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Al-Qaida Kills 11 In Ambush At Yemen Security Complex, Frees Detainees

AHMED AL-HAJ   06/19/10 10:24 PM ET   AP

Yemen
lack smoke is seen coming from the intelligence services building that came under attack in the southern port city of Aden, about 200 miles (320 kilometers) south of the capital, San'a, in Yemen Saturday, June 19, 2010. Four suspected al-Qaida gunmen blasted their way into the intelligence headquarters in Yemen's second largest city Saturday and freed several detainees in the group's most spectacular operation since a U.S.-backed government crackdown began late last year. (AP)

SAN'A, Yemen — Four suspected al-Qaida gunmen blasted their way into the intelligence headquarters of Yemen's second largest city Saturday and freed several detainees in the group's most spectacular operation since a U.S.-backed government crackdown began late last year.

The attack on the heavily protected security complex killed 11 and further bolstered U.S. concerns that Yemen's weak central government may not be up to tackling an increasingly effective foe seemingly able to strike anywhere inside or outside the country.

"We were hit where we least expected it," Yemeni Information Minister Hassan al-Lozy told the Al-Arabiya news channel. "This is a serious escalation from these terrorist elements."

U.S. officials say insurgents, including Americans, are training in militant camps in Yemen's vast lawless spaces and allying with powerful tribes opposed to the government of President Ali Abdullah Saleh.

Those concerns deepened last December, when al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula claimed responsibility for the failed attempt to blow up a Detroit-bound airliner.

In the wake of the Christmas attack, with U.S. aid, training and intelligence, Yemen's military and air force have struck repeatedly at al-Qaida sites and suspected hideouts, and arrested several suspects.

In a statement, the Yemeni government said the attacks bore the hallmarks of al-Qaida and resulted in the death of seven members of the security forces, three women and a child in the southern port city of Aden, about 200 miles (320 kilometers) south of the capital.

The fact that one of the most important security institutions in the country's second largest city could be attacked reflects the state's weakness, said analyst Mansour Hael, hinting that the attackers must have had inside help.

"The question to ask is how these attackers were able to infiltrate such a fortified security area. This raises a number of suspicions," he said.

The headquarters of the powerful intelligence agency is located in an upscale neighborhood of government offices overlooking the sea, flanked by the state television building and a branch of the Transport Ministry.

It was the same facility that 10 prisoners broke out of in 2003, including one involved in the plot to blow up the USS Cole in 2000, that killed 17 American sailors.

An eyewitness said the gunmen in military uniforms approached the building after parking their old sedan and a microbus at the nearby historic Crescent Hotel. The witness, who works in the building but was outside at the time of the attack, said the gunmen fired rocket-propelled grenades and threw hand grenades at the building's entrance before charging inside in a hail of bullets.

In the course of the half hour fire fight, said the witness, a number of the guards threw down their weapons and fled and the attackers managed to escape with several detainees, leaving the building on fire. He spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.

Yemen's security officials did not comment on whether any detainees were freed, only saying that nine people were injured in the attack and eight others have been detained for their suspected involvement.

There have been several other al-Qaida prison breaks, including a key one in 2006 when 23 top al-Qaida operatives tunneled their way out of a prison and boosted the organization's strength.

In 2009, the organization merged with the Saudi branch of al-Qaida and dramatically increased the pace of its attacks, including an unsuccessful attempt on the life of the British ambassador in April.

The early Saturday attack follows a military campaign in eastern Yemen against suspected al-Qaida hideouts, which prompted the movement to issue a statement on militant websites Friday threatening to "set the ground on fire under the tyrants of infidelity in (President) Saleh's regime and his U.S. collaborators."

An earlier statement by the local branch of al-Qaida also urged its supporters to free the group's members held in prisons around the region.

American worries about Yemen's ability to fight al-Qaida heightened last year after several Yemeni detainees who had been released from the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, resurfaced as leaders of the al-Qaida offshoot.

In recent months, the U.S. Defense Department approved spending $155 million to help Yemen in its fight, including the purchase of four helicopters to support counterterror operations there.

The money also includes $34.5 million to train and equip the Yemeni special forces and another $38 million for aircraft to allow those forces quicker access to hotspots in the country.

The U.S. State Department has also acknowledged this month that Yemeni authorities are holding 12 Americans in custody, apparently part of al-Qaida's efforts to hit targets in the U.S.

_________________

Associated Press Writer Sarah El Deeb contributed to this report from Cairo.

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SAN'A, Yemen — Four suspected al-Qaida gunmen blasted their way into the intelligence headquarters of Yemen's second largest city Saturday and freed several detainees in the group's most spectac...
SAN'A, Yemen — Four suspected al-Qaida gunmen blasted their way into the intelligence headquarters of Yemen's second largest city Saturday and freed several detainees in the group's most spectac...
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01:19 AM on 06/21/2010
how the security going to flee, that's soft. I believe the Romans used decimation to solve for these problems.
11:50 PM on 06/20/2010
More likely tribal than al-Qaida.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Giveadamn
Don't let them school you or even try to fool you.
11:15 PM on 06/20/2010
It's kind of prophetic that one of the cable channels had replayed the movie "Traitor" W/ Don Cheadle from SNL, from which Al-Queda pulled of a breakout of fellow terrorists in Yemen, just like what happened. Does art imitate life, or what
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LiberalTreeHugger
03:03 PM on 06/21/2010
yeah good movie.. that's what I was thinking about as well

Do you think one of escaped detainees is an untraceable undercover CIA operative? :P

That movie ended up being very realistic, they blew up the embassy with PETN, same stuff the christmas and shoe bomber used.
10:47 PM on 06/20/2010
I suspect this happened after lunch. That's when the entire Yemeni security apparatus is stoned on Ghat.
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08:24 PM on 06/20/2010
“In recent months, the U.S. Defense Department approved spending $155 million to help Yemen in its fight, including the purchase of four helicopters to support counterterror operations there.”

Thank you USDD for investing abroad on my behalf. You must know that they need more than we do.
07:55 PM on 06/20/2010
The U.S. is over.
07:38 PM on 06/20/2010
More Arab-on-Arab murder! Ho-hum!!
06:37 PM on 06/20/2010
Showing once again that no matter what you do elsewhere, those terrorists are still everywhere. And their numbers will not shrink so long as you continue to support theocratic regimes elsewhere instead of forcing them to change for the better.
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03:32 PM on 06/20/2010
Fraking awesome.... these guys are pros ..... God I fear them....
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Garbaj
What is the Matrix?
02:02 PM on 06/20/2010
sometimes when one reads certain articles, what is NOT said is often as important as what is said. that and a bit of common sense tells you there's much more to things than meets the eye...

for example, i intuit they are high profile targets or they would not be held at the headquarters of military intelligence. i would further intuit that there was likely some form of interrogation taking place...at some point...!

conspicuously ABSENT from this article is ANY mention of u.s. personnel at the facility when the breach occurred. it strains the imagination to believe that there were NO u.s. military or even civilian contractors at the hq of military intelligence when these four were held. if these 4 were indeed being interrogated at some point, then it beggars belief that NO u.s. personnel were involved...!

what kind of security detail do you have at such a facility where guards DROP THEIR WEAPONS AND FLEE THE SCENE...??? this isn't a 7-11 people this is the bloody hq of military intelligence...!!!

then you add the fact that this same facility was previously breached and you begin to see that there is something HIGHLY SUSPICIOUS about the official version of events as reported.

finally, the u.s. state dept acknowledges that yemen is holding 12 americans suspected of being involved with al-qaeda.

draw your own conclusions...!!!
01:53 PM on 06/20/2010
One of the lost factors on the America's war on Islam, is that in general the people in Muslim lands detest Al Qaeda but they detest the Americans even more. Why? The Americans are seen as a occupier and not a liberator, they are seen as Kafireen invading Muslim lands. Al Qaeda is gaining support now since the Yemeni Ulama issued a fatwa urging all Muslimeen to fight the non Muslim invaders like the Americans and British. These raids will continue since the insurgents realize that the Americans are funding the torture and actions of the government and it's security forces, which are now being trained in the States; against the Muslimeen and the shari'ah, which the government wants no part of. Yemeni gov has violated the sunnah as,with most of the Muslim governments in Muslims, by signing on an agreement with the biggest enemy to Islam, the Americans. This scenario is being played out in all Muslim lands. The Americans fund, train, equipment turncoat munaafiqeen governments officials in exchange to stay in power and fight insurgents, who want no part of western culture and western occupations; and want to usher in the shari'ah. In essence, the US backs a government that is seen as kafir, the insurgents form Mujahideen based upon the American assistance of kafireen government. The people don't want Al Qaeda nor do they want their government and they hate the US even more!
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02:50 PM on 06/20/2010
But, but...our leaders assure is that America isn't at war with Islam! /sarc

You make your argument using Islamic terms that are familiar to Muslims, but which may not be familiar to outsiders who have not studied the history of Islam, or its tenets (and atmospherics). To wit:

"Kafireen invading Muslim lands"

"the Yemeni Ulama issued a fatwa"

"Yemeni gov has violated the sunnah"

"turncoat munaafiqeen"

How many readers here do you suppose know enough of the history of Islam to even understand these terms? Granted, your prose has been watered down compared to the usual sort of Islamic rhetoric employed when speaking among yourselves, e.g., Abu Musa’ab al-Zarqawi's bombastic http://www.currenttrends.org/research/detail/zarqawis-anti-shia-legacy-original-or-borrowed-2 - how many readers would recognize the name Ibn al-‘Alqami?

Speaking of which, what's your position on the current status of the Sunni-Shia split? Do you think you guys will ever come to some kind of reconciliation? Fourteen-hundred years is an awfully long time to hold a grudge.
04:21 PM on 06/20/2010
You make your points about Islamic terminology but I do it on purpose to indicate that the west has develop terms that are totally incorrect in describing and characterizing the Muslimeen; in essence, I want those who used these terms, to see these correct terms and do their research. I refuse to use the terms that the west has developed, i.e., Muslim terrorist, jihadist and the such. The shi'a and sunnah divide is a complicated one and the argument by both is not for the airing in this site. Since most of the readers don't have the expertise to understand what classifies one to be a Muslim or a mu'min and so on. since there is a difference between the two. Lastly, even those that practice the sunnah, there is heated debate about Al Qaeda and insurgents that kills innocent human beings; by killing innocent human beings does that alone declassifies one as a Muslim? This is a hot topic in Muslim lands today. So there is lots of talk in Muslim lands about our plight, but one thing for sure, American invasions, Israelis killing sprees in Gaza has caused a 9/11 type of affect in Muslim lands; Many want revenge in the Muslim world and that is why Al Qaeda types are gaining recruits; since most Muslims don't care for Al Qaeda but secretly rooting them on as long as they kill non Muslim invaders in Muslim lands!
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10:52 PM on 06/20/2010
I understand them....and they are the product of superstitious insanity yammered by theocrats.

Keep in mind...this is the same person who said:
"If you defeat the Taliban, you would have defeated Islam, which by all accounts, this can't be done"
Translation: Taliban = Islam
and calls secular or pluralistic governments 'munaafiqeen'.
07:41 PM on 06/20/2010
We are not at war with Islam..just Islamic TERRORISTS who want to murder all Infidels!
01:17 AM on 06/21/2010
First, the term Islamic terrorist is wrong, there is no such thing. Second, in American, 1 million American Muslims placed upon a 'no fly' list. Wholesale discrimination and US Congressional personnel making incendiary comments against Islam and Muslims. The fire bombings of mosques in America and attacks on individual Muslims and the killing of innocent Muslims in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan threw drone attacks. America's policy of disrupting any new Islamic states and so on. No, you are wrong and many like you never ask the question why the Pakistan Taliban or Al Qaeda types wants American blood? Why not the Chinese or the Japanese or New Zealand, or maybe Mexico? Why is the focus on America by these groups. You invade the land of the Muslims, you kill their women and children in revenge for 9/11, in doing so, you have created a 9/11 in Muslim lands. These groups are against the Americans and Euros who assist in the invasions of Muslim lands. Not against China or Mexico, which are infidels too. Your argument is as wrong as your terminology in describing the Muslimeen!
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Ergon
Man From Atlan
10:59 AM on 06/20/2010
"Al-Qaida" in this case is the clans of North Yemen fighting against heavy handed repression by the other clans who form the government.
Just a civil war going on, but I guess A.Q. fits our narrative.
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11:52 AM on 06/20/2010
Northern Yemen clans are Al-Houthi Iranian backed shiite Muslims...Al-Qaeda is focused primarily in the Hadrahmat valley in south-central Yemen...and its a sunni group...both are at war with the central govt under Ali Abdullah Saleh...Iran sponsors the Al-Houthis and some Sunni countries fund Al-Qaeda in Yemen...its a proxy war, not unlike the one Egypt waged against Saudi Arabia in Yemen in 1965, except on a smaller scale, with proxies and not Nationalists vs Islamists but now Two different versions of Islam in two seperate wars against the central govt.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ergon
Man From Atlan
01:07 PM on 06/20/2010
Ah, TWO boogiemen now :)
The Shiites are "backed by Iran" and the Sunnis are Al-Qaeda sponsored by other countries. Plus the "two versions of Islam at war against each other" narrative.
Of course, your avatar points to your own bias which would not only support that narrative, but actually um, ENCOURAGE it.
Not that I blame the Israelis, it's in the US's interest to encourage civil war, the better to police the area and control the Suez route and the Horn of Africa.
07:42 PM on 06/20/2010
Didn't Yemen used to be a real big Commie stronghold at one time?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
1776 or 1984
IT'S AN EMPIRE, NOT A REPUBLIC!
10:03 AM on 06/20/2010
The C_I_A propaganda is hot and heavy in this piece. Creative writers, it almost captures my imagination.

==================
Be a rebel, not a subject
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11:53 AM on 06/20/2010
What exactly is " CIA propaganda" about this piece? do you not believe that Al-Qaeda has support networks within Yemen and it doesn't conduct terrorist operations there?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
1776 or 1984
IT'S AN EMPIRE, NOT A REPUBLIC!
12:14 PM on 06/20/2010
I don't believe the War on Terror.

I lost faith when I discovered Ali Mohamed in Peter Lance's book "Triple Cross." AQ is a tool of the Empire.
09:50 AM on 06/20/2010
We need to stop funding this war, bring our troops home, keep all that money for our selves to help our selves. It's time to have some HEALTHY SELFISHNESS FOR AMERICA. Everything seems to be falling apart these days, what the hell is that worthless piece doing in the WH anyway, there IS absolutely NOTHING this man has done right, he can't even run our government without keeping George's policies in place... He's WORTHLESS.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rougebaisers
09:35 AM on 06/20/2010
Gee, if only we had an army here too, and in Syria, and Egypt, and Turkey. Oh what the hell, everywhere but Israel. It's China's money anyway isn't it?