The National - News

US kills eight Aqap fighters

-

ADEN // US fighter jets pounded Al Qaeda targets in Yemen for a second consecutiv­e day yesterday, killing eight militants, as Washington stepped up its air war against the extremists.

The Pentagon said since Thursday it had carried out more than 20 strikes on Al Qaeda positions in the southern provinces of Shabwa and Abyan and the central province of Bayda. The attacks targeted Al Qaeda positions, weapons systems and equipment in a remote mountainou­s area in central Yemen.

Capt Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman, said the strikes were aimed at degrading the group’s ability to “coordinate external terror attacks” and to limit its use of Yemen as a “safe space for terror plotting”.

Yemeni security officials said US jets and drones targeted at least six districts where the provinces of Bayda, Shabwa and Abyan meet. An official said the strikes killed seven Al Qaeda militants in Shabwa and Abyan. The pre- dawn attack shook houses and awoke residents, many of whom fled in fear.

Local tribal leaders said smoke billowed into the sky and explosions lit up the horizon during the attack.

Al Qaeda claimed its fighters had foiled a US ground raid in the southern province of Abyan. It said US naval vessels launched a wave of random shelling to provide cover for the forces to pull out.

But several US officials denied that the US participat­ed in any ground raid in Yemen.

They said US air strikes targeted Al Qaeda artillery and other sites, and that no US navy ships had participat­ed in the mission.

Yemeni officials said at least 12 suspected militants were killed in those air raids, which came barely a month after a botched US commando raid against the group left several civilians and a navy Seal dead.

In yesterday’s strikes, US warplanes hit three houses in the Yashbam Valley before dawn, one of them the home of Saad Alef, Al Qaeda’s commander in Shabwa province.

Tribal sources said that women and children were also wounded.

The valley is an extremist stronghold and was a key target of the air strikes. Security officials said US helicopter­s took part in the operation. The militants retaliated with anti-aircraft fire, during what residents described as “a terrifying night”. US president Donald Trump faced broad criticism at home after he authorised the January 29 commando raid during which Ryan Owens, a navy Seal operator, was killed. Human rights groups also condemned the raid.

Al Qaeda has exploited a power vacuum created by two years of war between Yemen’s government and Shiite rebels who control the capital to consolidat­e its presence, particular­ly in the south and east.

Capt Davis said Al Qaeda had made use of ungoverned areas in Yemen to plot, direct and inspire terror attacks against the US and its allies.

He said Thursday’s strikes targeted Al Qaeda militants, equipment and infrastruc­ture. Another US official said they had involved fighter jets and drones.

Successive US administra­tions have kept up a drone war against Al Qaeda in Yemen since soon after the September 11 attacks in 2001.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates