May 23, 2013

Blast, drone kill 13 al Qaeda-linked militants in Yemen

98831031f816e1b8b4f804313f62fdef Blast, drone kill 13 al Qaeda linked militants in Yemen

() – More than 10 suspected al Qaeda operatives were killed by an explosion in a house in south Yemen where they were making bombs and at least three others died in a drone strike, tribal and official sources said on Sunday.

A bomb ripped through a house in the province of al-Bayda on Saturday night, the state news agency Saba and a local official said. Three other were killed in a drone strike in the of Maarib, also on Saturday, tribal sources and the Ministry of Defence said.

Yemen’s government has been fighting a powerful branch of al Qaeda that took advantage of chaos in the impoverished state two years ago during a popular uprising against former President Ali Abdullah Saleh.

Al Qaeda in the (AQAP) is considered by Western governments to be one of the most active and dangerous wing of the global network founded by Osama bin Laden, and has attempted a number of attacks against U.S. targets.

The house destroyed in al Bayda had been used for making bombs, an official from the area told Reuters on Sunday.

“We heard a massive explosion that terrified people and when we went to the house it was destroyed and everyone there was dead,” the official said.

In Maarib, a pilotless plane carried out against a car, a witness said.

“One of the strikes missed the and the other hit the car and left the bodies of the three people in it completely charred,” the witness told Reuters by telephone from the area.

He said unidentified people evacuated the bodies while tribesmen blocked the main road linking the capital of Maarib province with Sanaa on Saturday after the strikes.

The Yemeni said in an SMS text message that a number of militants were killed in two but gave no further details.

Earlier this month, dozens of armed tribesmen took to the streets in to protest drones they said killed innocent civilians and fed anger against the United States.

President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi spoke openly in favor of the strikes during a trip to the United States in September.

Praised by the U.S. ambassador in Sanaa as being more effective against al Qaeda than his predecessor, Hadi was quoted as saying in September that he personally approved every attack. Hadi has not commented on the most recent strikes.

AQAP offshoot, -Sharia (Partisan of ), seized a number of towns in the south in 2011 but Yemeni government forces retook the areas in a U.S.-backed offensive in June.

(Reporting by Mohammed Ghobari; Writing by Mahmoud Habboush; Editing by Sami Aboudi, Alison Williams and Jason Webb)

Al Qaeda-linked militants killed in south Yemen

b96daefb08057c257d8d4bb395a43e5b Al Qaeda linked militants killed in south Yemen

(Reuters) – Two al Qaeda-linked militants and a pro-government tribesman were killed in clashes in Yemen’s restive south on Sunday, a local official and a tribesman said.

Al Qaeda in the has made its base in the impoverished state, which slid into chaos last year after protests that eventually forced veteran ruler to step down.

The group has mounted operations in neighboring as well as attempting to launch attacks against the United States.

The Yemeni army helped by local tribes launched a U.S.-backed drive in May to drive Islamist militants from - (Partisans of Islamic Law), an of al Qaeda, out of several southern towns they had held for more than a year.

The two militants killed in Sunday’s violence in province were from Somalia and Pakistan, the tribesman said.

Ansar al-Sharia has attracted hundreds of since it seized the towns in the south and declared them Islamic emirates. Some of those militants had previously fought in Afghanistan.

A website said an al Qaeda commander, Batees, was among eight Islamist militants killed by a U.S. drone strike in a remote part of the eastern province of Hadramout on Friday.

Batees had previously been captured by security forces but escaped prison during the uprising last year.

Washington, which fears the spread of Islamist militancy in Yemen, has stepped up attacks by unmanned aircraft this year.

(Reporting by Mohammed Ghobari; Additional reporting by Dhouyazen Mukhashaf in ; Writing by Mahmoud Habboush; Editing by Pravin Char)

Al Qaeda in Yemen has “whole outfit” devoted to attacking U.S.

211ac726a164f26565daf816fd9019c7 Al Qaeda in Yemen has whole outfit devoted to attacking U.S.

(Phatforums News / CNN Analyst – ) — The branch of al Qaeda now has “a whole outfit designated to the U.S. homeland,” according to a source closely working with U.S. and the military.

In addition, the U.S. now believes Al Qaeda in the () is working on “several types of bombs” that could get past airport x-ray screening machines.

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The bomb technology is aimed at targeting the U.S., according to the source.

Although the group has not yet succeeded in any of their bomb plots against the U.S., there are several and a group of would-be inside the group, which operates out of rudimentary training camps in southern Yemen.

“What I think is concerning to myself and other people is that it seems the talent of the organization is getting better, that is, they are much more capable of carrying out attacks. So when something fails like the plot in 2009 or again the cartridge plot in 2010, the organization is able to adapt, and the next time they come back, they present a better and more lethal threat. I think that’s what has a lot of people in U.S. and Saudi intelligence quite concerned,” says analyst Gregory Johnsen, a Near East Studies scholar.

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CNN has previously reported that AQAP master bomb maker Ibrahim al-Asiri has been involved in training both bombmakers and suicide bombers. The source added that al-Asiri is now not making all the components himself. This gives the group the extra security and advantage of having multiple manufacturing capability if al Asiri were to be killed.

The source also confirmed that the latest device – turned over to the U.S. by a mole – had no metallic parts and an advanced detonation system to improve the chance the detonator would result in the entire bomb exploding. AQAP bomb designs are aimed at hiding explosives in clothing, camera lenses and animals according to the source.

But it is also the fundamental growth in AQAP’s ability to control territory that is making them increasingly thought to target since the 2009 incident.

“AQAP at that time was about two to three hundred members and it controlled no territory in Yemen. Now, two and a half years later, the terror group has more than tripled in strength to over a thousand members and it controls a great amount of territory in southern Yemen,” Johnsen said in an interview with CNN. He said the group controls towns, is running its own police department, and in certain places has established court systems.

“It’s providing services – electricity and water to some of the citizens, and really it sees itself in parts of southern Yemen as a government,” Johnsen said.

Yemeni airforce commander killed in car bomb

0a9e58133b1f9fa21b04c8ec3b090b1a Yemeni airforce commander killed in car bomb

(Reuters) – A air commander was killed in a in on Tuesday, a and witnesses said, the latest in a series of such attacks during a nine-month political crisis over ’s rule.

Amin al-Shami’s car went up in flames from an apparent car bomb after he left an air base in Lahej province, witnesses said. The security source said two people riding in the vehicle survived the attack.

A security source also said police seized a bomb factory in the southern city of Aden and arrested one person.

“We are still looking for a number of suspects, including a Saudi. This is the group that blew up al-Qawla police station on Saturday and tried to assassinate the defense minister in Aden last month,” the source said.

Police said an improvised was detonated outside a station in Aden’s al-Qawla district, shattering windows and setting a nearby car ablaze. One of the soldiers on guard was killed. Five others, plus two police officers, were wounded.

Aden, which lies east of a strategic shipping strait where some 3 million barrels of oil pass daily, has been in a for months. Its neighbouring province, Abyan, has been plunged into chaos since militants suspected of ties to al Qaeda began seizing cities in the coastal region several months ago.

Tens of thousands of refugees have fled into Aden and neighbouring provinces to escape the bloodshed and the Yemeni army has struggled to regain territory lost to the militants.

Other suspects for the attack on Saturday could be separatist militants. A long-simmering in south Yemen has been heating up as the country sinks further into turmoil.

Saleh, in power for 33 tears, has been clinging to his position as opposition and ruling party representatives cast about for a formula to effect a transition-of-power deal.

(Writing by Andrew Hammond; Reporting by Mohamed Mukhashaf; Editing by Michael Roddy)