Los Angeles Times

Al Qaeda gains in time of chaos

- By Zaid al-Alayaa Al-Alayaa is a special correspond­ent.

The group’s affiliate in Yemen is grabbing ground as violence surges.

SANA, Yemen — Ominous new signs emerged Tuesday that Al Qaeda’s affiliate in Yemen was capitalizi­ng on fighting between Shiite Muslim rebels and a Saudi-led military coalition to extend its territoria­l reach.

Suspected militants from Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, as the organizati­on’s Yemen franchise is known, advanced to Saudi Arabia’s doorstep by overrunnin­g a base near the border in northeaste­rn Yemen, killing two, including a senior officer, the Reuters news agency reported.

Less than a week ago, Al Qaeda militants — until recently in the gun sights of U.S. forces, who have staged a long drone-warfare campaign against them — seized much of a southeaste­rn seaport, Mukalla. They staged a prison break to free comrades, including a senior militant leader, looted the local branch of the Central Bank and set up checkpoint­s to enforce their authority over about half of the city.

In Tuesday’s strike, Al Qaeda attackers seized a base near Manwakh, about 270 miles northeast of Sana, the capital, Reuters said, citing militant sources in Hadhramaut province, the group’s main stronghold.

The fighting enveloping much of Yemen has all but derailed the U.S. fight against Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, considered one of Al Qaeda’s most lethal and active branches. Last month, U.S. personnel had to be withdrawn from the Al Anad military camp in southern Yemen, a hub of the drone war.

With calls for a cease-fire failing to bear fruit, warplanes from the Saudi-led coalition pounded Houthi rebel positions again Tuesday, seeking to drive the insurgents from a base on the outskirts of the capital.

Strikes on Bani Matar village have killed and injured dozens of civilians in recent days, and more casualties were reported in Tuesday’s attacks. Military officials said the base is now in ruins.

The fighting in Yemen, which began in earnest two weeks ago after months of unrest, has left hundreds of people dead and prompted warnings of a looming humanitari­an disaster. Shipments of medical supplies have been blocked, some foodstuffs are running low, electricit­y is often cut off, and gas stations are closed or besieged by long lines of motorists.

The chief Saudi military spokesman, Brig. Gen. Ahmed Asiri, told reporters in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia’s capital, on Tuesday that a ship loaded with Red Cross supplies had been given clearance to enter Yemeni waters. The coalition has blockaded Yemen’s ports and says it wants to ensure safety before allowing aid in.

Saudi Arabia launched its air war on March 26, a day after a rebel advance on the port city of Aden prompted Yemen’s internatio­nally recognized president, Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi, to flee.

The Saudis have vowed to contain the insurgents and restore Hadi to power, but Yemen’s former strongman leader, Ali Abdullah Saleh, has allied himself with the rebels, bringing many major military units to the fight with him.

Asiri appealed to turncoat units to rejoin the government fold. “We ask … those wanting to return to legitimacy and abandon the militias, to communicat­e with their colleagues … so they do not subject their camps and their lives to destructio­n,” he said.

The fight has devolved into a proxy war between Saudi Arabia, the region’s main Sunni power, and Shiite Iran, which has aided the rebels, who are mainly adherents of the Shiite offshoot Zaidi sect.

In addition to strikes on Sana, the Saudi-led coalition on Tuesday targeted Ibb province, in Yemen’s inland south, officials said. A bombardmen­t destroyed a strategic bridge to block Houthi supply routes, and a military encampment used by Saleh loyalists. The official news agency Saba reported that at least two civilians, both school-age children, died in the attacks.

Foreigners have been fleeing Yemen as the violence mounts, and India on Tuesday announced that it had plucked to safety more than 200 people of more than two dozen nationalit­ies. The crisis has produced shows of solidarity among traditiona­l enemies, with Pakistan offering air transport home for about a dozen Indians rescued along with its citizens.

 ?? Saleh al-Obeidi
AFP/Getty Images ?? A LOYALIST patrols Aden, Yemen. Saudi Arabia launched its air war after a rebel advance on the city last month. Fighting between insurgents and the Saudi-led coalition has left other areas vulnerable to Al Qaeda.
Saleh al-Obeidi AFP/Getty Images A LOYALIST patrols Aden, Yemen. Saudi Arabia launched its air war after a rebel advance on the city last month. Fighting between insurgents and the Saudi-led coalition has left other areas vulnerable to Al Qaeda.
 ?? Yahya Arhab
European Pressphoto Agency ?? RESIDENTS STOCK up on water in Sana, Yemen’s capital. About 270 miles northeast of the city, militants seized a base near the border with Saudi Arabia.
Yahya Arhab European Pressphoto Agency RESIDENTS STOCK up on water in Sana, Yemen’s capital. About 270 miles northeast of the city, militants seized a base near the border with Saudi Arabia.

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