The Niagara Falls Review

U.S. launches strikes on al-Qaida in Yemen

- AHMED AL-HAJ

SANAA, Yemen — U.S. jets carried out dozens of airstrikes on alQaida targets in Yemen overnight and in the past 48 hours in one of the lengthiest, sustained operations inside the conflict-torn Arab country, Yemeni officials and residents said Friday.

According to the officials, the strikes focused on a mountainou­s region where three provinces meet: Bayda, Shabwa, and Abyan. Casualty figures have been slow to emerge but officials said seven alleged al-Qaida militants were killed in the strikes on Thursday.

A senior Yemeni official described the strikes as “openended” and said they raised ques- tions about the objectives of such an operation.

Navy Capt. Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman, told reporters Friday that U.S. warplanes over the past two days targeted members of alQaida in the Arabian Peninsula, as well as the group’s infrastruc­ture, fighting positions and heavy weapons.

He said approximat­ely 25 strikes had been launched on Thursday and “several” more Friday, for a total of more than 30.

Davis said the U.S. was engaged in a sustained campaign in areas of Yemen where AQAP is most active. He said no U.S. ground troops have been involved in firefights there since a late-January raid.

Residents in Shabwa said strikes hit the town of Wadi Yabsham, where Saad Atef, the No. 2 figure in Yemen’s al- Qaida branch, is living. The residents and Yemeni officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to talk to journalist­s.

Sadek al-Jaouf, a Bayada tribal leader, said that houses were bombed in Yakla district — the site of a U.S. special operations raid two months ago in which a Navy SEAL was killed, six American soldiers were wounded and a U.S. military aircraft suffered a hard landing and had to be destroyed.

In the ground operation, a total of 25 Yemenis were killed, including 10 children, drawing criticism by internatio­nal rights groups and calls for an inquiry.

Al-Jaouf added that the top tribal figure, Abdel-Elah al-Dhahab, whose brothers were accused of links to al- Qaida and were killed in the January raid, survived the latest strikes.

 ?? MOHAMMED HUWAIS/GETTY IMAGES ?? Stalls and shoppers are seen in a street market in the Yemeni capital Sanaa. The U.S. has launched 30 airstrikes against al-Qaida’s Yemen branch, Navy Capt. Jeff Davis says.
MOHAMMED HUWAIS/GETTY IMAGES Stalls and shoppers are seen in a street market in the Yemeni capital Sanaa. The U.S. has launched 30 airstrikes against al-Qaida’s Yemen branch, Navy Capt. Jeff Davis says.

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