11:41 PM ET   AP

Yemen Airstrike

SAN'A, Yemen — Yemeni warplanes struck outside a desert village near the border with Saudi Arabia on Friday, killing six al-Qaida operatives, including the group's top military leader in the country, security officials said.

The military chief, who escaped a government attack targeting him last month, was one of Yemen's most-wanted militants and had plotted to assassinate the U.S. ambassador.

Yemen, with the help of U.S. counterterrorism aid and training, has intensified an offensive against an al-Qaida offshoot that has dug in to pockets of the mountainous, impoverished nation, sometimes under the protection of powerful local tribes that have their own grievances with the weak government.

In an intensifying battle against al-Qaida on another front where Washington is deeply involved, Pakistani intelligence officials said Friday that a U.S. missile strike there killed one of the FBI's most-wanted terrorists, a man suspected in a deadly 1986 plane hijacking with a $5 million bounty on his head.

That Jan. 9 strike was part of the CIA-led missile campaign against militant targets in Pakistan's insurgent-riddled tribal belt bordering Afghanistan.

It was not immediately clear if the U.S. was directly involved in Friday's strike in Yemen. The country's government, which depends in part on the support of powerful Islamic radicals to maintain its fragile hold on power, is deeply wary of being seen as too closely allied with Washington.

Four of those killed were on Yemen's list of most-wanted al-Qaida figures, including Qassim al-Raimi, the top military chief in the terrorist network's offshoot in Yemen. The attack took place near the village of Yatama, about 118 miles (190 kilometers) northeast of the capital, San'a.

Yemen has wrongly reported his death in the past. A written statement from the government's Supreme Security Committee said that this time it had intelligence that al-Raimi was among those in two cars that were destroyed in the airstrike on the edge of Jouf province.

Jouf's provincial governor, Hussein Hazib, confirmed six al-Qaida militants were killed in the strike, but said he did not yet know their identities.

Al-Qaida's Yemen and Saudi operations merged a year ago to form al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, and al-Raimi had been influential in strengthening the group.

"(Al-Raimi) is really the individual who has done most for (al-Qaida) in terms of rebuilding and reorganization," said Gregory Johnsen, an expert on Yemen at Princeton University.

But while his death might be a victory for the U.S.-backed government, Johnsen said al-Qaida now has a durable enough infrastructure in Yemen to keep going.

"They don't miss a beat; they can overcome," he said. "This is an organization that has planned for these types of losses."

In 2005, al-Raimi was convicted and sentenced to five years in prison for plotting a bomb attack in the capital's diplomatic quarter and planning to assassinate the American ambassador. Neither plot was carried out.

Al-Raimi escaped from prison in February of 2006 with 21 other militants who fled through a 200-yard tunnel that ended inside a mosque.

Also among the dead in Friday's strike was Ammar al-Waeli, who was accused of involvement in a July 2007 suicide bombing that killed eight Spanish tourists and two Yemenis visiting a temple in central Yemen.

Al-Waeli was also suspected of having a role in the kidnapping of a German family and a British man who disappeared in June and have yet to be found.

The country on the southern edge of the Arabian Peninsula is beset by al-Qaida attacks, a five-year war between government forces and rebels in the north and a separatist movement in the once-independent south.

After al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula claimed responsibility for the failed attempt to blow up a U.S. airliner in December, U.S. officials announced they were more than doubling the $67 million in counterterrorism aid they gave to Yemen in 2009.

Yemen's Interior Ministry stressed Friday that while its cooperation with the United States included training and intelligence sharing, it would not open its doors to forces from America or any other nation.

A group of prominent Muslim clerics, including one whom Washington has branded a spiritual mentor of Osama bin Laden, warned Thursday they will call for jihad, or holy war, if the U.S. sends troops to fight al-Qaida in Yemen.

President Barack Obama has said he does not plan to send American combat troops to Yemen.

In Pakistan, the U.S. has been pursuing a similar strategy but one with a more direct military role. It has pounded North Waziristan with missiles to try to subdue an area that has been a key sanctuary for a range of militant groups, including al-Qaida and factions focused on battling the U.S. in Afghanistan.

Pakistan has been resisting mounting U.S. pressure to wage an army offensive in the region.

The Jan. 9 missile strike killed Jamal Saeed Abdul Rahim. The FBI's Web site lists him as a Palestinian with possible Lebanese citizenship. Three Pakistani officials called him an al-Qaida member, but the FBI site says he was a member of the Abu Nidal Palestinian terrorist group.

Rahim is wanted for his alleged role in the Sept. 5, 1986, hijacking of a Pan American World Airways Flight during a stop in the southern Pakistani city of Karachi, according to the FBI site.

Some 20 people, including two Americans, died during the hijacking.

The three Pakistani intelligence officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they lacked authority to speak to media on the record.

___

Associated Press writers Hadeel al-Shalchi in Cairo, Ishtiaq Mahsud in Dera Ismail Khan, Pakistan, and Rasool Dawar in Mir Ali, Pakistan, contributed to this report.

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SAN'A, Yemen — Yemeni warplanes struck outside a desert village near the border with Saudi Arabia on Friday, killing six al-Qaida operatives, including the group's top military leader in the cou...
SAN'A, Yemen — Yemeni warplanes struck outside a desert village near the border with Saudi Arabia on Friday, killing six al-Qaida operatives, including the group's top military leader in the cou...
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08:41 PM on 01/15/2010
"A group of prominent Muslim clerics, including one whom Washington has branded a spiritual mentor of Osama bin Laden, warned Thursday they will call for jihad, or holy war, if the U.S. sends troops to fight al-Qaida in Yemen."

Seriously? As if they haven't already global jihad against America already? I believe we already got that meme quite awhile ago. Yemen, Pakistan, you're deep into this, step up or get out of the way.
12:36 PM on 01/17/2010
Yemen is stepping up.

As is (presumably) Pakistan.

The clerics threat was conditional. He did not say the fight against al Qaida was wrong. Just and American occupation.

And on that point I agree with him.

As no doubt does the President. President Obama is not about to attempt to invade or occupy Yemen.
BraveWarrior
The truth will set you free, like it or not
05:50 PM on 01/15/2010
Who do we believe here. I don't doubt that people were killed. If they were simply tribesmen the corrupt Yemeni gov't couldn't expect millions in American military aid. The Yemeni government had been fighting insurgencies in the north and south. Their people are unhappy being poor and trapped in the 18th Century. Suddenly we discover al queda is here? After a sad teenager, child of wealth and privilege comes from Yemen and starts his shorts on fire. The largest military establishment in history is threatened by this evil terrorist and his dangerous underwear. Or do we believe our military leaders, whose record for honesty and straight shooting seems permanently tarnished? The Tillman effect. Would we care about Yemen if it didn't straddle one of the most important shipping routes for oil. Will Saudi Arabia be threatened by these rag tag militants? They have all those F-15s we sold them. Or are their people sick of their feudal monarchs and their wasting the country's oil profits. Maintaining a lot of princes is expensive, no? F-15s are expensive to operate chasing goat herders and nomads. Better to protect those shipping lanes and oil fields. Seems like so many of our most trusted allies need protection from their own people. But then what else are we going to spend our dollars on-health care for Americans? It is cheaper to bribe dictators than to bribe their citizens.
07:04 PM on 01/15/2010
Nothing sudden about discovering al Qaida presence in Yemen.

Had you been paying attention you would have known about it BEFORE the attack on the Cole.

And if you do not understand the threat al Qaida poses to Yemen Saudi Arabia and the rest of the Islamic world it is time for more study.
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PRONESE
Somewhat Opinionated Curmudgeon
04:06 PM on 01/15/2010
Bright Flash
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Red Mist.
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Our Lord! Oh, give them double torment and curse them with a mighty curse
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Posish!
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R/ PRONESE
01:26 PM on 01/15/2010
The AQ dudes obviously didn't realize that Jihad goes both ways.
01:26 PM on 01/15/2010
Congrats.... and thank you to whomever provided the intel as to the whereabouts....
01:23 PM on 01/15/2010
As they say..."God Is Great"

Good aim guys....get some!
12:50 PM on 01/15/2010
That is the way it should go.

Working closely with governments of the ME and Muslim world we should attack al Qaida where ever they can be found. After all, the present a far greater threat to the governments and people of the Islamic world than they do the USA or West.

The US and the West cannot destroy al Qaida alone. It will take Muslims of the world to repudiate their religious zealotry. Which they are doing.

But bin Ladin will always remain a better Muslim compared to anyone in the West. It will take fellow Muslims to defeat his beliefs.

Since al Qaida and their clones are far more adept at killing fellow Muslims that should be a possible accomplishment given intelligent leadership.
12:39 PM on 01/15/2010
Yemen is complicit with Al-Quaida.

http://www.longwarjournal.org/archives/2009/02/yemens_multifaceted.php

The bombers of the USS Cole escaped from a Yemeni prison

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/uss-cole-bombers-tunnel-out-of-yemeni-jail-465826.html

Yemen released 90? 170? Al-Quaida operatives from prison

http://www.weaselzippers.net/blog/2009/02/bad-yemen-releases-170-alqaeda-prisoners-after-promising-to-be-nice-worse-obama-about-to-ship-100-gi.html

We can't fix the entire Middle East. We need to get out. When do we need to get out? NOW!
08:44 PM on 01/15/2010
I can't name to many middle eastern countries that aren't complicit with al Qaeda, including a great big one in the Western hemisphere called the US. This is a war against the patsies who set it up for complicit governments, the terror is that we allow them to hide it.
08:46 PM on 01/15/2010
I can't name too many, sorry.
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ibsteve2u
Someone who cares - to his unending regret
11:28 AM on 01/15/2010
B'bye, bad guys.