Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

AL-QAIDA OPERATIVE KILLED

Al-Qaida operative was on the FBI’s most wanted list

- By Ryan Browne and Barbara Starr

The terrorist behind the attack on the USS Cole is believed to have been killed in a U.S. airstrike.

The terrorist behind the 2000 attack on the USS Cole is believed to have been killed in a U.S. airstrike in Yemen on Tuesday, according to a U.S. administra­tion official.

Jamel Ahmed Mohammed Ali Al-Badawi was an al-Qaida operative who the U.S. believes helped orchestrat­e the Oct. 12, 2000, attack on the USS Cole that killed 17 American sailors.

The official said all intelligen­ce indicators show al-Badawi was killed in a strike in Yemen as a result of a joint U.S. military and intelligen­ce operation.

U.S. officials told CNN that the strike took place in Yemen’s Ma’rib Governorat­e.

The administra­tion official said that al-Badawi was struck while driving alone in a vehicle and that the U.S. assessed there was not any collateral damage.

Al-Badawi was on the FBI’s list of most wanted terrorists.

The Cole was attacked by suicide bombers in a small boat laden with explosives while in port in Aden, Yemen, for refueling. The attack also wounded 39 sailors.

The bombing was attributed to al-Qaida and foreshadow­ed the attack on the U.S. less than one year later on Sept. 11,

2001.

Al-Badawi was arrested by Yemeni authoritie­s in December

2000 and held in connection with the Cole attack but he escaped from a prison in Yemen in April 2003.

He was recaptured by Yemeni authoritie­s in March 2004 but again escaped Yemeni custody in February 2006 after he and several other inmates used broomstick­s and pieces of a broken fan to dig an escape tunnel that led from the prison to a nearby mosque.

The State Department’s Rewards for Justice Program had previously offered a reward of up to $5 million for informatio­n leading to his arrest.

Abd al Rahim al-Nashiri, an al-Qaida militant also seen as a key figure in the bombing, has been in U.S. custody since 2002 and has been held at the detention facility in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, since 2006.

U.S. military prosecutor­s have charged al-Nashiri with murder for allegedly planning the attack on the USS Cole.

Al-Badawi is also not the first high-profile al-Qaida target that the U.S. has killed in Yemen.

U.S. officials told CNN in August that a 2017 CIA drone strike in Yemen killed Ibrahim al-Asiri, a master al-Qaida bombmaker.

Al-Asiri, a native of Saudi Arabia, was the mastermind behind the “underwear bomb” attempt to detonate on a flight above the skies of Detroit on Christmas Day in 2009.

He was widely credited with perfecting miniaturiz­ed bombs with little or no metal content that could make it past some airport security screening. That ability made him a direct threat to the U.S., and some of his plots had come close to reaching their targets in the U.S.

 ??  ?? Al-Badawi
Al-Badawi

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States