Tuesday, February 7, 2017

Source: A target of Yemen raid was al Qaeda chief

A senior US military official told CNN Monday that intelligence collection wasn't the only objective of the recent military raid in Yemen but the leader of al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula had also been targeted.
If the leader, Qassim al-Rimi, wasn't there, the US military believed it would find intelligence that would help lead to him, the official said.
But US Central Command, which oversees US forces in the region, strongly disputed that al-Rimi was the objective of the raid just over a week ago.
"It wasn't a high-value target mission," Col. John Thomas told CNN, referring to operations aimed at killing or capturing terrorist leaders.
Thomas added that there was no hard intelligence indicating a "high possibility" al-Rimi was at the compound on the night of the raid, saying that the Navy SEALs would have captured AQAP leaders, including al-Rimi, as part of the intelligence-gathering operation.
"Anyone found on site would have been taken," Thomas said.
Al-Rimi was not captured or killed and has since released an audio message mentioning the raid and taunting President Donald Trump.
NBC first reported that al-Rimi was a target of the raid.
The chance to take out such a pivotal member of al Qaeda may explain the large allocation of resources used in the mission.
The raid led to the first US combat death since Trump took office. The mission combined US Navy SEALs with significant air support, as well as support from UAE special forces. In addition to the death of Chief Petty Officer William "Ryan" Owens, several SEALs were injured.
An 8-year-old girl, who was the daughter of Anwar Al-Awlaki, a US-born cleric who directed attacks against the US, was killed in the raid; al-Awlaki was killed in 2011. The London-based NGO Reprieve and a Sanaa-based human rights worker told CNN that at least 23 civilians were killed in the attack.
The SEAL team was detected by AQAP fighters prior to reaching its objective leading to the intense firefight.
Following news of the raid, the military had said the goal of the mission was to gather intelligence on AQAP. The senior military official said that the raid still gained valuable intelligence that could help lead the US to the AQAP leader.
On Friday, the Pentagon released clips from an al Qaeda training video seized during the raid, but later pulled those clips back because they were years old.
Government officials said plans for the raid had been in the works for months and that Trump greenlit the mission shortly after his inauguration.
The Pentagon said the battle resulted in the deaths of 14 al Qaeda fighters, including two AQAP leaders.
Since its formation in 2009, many observers have considered among the most dangerous if not the most dangerous branch of al Qaeda.
Al-Rimi reportedly became the head of AQAP following the drone strike killing of Nasir al-Wuhayshi in 2015.

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