Aborted Bombing Puts Yemen in the Limelight
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By Jim Lobe
Inter Press Service
Tuesday, Dec 29, 2009
The attempted Christmas Day bombing of a U.S.
airliner by a Nigerian allegedly associated with al Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) has propelled long-neglected Yemen into the
media spotlight here.
The attempt, which was
foiled by alert passengers who subdued the alleged bomber, 23-year-old
Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, as he tried to set off explosives, could
result in increased U.S. military and economic aid for the beleaguered
regime headed President Ali Abdullah Saleh, as some influential think
tanks here have urged.
It
could also renew a simmering debate over whether "Al Qaeda Central"
located along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border constitutes "the
epicentre of violent extremism", as President Barack Obama contended
when he announced his plan to send 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan
earlier this month, or whether loosely affiliated groups and
individuals now pose the greater threat to U.S. security.
"This
attempted attack does not appear to have any connection to
Afghanistan," Paul Pillar, the former top Near and South Asia analyst
for the U.S. intelligence community who argued against the escalation
of the U.S. military presence in Afghanistan, told Newsweek Monday.
"The
incident is a reminder that countering such terrorism is not a matter
of controlling particular pieces of foreign real estate but instead of
less visible work by intelligence and law enforcement resources," he
said.
In a brief appearance Monday to announce stepped-up
security measures and reassure travellers of the safety of flying on
commercial aircraft, Obama stressed that Washington was determined to
punish those who aided Abdulmutallab, although he did not mention AQAP
explicitly.
"We will not rest until we find all who were
involved and hold them accountable," he said in Hawaii where he is
vacationing with his family.
"We will continue to use every
element of our national power to disrupt, to dismantle and defeat the
violent extremists who threaten us, whether they are from Afghanistan
or Pakistan, Yemen or Somalia, or anywhere where they are plotting
attacks against the U.S. homeland," he added.
In a message that
appeared on a number of radical Islamist websites Monday, AQAP claimed
responsibility for the attempted bombing, which took place as the
Northwest Airlines flight descended into Detroit from Amsterdam where
it originated. Abdulmutallab had flown to Amsterdam from Lagos Dec. 24.
According
to various reports, Abdulmutallab has told interrogators here that he
had received training and explosives from AQAP in Yemen, a link that
investigators are currently trying to confirm.
Some officials
noted that the explosive used by the alleged bomber, PETN, was the same
as that used last August by another AQAP militant in an unsuccessful
assassination attempt against Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, the director
of Saudi Arabia's counterterrorism programme.
Abdulmutallab's
father, a prominent Nigerian banker who had reportedly warned U.S. and
Nigerian officials about his son's apparent radicalisation since
graduating from University College in London, said Abdulmutallab
travelled to Yemen, his mother's ancestral home, earlier this fall
before breaking off all contact with the family last month.
In
its Internet message, AQAP said the attempted bombing was carried out
in retaliation for raids by Yemeni security against suspected AQAP
hideouts in three cities in which the government claimed 34 militants,
including senior commanders, were killed and 17 others arrested.
One
unnamed U.S. official told reporters here that the raids were backed by
U.S.-supplied "intelligence and firepower". Yemeni officials have
subsequently denied reports that U.S. cruise missiles or predator
drones took part in the raids.
In a eulogy to those killed in
the raids, one AQAP member called for retaliation against "America and
its agents", according to a translation by Virginia-based IntelCenter.
"We are carrying a bomb to hit the enemies of God," he said.
One
week later, Yemeni warplanes bombed a compound in the southern province
of Shabwa, where the government said senior AQAP officials were
meeting.
It claimed that more than 30 militants were killed in
the strike, including the group's leader, Nasir al-Wuhayshi and his top
deputy. Also reportedly killed was Anwar al Aulaqi, a U.S.-born Yemeni
cleric with whom the U.S. Army major accused of gunning down 13 of his
fellow soldiers at Fort Hood, Texas, last month had been in email
contact. Aulaqi's family, however, has denied that he was present at
the time.
Another 29 AQAP members were arrested Monday,
according to the government, which said they had plotted to attack
several government targets and the British Embassy in Yemen's capital,
Sana'a.
According to a New York Times report Monday, Washington,
which has long been concerned that Yemen could become a "failed state",
has been providing increasing amounts of mostly covert military and
intelligence assistance to the country. This includes top field
operatives from the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and Special
Operations Forces (SOF) commandos who have begun training Yemeni
security forces in counterterrorism tactics, the newspaper said.
It
plans to double such aid – to more than 70 million dollars over the
next 18 months, according to the report, which noted that separate
secret visits to Yemen in late summer by the chief of the U.S. Central
Command, Gen. David Petraeus, and Obama's counterterrorism chief, John
Brennan, marked a "pivotal point" in gaining Pres. Saleh's agreement to
make AQAP the government's top priority.
The central government
faces a growing secessionist movement in the south and, more important,
a major insurgency in the north, home to members of the Zaydi Shia sect
that make up about a third of the country's 23 million people. Both
challenges have, at least until recently, been considered by the
government a greater threat than AQAP.
In a report released last
month, the Center for a New American Security (CNAS) warned that Yemen,
the Arab world's poorest country, "rests today on a knife's edge" and
called on Washington to significantly increase both military and
development assistance as part of a larger counterinsurgency strategy
to ensure the state's survival and repel the growing AQAP threat.
Washington
is planning to provide nearly 40 million dollars in economic aid to the
government in 2010, up from 24 million dollars this year.
CNAS,
a think tank from which the Obama administration has recruited heavily,
also called for the U.S. to seek a political settlement to the northern
"Houthi" rebellion so that "the government [could] take more seriously
the threat posed by transnational terrorists present on Yemeni soil."
Inter Press Service
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