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Arab Peninsula Instability

George Wallace

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Another region that should be watched.

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Military approach in Yemen may backfire: experts
09/01/2010 8:03:08 AM
Article Link

Ian Munroe
It's a pattern that governments fighting Islamic extremism don't want to see repeated -- success cracking down on militants in one country boosts terrorism elsewhere.


In Afghanistan, for example, the U.S. invasion prompted al Qaeda's leadership to seek shelter in the tribal areas of Pakistan, beyond the reach of the central government in Islamabad.

Similarly, experts say al Qaeda in the Arab Peninsula, the group that claimed responsibility for the attempted bombing of a Detroit-bound flight on Dec. 25, was formed in Yemen partly because of Saudi Arabia's success at abolishing militant groups next door.

Saudi authorities have been waging a campaign to rehabilitate, imprison or kill suspected extremists since a wave of terrorist attacks wracked the country in 2003 and 2004. But some militants fled south to Yemen, where AQAP was created last January.

"There was a balloon effect," said Letta Tayler, a terrorism and counterterrorism researcher with Human Rights Watch. "It's a much more hospitable environment for al Qaeda than Saudi Arabia was following the crackdown."

The American military had been helping Yemen combat al Qaeda before Umar Farouq Abdulmutallab, a 23-year-old Nigerian who had taken Arabic classes in Yemen, allegedly tried to detonate a bomb on board Flight 253.

Earlier in December, the U.S. military assisted with two air strikes on Yemeni territory. They were reportedly aimed at suspected al Qaeda leaders and killed several dozen civilians. The second strike took place a day before Abdulmutallab boarded a flight to Detroit.

The U.S. also provided nearly US$70 million in military aid to Yemen in 2009. Gen. David H. Petraeus, the head of U.S. Central Command, has said the Department of Defense will double that amount this year.

Meanwhile, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown announced that his government, along with the U.S., will help Yemen fund a new counterterorrism force.

Later this month, the British capital will also host two simultaneous international conferences, one on Afghanistan and the other on Yemen.

Tayler said that countries seeking to combat radicalization in Yemen would do well to learn from U.S. General Stanley McChrystal, NATO's top commander in Afghanistan.

To defeat the Taliban and keep al Qaeda from returning to Kabul, McChrystal has recommended that U.S. troops use "courageous restraint."

"At the end of the day, the success of this operation will be determined in the minds of the Afghan people," McChrystal said last month. "It's not the number of people you kill. It's the number of people you convince. It's the number of people that don't get killed. It's the number of houses that aren't destroyed."

As with Afghanistan, experts say there's no easy solution to countering al Qaeda in Yemen.

Joost Hiltermann, deputy program director with International Crisis Group's Middle East and North Africa arm, warned that military intervention could weaken the central government, allowing al Qaeda more free rein there.

"In a situation as fragile as in Yemen, to put a major external military force could be fatal," Hiltermann told CTV.ca. "The country may not be able to sustain it."

Complex problems

Yemen is a semi-mountainous country on the southern tip of the Arabian peninsula with a fast-growing population of some 22 million people.

One of the least developed countries outside sub-Saharan Africa, the UN Human Development Index estimates that 35 per cent of Yemenis live in poverty. Malnourishment is a common affliction for children and nearly half the population is illiterate.

Oil, which brings in three-quarters of the national income, is running out. Tourism was touted as a possible alternative revenue generator (Yemen houses four UNESCO heritage sites). But visitor numbers have dropped due to attacks on foreigners, and political instability.

About 150,000 people have been displaced by a civil war that has been raging intermittently near Saada, in the north of the country, since 2004. The Yemeni government has been accused of indiscriminate bombing in the conflict, which Hiltermann says "is clearly escalating."

In the south, a secessionist movement flared up last spring, bringing hundreds of thousands of protesters into the streets.

"The bottom line is, the country's in chaos," Tayler said. "There are no prospects for youth and most citizens are concerned about how to get the next meal."

As Yemen's troubles mount, President Ali Abdullah Saleh's government is losing more control. His reach, which doesn't extend to many parts of the country, is weakening further.

Marisa L. Porges, an international affairs fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations who advises on counterterrorism for the U.S. Department of Defense, travelled to Yemen in the fall.

"There are so many domestic problems that al Qaeda isn't a top priority," Porges said by phone from Washington.

"In private conversations, many officials say 'we're already there -- the state has failed.'" she added. "This is the pervading sense now."

Confronting al Qaeda

AQAP launched several attacks last year, including an attempt to assassinate Saudi Arabia's counterterrorism chief, Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, and two attacks against South Korean tourists and dignitaries -- all using suicide bombers.

But the attempted Dec. 25 airliner attack seems to represent the group's first plot against a target outside the region.

While that incident focused the international community's attention on AQAP, experts say it will be hard if not impossible to keep such groups off Yemeni territory without addressing the country's other problems.

Jane Novak, an American analyst and expert on Yemen, warned that President Saleh may simply use military aid from the U.S. to oppress his opponents, while the country goes down.

"It's such a complex situation," she said. "It's very difficult in Yemen to find anyone there to work with."

Convincing Saleh, who has ruled the country for three decades, to implement political reforms could help make the country less hospitable for terrorist groups by boosting loyalty to the government, Novak said.

"Basically in Yemen they consider (the Saleh regime) a tyranny, and an incompetent one as well," she said. "To reduce the instability, the ungoverned regions, they need to somehow force power-sharing and the respect for civil rights."

Tayler echoed that view, saying policies that reduce oppression and boost faith in the government are needed to fight al Qaeda there effectively.

"You need a holistic approach," Tayler said. "Otherwise, the counterterrorism policy will simply backfire -- whether it's Pakistan, whether it's Yemen, whether it's Afghanistan."
 
The campaign against Al Qaeda in Yemen continues:

Yemeni AF strike kills 6 Al Qaeda operatives

SAN'A, Yemen – An airstrike by Yemeni warplanes killed six al-Qaida operatives Friday in a desert village bordering Saudi Arabia, including a key figure who plotted to assassinate the U.S. ambassador, security officials said.

Four of those killed were on Yemen's list of most-wanted al-Qaida figures, including Qassim al-Raimi, who was considered to be the most senior military leader in the terrorist network's offshoot in Yemen.

(...)

 
 
This from CBC.ca:
Yemen's foreign minister was in Ottawa on Monday seeking support from the government of Canada as the Middle Eastern country struggles with al-Qaeda elements within its borders.

The Yemeni minister, Abubakar al-Qirbi, is making the rounds ahead of a major conference on Yemen in London next week, when Yemen is expected to ask for development aid.

Al-Qirbi said at a news conference with Minister of Foreign Affairs Lawrence Cannon that he hopes the London conference will be a "landmark" moment in how Western countries approach Yemen's issues. He said Yemen is seeking support for logistics and training as it deals with "radicalization" and extremists in the country.
(....)

Cannon said the Canadian government is concerned about recent events that threaten Yemen's stability, and he and al-Qirbi discussed ways that Canada could help.

Soooooo, police, military or both kinds of "help"?
 
The campaign continues with the Yemeni forces suffering their own casualties.

AFP link
Ten soldiers killed in north Yemen clashes

AFP

1 hr 7 mins ago

SANAA (AFP) – Ten Yemeni soldiers have been killed, most of them by snipers, and 18 wounded in a fresh outbreak of fighting with Shiite rebels in north Yemen, a military official said on Monday.
The latest clashes come days after the government announced a timetable for a ceasefire, to which the rebels have yet to respond.

The fighting took place around the northern city of Saada, in Harf Sufyan, which lies to the south of the city, and in the Malahidh border area, the official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

He added that most of those killed were gunned down by snipers.

The official also said that a group of several hundred Yemeni soldiers who were besieged by rebel forces in the mountains southeast of Saada were able to break out of the cordon on Monday.

The rebels had dug trenches and laid a number of landmines around Jebel al-Samah, trapping the soldiers for the past 10 days.

The official said that there "were casualties" in the fighting, but did not elaborate.

The Yemeni government on Saturday announced a timetable for the implementation of a ceasefire, after the rebels accepted six conditions for an end to the fighting.
The details of the timetable were transmitted to rebel leader Abdul Malak al-Huthi through a go-between, presidential adviser Abdul Karim al-Ariania said.

Sanaa wants the rebels to withdraw from official buildings and abandon military posts in the mountains, reopen roads in the north, return weapons seized from security services, free all military and civilian prisoners, including Saudis, respect the law and the constitution, and pledge not to attack Saudi Arabia.

(...)

 
 
Obviously a different seaborne threat from the usual pirate threats in the area:

Associated Press link




CAIRO – The U.S. is warning of possible al-Qaida attacks against ships off the coast of Yemen, where an offshoot of the terrorist network has established a significant base of operations over the past year.

Yemen became a focus of deep international concern in December when al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula claimed responsibility for the failed attempt to blow up a Detroit-bound airliner, showing the group based in an impoverished and unstable corner of the Middle East had global reach.

"Information suggests that al-Qaida remains interested in maritime attacks in the Bab al-Mandeb Strait, Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden along the coast of Yemen," said an advisory from the U.S. Department of Transportation, which was posted on the U.S. Office of Naval Intelligence Web site.

The warning said such attacks could be similar to the 2000 strike against the Navy destroyer USS Cole in Yemen's Aden harbor that killed 17 American sailors. The attackers used a small boat laden with explosives to blow a hole in the side of the ship.

(...)

 
 
Seen....MARS had posted in the pirates thread early this AM.
 
Associated Press link

SAN'A, Yemen – The British ambassador in Yemen narrowly escaped a suicide attack Monday morning, when a young man in a school uniform detonated his explosives belt near his armored car at a poor neighborhood of San'a, officials said.

A British Embassy spokeswoman said the ambassador, Timothy Torlot, was unhurt, but the attack underlined the precarious security in Yemen. An impoverished Arab nation in the southern corner of the Arabian Peninsula, Yemen has in recent years become a haven for al-Qaida militants taking advantage of the government's limited authority outside major cities and the control of rural areas by heavily armed tribes.
(...)
 
Reuters link

SANAA (Reuters) - Yemeni security forces have launched an operation to free two Chinese oil workers kidnapped by separatist militants, a Defense Ministry website said on Monday.

Separately, al Qaeda's Yemen-based regional wing blamed the United States for a March raid that killed some of its militants, saying the attack provided it with "a thousand reasons" to strike back within the United States.


The ministry website, quoting the governor of Shabwa province where the men were kidnapped, called on the kidnappers to "quickly release the hostages unconditionally and surrender." It gave no details of the operation.


A government official told Reuters that negotiations "are still ongoing" but that "at the same time, troops are being prepared to move into the area."


Details over the number of hostages and who employed them have been unclear since the kidnapping on Sunday.


A local official said initially three oil workers had been kidnapped, but state media later said two Chinese men were abducted.


The men were working for the Chinese company Sinopec, the Defense Ministry website said. An official had said earlier they worked for a unit of U.S. firm Nabors Industries, which denied the report.


"The ... Chinese workers are employees of a competitor of ours which is a Chinese drilling contractor named ZPEB," said a Nabors spokesman. "There is no connection to Nabors whatsoever other than we have two rigs operating in the vicinity."



The kidnappers, believed to be part of a separatist group, demand compensation for injuries suffered by a group member during clashes with troops in a protest, a local official said.


AL QAEDA BLAMES U.S. FOR RAIDS


Al Qaeda's regional wing said in an Internet message that several of its leading members had been killed in recent raids or clashes, including Nayef al-Qahtani, a wanted Saudi identified as the founder of its media arm, Al Malahim.


The group, which claimed responsibility for a failed bombing of a Detroit-bound plane in December, also blamed the United States for a mid-March air raid in south Yemen in which it said two of its militants were killed.


"By (this) killing, you (Americans) ... have given us a thousand new reasons to strike you in your very home," Qasim al-Rimi, military chief of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, said in an audio recording posted on Islamist websites.


Washington has announced plans to boost military assistance to Yemen. The Arab country has denied that U.S. forces were involved in a series of air raids on suspected al Qaeda targets.


On Sunday, the group threatened the United States with more attacks should harm come to a U.S.-born radical cleric wanted dead or alive by Washington.



Kidnappings of foreigners and Yemenis are common in the impoverished Arabian Peninsula country. Hostages are used by disgruntled tribesmen to press demands on authorities.


Most hostages have been freed unharmed, but in 2000 a Norwegian diplomat was killed in crossfire and in 1998 four Westerners were killed during a botched army attempt to free them from Islamist militants who had seized 16 tourists.


Tensions are rising in south Yemen as separatist movements calling for re-establishment of the region as an independent state become more active. South and north Yemen united in 1990.

On Monday, police dismantled an explosive device that had been placed near the office of the governor of Abyan province in the south, a security official said.

The government, struggling to stabilize a fractious country in which central authority is often weak, faces international pressure to quell domestic conflicts in order to focus on fighting a resurgent al Qaeda.
 
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