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Aborted Bombing Puts Yemen in the Limelight
WASHINGTON - The attempted Christmas Day bombing of a U.S. airliner by a Nigerian allegedly associated with al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) has propelled long-neglected Yemen into the media spotlight here.
The attempt, which was foiled by alert passengers who subdued the alleged bomber, 23-year-old Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, as he tried to set off explosives, could result in increased U.S. military and economic aid for the beleaguered regime headed President Ali Abdullah Saleh, as some influential think tanks here have urged.
It could also renew a simmering debate over whether "Al Qaeda Central" located along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border constitutes "the epicentre of violent extremism", as President Barack Obama contended when he announced his plan to send 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan earlier this month, or whether loosely affiliated groups and individuals now pose the greater threat to U.S. security.
"This attempted attack does not appear to have any connection to Afghanistan," Paul Pillar, the former top Near and South Asia analyst for the U.S. intelligence community who argued against the escalation of the U.S. military presence in Afghanistan, told Newsweek Monday.
"The incident is a reminder that countering such terrorism is not a matter of controlling particular pieces of foreign real estate but instead of less visible work by intelligence and law enforcement resources," he said.
In a brief appearance Monday to announce stepped-up security measures and reassure travellers of the safety of flying on commercial aircraft, Obama stressed that Washington was determined to punish those who aided Abdulmutallab, although he did not mention AQAP explicitly.
"We will not rest until we find all who were involved and hold them accountable," he said in Hawaii where he is vacationing with his family.
"We will continue to use every element of our national power to disrupt, to dismantle and defeat the violent extremists who threaten us, whether they are from Afghanistan or Pakistan, Yemen or Somalia, or anywhere where they are plotting attacks against the U.S. homeland," he added.
In a message that appeared on a number of radical Islamist websites Monday, AQAP claimed responsibility for the attempted bombing, which took place as the Northwest Airlines flight descended into Detroit from Amsterdam where it originated. Abdulmutallab had flown to Amsterdam from Lagos Dec. 24.
According to various reports, Abdulmutallab has told interrogators here that he had received training and explosives from AQAP in Yemen, a link that investigators are currently trying to confirm.
Some officials noted that the explosive used by the alleged bomber, PETN, was the same as that used last August by another AQAP militant in an unsuccessful assassination attempt against Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, the director of Saudi Arabia's counterterrorism programme.
Abdulmutallab's father, a prominent Nigerian banker who had reportedly warned U.S. and Nigerian officials about his son's apparent radicalisation since graduating from University College in London, said Abdulmutallab travelled to Yemen, his mother's ancestral home, earlier this fall before breaking off all contact with the family last month.
In its Internet message, AQAP said the attempted bombing was carried out in retaliation for raids by Yemeni security against suspected AQAP hideouts in three cities in which the government claimed 34 militants, including senior commanders, were killed and 17 others arrested.
One unnamed U.S. official told reporters here that the raids were backed by U.S.-supplied "intelligence and firepower". Yemeni officials have subsequently denied reports that U.S. cruise missiles or predator drones took part in the raids.
In a eulogy to those killed in the raids, one AQAP member called for retaliation against "America and its agents", according to a translation by Virginia-based IntelCenter. "We are carrying a bomb to hit the enemies of God," he said.
One week later, Yemeni warplanes bombed a compound in the southern province of Shabwa, where the government said senior AQAP officials were meeting.
It claimed that more than 30 militants were killed in the strike, including the group's leader, Nasir al-Wuhayshi and his top deputy. Also reportedly killed was Anwar al Aulaqi, a U.S.-born Yemeni cleric with whom the U.S. Army major accused of gunning down 13 of his fellow soldiers at Fort Hood, Texas, last month had been in email contact. Aulaqi's family, however, has denied that he was present at the time.
Another 29 AQAP members were arrested Monday, according to the government, which said they had plotted to attack several government targets and the British Embassy in Yemen's capital, Sana'a.
According to a New York Times report Monday, Washington, which has long been concerned that Yemen could become a "failed state", has been providing increasing amounts of mostly covert military and intelligence assistance to the country. This includes top field operatives from the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and Special Operations Forces (SOF) commandos who have begun training Yemeni security forces in counterterrorism tactics, the newspaper said.
It plans to double such aid - to more than 70 million dollars over the next 18 months, according to the report, which noted that separate secret visits to Yemen in late summer by the chief of the U.S. Central Command, Gen. David Petraeus, and Obama's counterterrorism chief, John Brennan, marked a "pivotal point" in gaining Pres. Saleh's agreement to make AQAP the government's top priority.
The central government faces a growing secessionist movement in the south and, more important, a major insurgency in the north, home to members of the Zaydi Shia sect that make up about a third of the country's 23 million people. Both challenges have, at least until recently, been considered by the government a greater threat than AQAP.
In a report released last month, the Center for a New American Security (CNAS) warned that Yemen, the Arab world's poorest country, "rests today on a knife's edge" and called on Washington to significantly increase both military and development assistance as part of a larger counterinsurgency strategy to ensure the state's survival and repel the growing AQAP threat.
Washington is planning to provide nearly 40 million dollars in economic aid to the government in 2010, up from 24 million dollars this year.
CNAS, a think tank from which the Obama administration has recruited heavily, also called for the U.S. to seek a political settlement to the northern "Houthi" rebellion so that "the government [could] take more seriously the threat posed by transnational terrorists present on Yemeni soil."
Jim Lobe's blog on U.S. foreign policy can be read at http://www.ips.org/blog/jimlobe/.
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30 Comments so far
Show AllThat "attempted bombing" was just SO convenient.
God must be on the side of the USA. Everytime a change in policy needed wherein another foreign country can be attacked and its people bombed, God sends down a sign like 9/11 , Mumbai or the Christmas day bomber.
This is a two for one sign. One can interpert it as calling for attacks on Nigeria or on Yemen , clever fellow that he is.
The Miracle on Flight 235! Time for a movie!
It IS odd how these things happen--almost as if made to order.
"The attempt, which was foiled by alert passengers who subdued the alleged bomber, 23-year-old Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, as he tried to set off explosives, could result in increased U.S. military and economic aid for the beleaguered regime headed President Ali Abdullah Saleh, as some influential think tanks here have urged."
Does anyone remember the movie "The Mouse That Roared," about a tiny country which "attacks" the US in order to be defeated and get US aid?
We're seeing a pattern here.
q
Great one, quickstepper.
As I recall that hilarious Peter Sellers movie the Mouse won.
it is amazing indeed to watch this story morph.
implications, innuendos, and insults on intelligence now fill all the reports.
If you haven't noticed, the USA is like a banana republic-controlled by the military industrial complex, and the corporate financial elite; the government is bought and paid for by those same, elections are a farce.
The financial elite have a blank check from the treasury, and few seem concerned.
The people sleep and only awake for the bread and games.
I have been noticing more news stories about Yemen lately. There are reports that al qaeda operates from there. People in the US are reportedly "fed up with Yemen". Do people in the US really know what Yemen is? Is Yemen a contestant on "Dancing with the Stars"?
I suppose we will just have to bomb Yemen... and Nigeria, later Syria, and of course Iran, and continue in Iraq, and Afghanistan and send more bombs into Pakistan. And keep the 800 foreign military bases. Build a few new ones in Colombia.
Meanwhile, no jobs. No money for schools. States bankrupt. But we will show that raggedy little upstart Yemen.
Joe
"later Syria"
You must mean "Syria again"
'U.S. Syria raid killed 80' (7/03, Washington Times)
'US helicopter raid on Syria kills eight', (10/08 Guardian)
'Israeli Raid on Syria' (9/07, NY Times)
It's so hard to keep up with all our attacks. Thanks for the information. And I forgot about Somalia.
Joe
As usual, the response to this alleged would-be bomber consists of a series of irrelevant and overblown non-sequitors. There is little about police work or intelligence, about connecting the dots.
Instead we will be: Building up a case for invasions and operations in Yemen; Keeping people in their seats one hour before landing (terrorists note new plans - all actions will have to take place 1.5 hours before landing); disallowing blankets and books or anything in the lap (will babies be in the overhead luggage carrier?); denying access to carry on luggage.
Once the shoe-bomber was caught, millions of people had to remove their shoes at airports. The newest suspect allegedly had the bombing materials in his underwear. It logically follows that we must all remove our underwear to get through security.
One of my friends suggested that if they keep geriatric people in their seats too long in airplanes, the passengers could have a P-in or a ur-in.
Joe
And then what happens if one is "going commando", as it were, and not wearing ANY underwear?
And no more wearing underwear for air travelers. Bet the TSA will be copping a few feels just to make sure.
All the new in flight rules, including changes about allowability of carry-ons, have done their job of creating chaos at Canadian airports. Many of our international (trans-border) flights have been cancelled or severely delayed. Seems like the main role of the TSA's latest rules was to disrupt Canadian air traffic.
Now we've heard that they'll expire at midnight EST on December 31st. I guess there must have been a whole wave of Nigerian terrorists who would detonate bombs within one hour of landing on international flights during the week between Christmas and New Year.
So if we can get through the week OK, a Happy New Year to all!
This is a good starting analysis of who is fighting and working with whom in Yemen. The dollar figures are also helpful in terms of perspective (ie peanuts).
As long as we - US - continues to steal - it will be so
The Military-Industrial-Media-Political Complex are begining their "Get to Know Yemen" campaign.
Got to use up some more of those million dollar cruise missles...General Dynamics needs a new pair of everything, and the bailout dollars just dont go that far anymore.
Good to see the media doing their part to whip up the frenzy! The usual hacks are appearing nonstop calling for further restrictions of your rights.
All these guys have to do now is get some idiot to light his farts on a flight, claim he was from country X, and off to war we go again!
An the money keeps on rolling in like magic!
Its good to be king!
For a critical socialist perspective, read this detailed analysis from the World Socialist Web Site (wsws.org0
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2009/dec2009/yemn-d29.shtml
(article highlights below:)
In wake of airline incident: Drumbeat for US war in Yemen
By Bill Van Auken
29 December 2009
In the wake of the abortive Christmas Day attempt by a 23-year-old Nigerian, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, to detonate a bomb on a Detroit-bound Northwest Airlines flight from Amsterdam, there has been an escalating drumbeat for a wider US military intervention in Yemen.
While US officials initially said they believed that the suspect acted alone and had no formal ties to any terrorist organizations, this did not deter leading politicians of both political parties and much of the US media from immediately raising the prospect of war in Yemen, where Abdulmutallab has family ties (his mother is Yemeni), and where Al Qaeda has a presence.
...
Whatever the truth of the Yemeni connection to the incident, it has proven highly fortuitous for the Obama administration, which—parallel to its Afghanistan escalation—has already launched a secret military intervention in the impoverished Arab country.
As the New York Times reported Monday, “In the midst of two unfinished major wars, the United States has quietly opened a third, largely covert front against Al Qaeda in Yemen.”
...
Last month, the United Nations Committee against Torture issued a stinging report on conditions in Yemen, citing “hostage taking, reports that family members were abducted and held to ensure that persons sought would give themselves up, as well as arbitrary detention and forced disappearances.”
...
This is the character of the regime with which, according to the Times, the Obama “White House is seeking to nurture enduring ties.” The dispatch of Special Operations commandos and CIA operatives to Yemen will only intensify this hideous repression.
...
The Northwest Airlines incident has provoked calls for more direct military action from both Democratic and Republican politicians.
Senator Joseph Lieberman, the so-called “independent Democrat” who heads the Senate Homeland Security Committee, called Sunday for a “preemptive” military intervention in Yemen.
...
The US media, as in every other drive toward war, has fallen into line. The Washington Post published a front-page article Monday headlined, “Al-Qaeda Group in Yemen Gaining Prominence.”
...
The Obama administration was swept into office on the slogan of “change,” thanks in large measure to the American people’s hostility to the two wars launched under the presidency of George W. Bush. Now, rather than ending these wars, the Obama White House is continuing the occupation of Iraq, sending at least 30,000 additional US troops into Afghanistan and initiating yet another American military intervention in Yemen.
...
The growing threat of a US war in Yemen demonstrates the impossibility of opposing American militarism within the framework of the capitalist two-party system. This struggle requires the independent political mobilization of the working class against the Obama administration on the basis of a socialist program to put an end to the profit system, which is the driving force of imperialist war.
Did anyone hear the interview with former Homeland Security Chief Michael Chertoff on NPR's All Things Considered this afternoon?
It was pretty disgusting. Chertoff was unapologetic in his call for more fascist control of Americans' lives, especially in the airports. He wants full-body scans for every single traveller and other more stringent rules. Robert Siegel did little to question the absurdity of Chertoff's claims or the obvious destruction of the last tattered remnants of liberties . . . with one slightly commendable exception: Siegel did point out the financial ties Chertoff has with the companies who make the full-body scan machines.
His dad was warning of strange behavior.
Hmmm, here is a guy willing, let's give him a dud that will fry his you know what off. Haaaa! I bet someone is laughing pretty hard.
Yea, it would be pretty easy to set someone up like that!
A Nigerian from Yemen? What has the US ever done to Nigeria of Yemen?
Oh, I see. Nevermind, I understand now...
Diane Sawyer on the news show tonight was speculating on which constitutional guarentees USAans might be willing to give up in order to feel secure.
She mentioned one specific constitutional right ( I forget which one).
But it's probably the next one we will "voluntarily" give up.
Aborted Bombing Puts Yemen in the Limelight
That was the plan. Stay tuned for more to come.
They said thae man is an unknown and wasn't on the no-fly list. They said that he had no prior criminal history.
Yet within a day after this "terror attempt" they know all about him. His nationality. Where he was trained. What terror netowrk he is affiliated with.
That sure is fast.
Lorax -
Nearly as fast as they were able to determine the identities, nationalities, backgrounds, modus operandi, and rehearsal movements of all those swarthy 9/11 high jackers - while the rubble of the WTC was still smoldering.
Oh well. Case closed.
Bill from Saginaw