Showing posts with label Yemen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yemen. Show all posts

Monday, April 7, 2014

An American Just Disappeared From a Prison in Yemen, and No One Will Say What Happened

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An American Just Disappeared From a Prison in Yemen, and No One Will Say What Happened

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Anti-US drone organization founded in Yemen

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Anti-US drone organization founded in Yemen

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Yemen police, al-Qaeda clash kills four

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Yemen police, al-Qaeda clash kills four

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

White House Conducts Secret Mass Drone Bombing in Yemen

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White House Conducts Secret Mass Drone Bombing in Yemen

Friday, December 27, 2013

Al Qaeda: Were sorry about Yemen hospital attack

(CNN) — Its something you dont often hear from the leaders of a terrorist group known for violence: Were sorry. But thats just what the head of al Qaeda in the Arabian…
AboveTopSecret.com New Topics In War On Terrorism



Al Qaeda: Were sorry about Yemen hospital attack

Thursday, December 26, 2013

Obama Unapologetic About Drone Massacre Of Yemen Wedding Party




Michael Thomas


by Michael Thomas
December 26th, 2013
Updated 12/26/2013 at 2:03 pm


US Continues Extra-Judicial Drone Assassinations In Spite Of Innocents Being Murdered


When will the Obama Administration learn that the highly misguided and illegal use of drones will always come back to haunt them?  No matter how many times they try to justify the unlawful use of deadly force by drones, innocent people are always caught in the middle.  The death of innocent women, children and elderly men has been a constant problem for both the CIA and the entire military chain of command responsible for these cold-blooded murders.


U.S. drone strike on Yemen wedding party kills 17


al-baidaa-victims

Dead victims of the Drone in Ra’ada, Yemen



The US Federal Government appears to be the only one in the world that has unlawfully arrogated power unto itself to commit these extra-judicial assassinations.  Just because the deadly weapons are discharged from drones by remote control does not make these crimes against humanity any more acceptable.  Murder is murder regardless of the weapon that is used.


Most of the nations that have fallen victim to this high tech military aggression by the USA have protested bitterly.  Nevertheless, the CIA and Armed Services continue to support these international crimes.  Yemen, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Somalia have complained of the flagrant invasion of their national sovereignty which these missile attacks represent.  Yemen has just voted to ban them on their soil.


Yemeni parliament votes to ban drone attacks


Shocking Refusal To Express Public Regret Or Sincere Apology


What is most disturbing about this very sordid and ongoing saga is the persistent refusal of the US Government to issue any kind of apology for these atrocities.  Because of the CIA’s routine lack of acknowledgment of these massacres, even the citizenry of the USA seems to be oblivious to such heinous crimes being committed in their name.  They seem to occur and then are very quickly forgotten just like passing days of the week.  Clearly, this is the most serious byproduct of these barbaric assaults in foreign lands.  That the people have come to accept them as business as usual.


Only because these frequent fatal attacks are not being conducted in Western nations are they somehow justifiable.  They have no legitimacy in international law, common law, natural law or federal law.  Simply put, the drone assassination program operates completely outside of the framework of every body of law in existence, including military law.


How, then, does the USA continue to get away with these repugnant crimes?


There’s only one way.  And that is the very same way that a global bully gets away with all of the military aggression and illicit attacks on other sovereign nations.  The USA has come to embody, without any legitimacy whatsoever, the false precept of:
“Might makes right”.


What is quite evident from the incessant disrespect that US politicians, diplomats and statesmen demonstrate toward many foreign nations is that they know what a military superpower can get away with.  Only because the USA commands such a large military presence around the world, is it able to act which such impunity.  However, such blatant disregard for the human life in so many foreign countries will eventually come back to bite US.


reportint20130520165237440

Yemenis protest against US intervention in their country



What the US and its NATO allies fail to understand is that so much unprovoked violence is being watched by the entire world. Not only are those nations that are victimized by drone attacks angered by such territorial violations; their neighbors, trading partners, and other countries are sympathetic to their plight.


Eventually, the blowback will surely come. Usually that occurs at a time, in a place and in a way that is least expected. Quite similarly to the initial drone surprise attacks conducted by the US and company do violent events regularly take place throughout the USA. Any government which permits these kinds of offensive military strikes, whether on the giving or receiving end, is sure to fall hard when it does.  Despite its perceived invincibility, the USA is no exception.


The victim nations are usually bribed and/or extorted into allowing drone attacks on their soil.


Rarely do you read such a report, but those nations which do not actively prevent such drones from entering their airspace are complicit in these crimes against their citizens.  However, they are usually operating under extreme financial duress, excessive military influence, and/or relentless political pressure when they submit to the bribes and extortion demanded by the Western military powers.


Usually it is the case that such nations have already received ‘generous’ amounts of American largesse.  Such financial aid comes with many strings attached and has enough pork baked in it to satisfy the local politicians.  Whatever the aid may be earmarked for, you can be sure that it is syphoned up by US contractors, companies, surrogates and proxies.  Rarely do the nation’s citizens ever directly benefit from this cynical form of ‘international aid’.


Pakistan is the perfect example of how their military has benefited from the annual US multi-billion dollar ‘stipend’ without any accountability.  Because the Pakistani armed services exert so much influence in governmental affairs, they have given the CIA a green light to commit their drone atrocities without fear of retribution.  Can this incestuous relationship become any more dysfunctional for either party?  Because it takes place completely under the radar of public scrutiny, it continues to fester and produce fierce anti-American sentiments wherever drone attacks occur.


How does any of this extremely destructive and ill-conceived foreign policy help America?  By creating more enemies?  By making it more difficult than ever for Americans to travel abroad?  By even turning our traditional friends against us?


Really, who is it that formulates such foolish and outrageous drone implementation plans?  Is it ‘Defense’, State, or the White House?  It doesn’t make much sense that any of these organs of US Government would make such self- destructive international policy, does it?


Drone strike that killed at least 15 in a wedding party in Yemen.

Drone strike that killed at least 15 in a wedding party in Yemen.



Therefore, it is now quite transparent that the US is run by a global shadow government which operates completely outside of the Constitution, or any other legal framework for that matter.  By doing so, it has transformed the US Government into a patchwork of rogue institutions, where the rule of law is now practically nonexistent.


Hence, this covert and lawless entity continues to arrogate power unto itself which cannot be challenged.  Who or what is there to confront on behalf of the American people?  To whom does one demand and implore that such cruel extra-judicial killings by drones be stopped.  The American people want these senseless murders to stop.  They especially do no want them conducted in their name and using their tax dollars.


Michael Thomas
State of the Nation
December 26, 2013


References:


The US Has Bombed at Least Eight Wedding Parties Since 2001


No holiday for U.S. drones in Pakistan; 3 killed…


DRONES: The Rank Hypocrisy of Barack Obama


Sec. Hagel to Pakistan: Drone Protests & Blocking NATO Convoys; Threatens to cut $ 1.6 bn Pakistan aid


Five Afghan Children Among Ten Civilians Killed in NATO/US Drone Attack


Drone strike kills 15 ‘wedding party-goers’ in Yemen


Insight – In Yemen, al Qaeda gains sympathy amid U.S. drone strikes


Yemenis protest against US intervention in their country


Air strike kills 15 civilians in Yemen by mistake-officials


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Tags: afghanistan, cia, drones, featured, latest, NATO, Obama, Pakistan, secondary, War Crimes, yemen


Category: US, War, War Crimes




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Obama Unapologetic About Drone Massacre Of Yemen Wedding Party

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

VIDEO: U.S. Drone Strikes May Be "War Crimes": Human Rights Group







A new report by Amnesty International is calling on the United States government to investigate civilian deaths from CIA drone strikes.













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VIDEO: U.S. Drone Strikes May Be "War Crimes": Human Rights Group

VIDEO: U.S. Drone Strikes May Be "War Crimes": Human Rights Group







A new report by Amnesty International is calling on the United States government to investigate civilian deaths from CIA drone strikes.













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VIDEO: U.S. Drone Strikes May Be "War Crimes": Human Rights Group

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Two suspected al Qaeda militants killed in Yemen drone strike

ADEN (Reuters) – At least two suspected Islamist militants were killed in a drone missile strike in Yemen’s southern Shabwa province, the latest in a surge since Washington warned of possible attacks by al Qaeda in the region.


Reuters: Top News



Two suspected al Qaeda militants killed in Yemen drone strike

Two suspected al Qaeda militants killed in Yemen drone strike

ADEN (Reuters) – At least two suspected Islamist militants were killed in a drone missile strike in Yemen’s southern Shabwa province, the latest in a surge since Washington warned of possible attacks by al Qaeda in the region.


Reuters: Top News



Two suspected al Qaeda militants killed in Yemen drone strike

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Drone strike kills six suspected militants in Yemen

ADEN (Reuters) – A U.S. drone killed at least six suspected al Qaeda militants in southern Yemen on Wednesday, officials said, a day after U.S. and British embassies evacuated some staff because of growing fears of attacks.



Reuters: Top News



Drone strike kills six suspected militants in Yemen

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Yemen drone strike kills four suspected al Qaeda militants: tribal leaders

SANAA (Reuters) – At least four suspected al Qaeda members were killed in a drone strike in central Yemen, local tribal leaders said on Tuesday, following a U.S. warning of a possible major militant attack in the region.



Reuters: Top News



Yemen drone strike kills four suspected al Qaeda militants: tribal leaders

State Dept. urges US citizens to leave Yemen







A Yemeni soldier stops a car at a checkpoint in a street leading to the U.S. embassy in Sanaa, Yemen, Sunday, Aug. 4, 2013. Security forces close access roads, put up extra blast walls and beef up patrols near some of the 21 U.S. diplomatic missions in the Muslim world that Washington ordered closed for the weekend over a “significant threat” of an al-Qaida attack. (AP Photo/Hani Mohammed)





A Yemeni soldier stops a car at a checkpoint in a street leading to the U.S. embassy in Sanaa, Yemen, Sunday, Aug. 4, 2013. Security forces close access roads, put up extra blast walls and beef up patrols near some of the 21 U.S. diplomatic missions in the Muslim world that Washington ordered closed for the weekend over a “significant threat” of an al-Qaida attack. (AP Photo/Hani Mohammed)





Map shows U.S. embassies and consulates that will remain closed through Aug. 10; 3c x 4 inches; 146 mm x 101 mm;













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WASHINGTON (AP) — The State Department on Tuesday ordered non-essential personnel at the U.S. Embassy in Yemen to leave the country following the threat by al-Qaida that has triggered temporary shutdowns of 19 American diplomatic posts across the Middle East and Africa.


The department said in a travel warning that it had ordered the evacuation of non-emergency U.S. government personnel from Yemen “due to the continued potential for terrorist attacks” and said U.S. citizens in Yemen should leave immediately because of an “extremely high” security threat level.


“As staff levels at the Embassy are restricted, our ability to assist U.S. citizens in an emergency and provide routine consular services remains limited and may be further constrained by the fluid security situation,” the travel warning said. The U.S. Embassy is located in Sanaa, the capital of Yemen.


A U.S. intelligence official and a Mideast diplomat told The Associated Press that the current shutdown of embassies in the Middle East and Africa was instigated by an intercepted secret message between al-Qaida chief Ayman al-Zawahri and Nasser al-Wahishi, the leader of the Yemen-based al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, about plans for a major terror attack. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.


The U.S. has pummeled terrorist leaders in Yemen with targeted drone strikes. On Tuesday, Yemeni security officials said a suspected U.S. drone killed four alleged al-Qaida members in a volatile eastern province of the country. The drone fired a missile at a car carrying the four men, setting it on fire and killing all of them, the officials said.


The Yemeni officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they are not allowed to talk to the media, said they believe one of the dead is Saleh Jouti, a senior al-Qaida member. It’s the fourth drone attack in the past week to hit a car believed to be carrying al-Qaida members.


The State Department on Sunday closed a total of 19 diplomatic posts until next Saturday. They include posts in Bangladesh and across North Africa and the Middle East as well as East Africa, including Madagascar, Burundi, Rwanda and Mauritius.


Jen Psaki, spokeswoman for the State Department, said in a separate statement issued early Tuesday that the department issued the order for Yemen because of concern about a “threat stream indicating the potential for terrorist attacks against U.S. persons or facilities overseas, especially emanating from the Arabian Peninsula.”


The statement said U.S. citizens who choose to stay in Yemen despite the travel warning should limit nonessential travel within the country and make their own contingency emergency plans. “From time to time, the Embassy may temporarily close or suspend public services for security reasons,” Psaki said. “Emergency assistance to U.S. citizens during non-business hours (or when public access is restricted) is available through embassy duty personnel.”


Britain’s Foreign Office also announced that it had evacuated all staff from its embassy in Yemen due to security concerns. The office said the British embassy staff were “temporarily withdrawn to the U.K.” on Tuesday, but declined further comment. Previously, the U.K. had said the embassy would be closed until the end of the Muslim festival of Eid later this week.


AQAP, gathered in small cells scattered across Yemen’s vast under-governed regions, has proven to be a tenacious enemy.


Officials say al-Zawahri, who took over for Osama bin Laden and works from Pakistan, has reached out to the Yemeni branch, cementing their ties and further signaling the AQAP is once again looking to target U.S. and Western interests after a sustained period of more local and regional focus.


For puzzled Americans who’ve been told that al-Qaida is on the decline, the latest warnings raise questions about how successful America’s war on terror has been and whether the terror group has been able to reorganize and reconstitute itself since bin Laden’s death in May 2011.


And, although U.S. officials agreed a year ago to restart military aid to Yemen, it’s unclear how much of the new aircraft and weapons have arrived. After aid to Yemen was frozen for some time, the U.S. military is once again on the ground there training Yemeni special operations forces and has delivered more than a dozen helicopters to the Yemeni military and provided training for them, U.S. defense officials said.


But other weapons and equipment are still in the pipeline, according to a Mideast official.


The latest terror alert was triggered in part when the secret message between al-Zawahri and al-Wahishi was intercepted several weeks ago.


There long has been movement of fighters between Pakistan and Yemen, and discussions between the two groups, but the latest communication triggered worries and prompted the U.S. to take steps to boost security. The embassy closures came one day after a meeting between President Barack Obama and Yemeni President Abdo Rabu Mansour Hadi.


AQAP has been widely considered al-Qaida’s most dangerous affiliate for several years. Even though the group lost Anwar al-Awlaki — one of its key inspirational leaders — to a U.S. drone strike in 2011, al-Wahishi and the group’s master bomb maker, Ibrahim Hassan al-Asiri, remain on the loose and determined to target the U.S. and other Western interests.


The group is linked to the botched Christmas Day 2009 bombing of an airliner bound for Detroit and explosives-laden parcels intercepted aboard cargo flights a year later — both incidents involving al-Asiri’s expertise.


In recent years, however, AQAP has been focused more on making gains at home, taking advantage of an unstable government and overstretched military that was forced to concentrate on protecting the political center in Sanaa. As a result, said a senior defense official, AQAP was able to expand its foothold in the south, capture more weapons and gain control of additional territory.


Obama and others have consistently alluded to the weakening of core al-Qaida in Pakistan — particularly since a Navy SEAL team killed bin Laden in Pakistan two years ago. Obama frequently touts bin Laden’s death in his speeches, and has declared that the terror group was “on the path to defeat.”


But while core al-Qaida may be on the ropes, officials have warned repeatedly that its offshoots in places like Yemen and Africa, as well as homegrown believers in the U.S., have grown increasingly dangerous and more difficult to track.


On Monday, officials declined to be more specific about the latest threat.


“What we know is the threat emanates from, and may be focused on, occurring in the Arabian Peninsula,” White House spokesman Jay Carney said. “It could potentially be beyond that, or elsewhere.”


___


Associated Press writers Lara Jakes, Kimberly Dozier, Robert Burns and Julie Pace in Washington and Ahmed Al-Haj in Sanaa, Yemen, contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Politics Headlines



State Dept. urges US citizens to leave Yemen

State Dept. urges US citizens to leave Yemen








A Yemeni soldier stops a car at a checkpoint in a street leading to the U.S. embassy in Sanaa, Yemen, Sunday, Aug. 4, 2013. Security forces close access roads, put up extra blast walls and beef up patrols near some of the 21 U.S. diplomatic missions in the Muslim world that Washington ordered closed for the weekend over a “significant threat” of an al-Qaida attack. (AP Photo/Hani Mohammed)





A Yemeni soldier stops a car at a checkpoint in a street leading to the U.S. embassy in Sanaa, Yemen, Sunday, Aug. 4, 2013. Security forces close access roads, put up extra blast walls and beef up patrols near some of the 21 U.S. diplomatic missions in the Muslim world that Washington ordered closed for the weekend over a “significant threat” of an al-Qaida attack. (AP Photo/Hani Mohammed)





Map shows U.S. embassies and consulates that will remain closed through Aug. 10; 3c x 4 inches; 146 mm x 101 mm;













Buy AP Photo Reprints







(AP) — The State Department on Tuesday ordered non-essential personnel at the U.S. Embassy in Yemen to leave the country following the threat by al-Qaida that has triggered temporary shutdowns of 19 American diplomatic posts across the Middle East and Africa.


The department said in a travel warning that it had ordered the evacuation of non-emergency U.S. government personnel from Yemen “due to the continued potential for terrorist attacks” and said U.S. citizens in Yemen should leave immediately because of an “extremely high” security threat level.


“As staff levels at the Embassy are restricted, our ability to assist U.S. citizens in an emergency and provide routine consular services remains limited and may be further constrained by the fluid security situation,” the travel warning said. The U.S. Embassy is located in Sanaa, the capital of Yemen.


A U.S. intelligence official and a Mideast diplomat told The Associated Press that the current shutdown of embassies in the Middle East and Africa was instigated by an intercepted secret message between al-Qaida chief Ayman al-Zawahri and Nasser al-Wahishi, the leader of the Yemen-based al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, about plans for a major terror attack. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.


The U.S. has pummeled terrorist leaders in Yemen with targeted drone strikes. On Tuesday, Yemeni security officials said a suspected U.S. drone killed four alleged al-Qaida members in a volatile eastern province of the country. The drone fired a missile at a car carrying the four men, setting it on fire and killing all of them, the officials said.


The Yemeni officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they are not allowed to talk to the media, said they believe one of the dead is Saleh Jouti, a senior al-Qaida member. It’s the fourth drone attack in the past week to hit a car believed to be carrying al-Qaida members.


The State Department on Sunday closed a total of 19 diplomatic posts until next Saturday. They include posts in Bangladesh and across North Africa and the Middle East as well as East Africa, including Madagascar, Burundi, Rwanda and Mauritius.


Jen Psaki, spokeswoman for the State Department, said in a separate statement issued early Tuesday that the department issued the order for Yemen because of concern about a “threat stream indicating the potential for terrorist attacks against U.S. persons or facilities overseas, especially emanating from the Arabian Peninsula.”


The statement said U.S. citizens who choose to stay in Yemen despite the travel warning should limit nonessential travel within the country and make their own contingency emergency plans. “From time to time, the Embassy may temporarily close or suspend public services for security reasons,” Psaki said. “Emergency assistance to U.S. citizens during non-business hours (or when public access is restricted) is available through embassy duty personnel.”


Britain’s Foreign Office also announced that it had evacuated all staff from its embassy in Yemen due to security concerns. The office said the British embassy staff were “temporarily withdrawn to the U.K.” on Tuesday, but declined further comment. Previously, the U.K. had said the embassy would be closed until the end of the Muslim festival of Eid later this week.


AQAP, gathered in small cells scattered across Yemen’s vast under-governed regions, has proven to be a tenacious enemy.


Officials say al-Zawahri, who took over for Osama bin Laden and works from Pakistan, has reached out to the Yemeni branch, cementing their ties and further signaling the AQAP is once again looking to target U.S. and Western interests after a sustained period of more local and regional focus.


For puzzled Americans who’ve been told that al-Qaida is on the decline, the latest warnings raise questions about how successful America’s war on terror has been and whether the terror group has been able to reorganize and reconstitute itself since bin Laden’s death in May 2011.


And, although U.S. officials agreed a year ago to restart military aid to Yemen, it’s unclear how much of the new aircraft and weapons have arrived. After aid to Yemen was frozen for some time, the U.S. military is once again on the ground there training Yemeni special operations forces and has delivered more than a dozen helicopters to the Yemeni military and provided training for them, U.S. defense officials said.


But other weapons and equipment are still in the pipeline, according to a Mideast official.


The latest terror alert was triggered in part when the secret message between al-Zawahri and al-Wahishi was intercepted several weeks ago.


There long has been movement of fighters between Pakistan and Yemen, and discussions between the two groups, but the latest communication triggered worries and prompted the U.S. to take steps to boost security. The embassy closures came one day after a meeting between President Barack Obama and Yemeni President Abdo Rabu Mansour Hadi.


AQAP has been widely considered al-Qaida’s most dangerous affiliate for several years. Even though the group lost Anwar al-Awlaki — one of its key inspirational leaders — to a U.S. drone strike in 2011, al-Wahishi and the group’s master bomb maker, Ibrahim Hassan al-Asiri, remain on the loose and determined to target the U.S. and other Western interests.


The group is linked to the botched Christmas Day 2009 bombing of an airliner bound for Detroit and explosives-laden parcels intercepted aboard cargo flights a year later — both incidents involving al-Asiri’s expertise.


In recent years, however, AQAP has been focused more on making gains at home, taking advantage of an unstable government and overstretched military that was forced to concentrate on protecting the political center in Sanaa. As a result, said a senior defense official, AQAP was able to expand its foothold in the south, capture more weapons and gain control of additional territory.


Obama and others have consistently alluded to the weakening of core al-Qaida in Pakistan — particularly since a Navy SEAL team killed bin Laden in Pakistan two years ago. Obama frequently touts bin Laden’s death in his speeches, and has declared that the terror group was “on the path to defeat.”


But while core al-Qaida may be on the ropes, officials have warned repeatedly that its offshoots in places like Yemen and Africa, as well as homegrown believers in the U.S., have grown increasingly dangerous and more difficult to track.


On Monday, officials declined to be more specific about the latest threat.


“What we know is the threat emanates from, and may be focused on, occurring in the Arabian Peninsula,” White House spokesman Jay Carney said. “It could potentially be beyond that, or elsewhere.”


___


Associated Press writers Lara Jakes, Kimberly Dozier, Robert Burns and Julie Pace in Washington and Ahmed Al-Haj in Sanaa, Yemen, contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



State Dept. urges US citizens to leave Yemen

US warns citizens to leave Yemen











The US State Department has told citizens and non-emergency government staff to leave Yemen “immediately” due to security threats.


It comes after the sudden closure of 20 US embassies and consulates on Sunday.


This was prompted by intercepted conversations between two senior al-Qaeda figures, including top leader Ayman al-Zawahiri, US media said.


The US earlier said the closures in North Africa and the Middle East were “out of an abundance of caution”.



‘Extremely high’

A global travel alert issued on Tuesday said: “The US Department of State warns US citizens of the high security threat level in Yemen due to terrorist activities and civil unrest.


“The department urges US citizens to defer travel to Yemen and those US citizens currently living in Yemen to depart immediately.”


It added that “the security threat level in Yemen is extremely high”.


The BBC’s Abdullah Ghorab, in Sanaa, says the Yemeni capital has been experiencing unprecedented security measures, with hundreds of armoured military vehicles deployed to secure the presidential palace, vital infrastructural buildings and Western embassies in the capital.


Our correspondent says that a security source confirmed Yemeni intelligence services had discovered that tens of al-Qaeda members had arrived in Sanaa over the past few days from other regions in preparation for the implementation of a large plot.


The source described the plot as dangerous, and suggested it was to include explosions and suicide attacks aimed at Western ambassadors and foreign embassies in Yemen, in addition to operations aimed at the Yemeni military headquarters.


Both the White House and the US state department have said the current threat comes from al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), but have refused to divulge further details.


According to the New York Times, the US intercepted communications between Zawahiri and the group’s head in Yemen, Nasser al-Wuhayshi.


The paper said the conversation represented one of the most serious plots since the 9/11 attacks.


A number of US diplomatic posts in the region – including in the Yemeni capital Sanaa – will remain closed until Saturday.


Several European countries have also temporarily shut missions in Yemen and the UK Foreign Office is advising against all travel to the country.


A state department global travel alert, issued last week, is also in force until the end of August.


In its latest statement, the department referred to previous attacks on US embassies, including the storming of its compound in September 2012.


Earlier that month mob attacks on the US consulate in Benghazi had left US ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans dead.


Meanwhile, officials in Yemen released the names of 25 al-Qaeda suspects, saying they had been planning attacks targeting “foreign offices and organisations and Yemeni installations” in the capital of Sanaa and other cities across the country.


AQAP, the Yemeni branch of al-Qaeda, has also been blamed for the foiled Christmas Day 2009 effort to bomb an airliner over Detroit and for explosives-laden parcels that were intercepted the following year aboard cargo flights.


Seven suspected al-Qaeda militants were killed in two US drone air strikes in southern Yemen in June, officials say.




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US warns citizens to leave Yemen

U.S. Urges Americans to Leave Yemen


After days of security alarms and the closure of American embassies, the United States on Tuesday ordered “non-emergency” government personnel to leave Yemen and urged its citizens living there to leave the country immediately.





The warning on the State Department Web site came a day after officials in Washington said the United States had intercepted electronic communications in which the head of Al Qaeda ordered the leader of the group’s affiliate in Yemen to carry out an attack as early as this past Sunday.


Consequently the Obama administration decided last week to close nearly two dozen diplomatic missions and issue a worldwide travel alert.


In its latest update on Tuesday, the State Department warned United States citizens of “the high security threat level in Yemen due to terrorist activities and civil unrest.” It urged Americans “to defer travel to Yemen and those U.S. citizens currently living in Yemen to depart immediately.”


“On August 6, 2013, the Department of State ordered the departure of non-emergency U.S. government personnel from Yemen due to the continued potential for terrorist attacks,” the State Department said in a statement.




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U.S. Urges Americans to Leave Yemen