Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Officials defend Yemen raid despite fatalities

- By Dan Lamothe “in extremis,”

WASHINGTON — The Pentagon and White House on Thursday defended the planning and execution of a U.S. Special Operations raid in Yemen that killed civilians along with a Navy SEAL, saying there was sufficient intelligen­ce to carry it out and that it had been planned for months.

Navy Capt. Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman, said the civilians were killed Saturday by gunfire from aircraft needed to support the SEALs after they came under heavy gunfire by militants, among them women who ran to planned fighting positions. The SEALs, he said, were

a term the U.S. military uses to define situations in which service members or partner forces are under immediate threat. The dead are said to include the 8-year-old daughter of Anwar alAwlaki, the U.S.-born cleric and a propagandi­st with al-Qaida’s affiliate in Yemen who was killed in a 2011 U.S. drone strike.

“The enemy had gone to a building and taken up fighting positions in that building to fire on our troops who were on the ground conducting this operation,” Davis said. “The enemy put potentiall­y the civilians at risk in doing so.”

The operation was launched under cover of darkness in the village of Yaklaa, a stronghold of al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula that was defended with land mines and guarded by heavily armed militants. A fierce firefight erupted. Wounded SEALs were evacuated for pickup by Marines flying on MV-22 Osprey aircraft from the USS Makin Island, an amphibious assault ship. One of the Ospreys was damaged badly enough in the rescue operation that U.S. military officials elected to destroy it with a GPSguided bomb to make sure al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula wasn’t able to exploit it.

Davis and White House press secretary Sean Spicer disputed allegation­s, reported by Reuters and the New York Times, that the mission was poorly planned and had lost the element of surprise. The Times reported that the SEALs learned that their mission had been compromise­d after intercepti­ng a transmissi­on that showed the militants were preparing for their arrival.

“We have nothing to suggest that this was compromise­d,” Davis said, adding that report “does not match with reality.”

Spicer said that the plan for the mission was first submitted by U.S. Central Command, which oversees military operations across the Middle East, to the Defense Department on Nov. 7, one day before the presidenti­al election. A plan was approved by the Pentagon on Dec. 19 and turned over to the White House. Obama administra­tion officials approved a plan for an operation during an interagenc­y meeting Jan. 6, two weeks before President Donald Trump’s inaugurati­on, and decided it would be best to carry it out in the dark of a “moonless night,” Spicer said.

Defense Secretary James Mattis reviewed a memorandum on the plan Jan. 24 during his first week on the job, and Trump was briefed on it by national security adviser Michael Flynn the following day, Spicer said. Trump met with Mattis and Marine Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and then authorized the mission one day later.

Spicer defended the mission as a “successful operations by all standards,” despite the loss of life, saying the intelligen­ce gathered would ultimately protect American lives. Trump traveled Wednesday to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware to view the arrival of the remains of the fallen SEAL, Chief Petty Officer William “Ryan” Owens, 36.

“It’s hard to ever call something a complete success when you have the loss of life or people injured,” Spicer said. “But I think (it was) when you look at the totality of what was gained to prevent the future loss of life, here in America, and against our people and our institutio­ns and probably throughout the world, in terms of what some of these individual­s could have done.”

 ?? YAHYA ARHAB/EPA ?? A Yemeni walks past graffiti protesting U.S. military operations. A recent attack resulted in civilian deaths.
YAHYA ARHAB/EPA A Yemeni walks past graffiti protesting U.S. military operations. A recent attack resulted in civilian deaths.

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