Al Qaida militants have staged a surprise attack on a Yemeni army base in the
south, killing 20 soldiers and capturing 25 just hours after a US drone strike
killed a senior figure in the terror network wanted in connection with the 2000
bombing of the USS Cole in Yemen.
It was not immediately clear if the
pre-dawn attack on the military base in the southern Abyan province was in
retaliation for the death of Fahd al-Quso, a top al-Qaida leader on the FBI’s
most wanted list.
The militants reached the base both from the sea and by
land, gunning down troops and making away with weapons and other military
hardware after the blitz attack, Yemeni military officials
said.
Government forces later shelled militant positions elsewhere in
Abyan, killing 16 militants, said the officials.
Yemen has been waging an
offensive on al Qaida, whose fighters took advantage of the country’s political
turmoil during the past year to expand their hold in the south, seizing entire
cities and towns and large swathes of land. Abyan’s provincial capital of
Zinjibar has been held by al Qaida for a year.
The new Yemeni president,
Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, has promised improved co-operation with the US to
combat the militants. On Saturday, he said the fight against al Qaida is in its
early stages.
Mr Hadi took over in February from long-time authoritarian
leader Ali Abdullah Saleh.
Yesterday, al-Quso, the top al Qaida leader,
was hit by a missile as he stepped out of his vehicle along with another
operative in the southern Shabwa province, Yemeni military officials
said.
The drone strike was carried out by the CIA, after an extended
surveillance operation by the CIA and US military, two US officials
said.
Al-Quso, 37, was on the FBI’s most wanted list, with a $5m reward
for information leading to his capture. He was indicted in the US for his role
in the 2000 bombing of the USS Cole in the harbour of Aden, Yemen, in which 17
American sailors were killed and 39 injured.
He served more than five
years in a Yemeni prison for his role in the attack and was released in 2007. He
briefly escaped prison in 2003 but later turned himself in to serve the rest of
his sentence.
A telephone text message claiming to be from al Qaida’s
media arm confirmed al-Quso was killed in the strike.
He was also one of
the most senior al Qaida leaders publicly linked to the 2009 Christmas airliner
attack and allegedly met in Yemen with the suspected Nigerian bomber, Umar
Farouk Abdulmutallab, before the Nigerian left to execute his failed attack over
Detroit with a bomb concealed in his underwear.
In December 2010, al-Quso
was designated a global terrorist by the State Department, an indication that
his role in al Qaida’s Yemen offshoot, al Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, had
grown more prominent.
Read more: http://www.breakingnews.ie
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