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Arabia
Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula: A Primer
2010-01-03
On a February morning in 2006, as Sana'a, the capital of Yemen, was jolted awake by the calls to prayer from the city's mosques, 23 Yemeni prisoners crawled their way to freedom.

They had spent weeks patiently digging a 140-foot tunnel that would extend from their basement prison cell to a nearby mosque. Among the escapees were Jamal al-Badawi, the alleged mastermind of the 2000 USS Cole bombing that killed 17 American sailors, and Jaber al-Banna, a Yemeni with U.S. citizenship who was counted among the FBI's 26 most wanted.

There was widespread speculation that the men had help from both inside the prison and out, only fueling fears about Yemen's revolving doors of justice. It wasn't the first time al-Badawi had escaped.

President Ali Abdullah Saleh's government vowed swift action, and while almost all of the prisoners, including al-Badawi and al-Banna, were later recaptured or killed, two of the lesser-known escapees eluded authorities.

Those men, Qasim al-Raimi and Nasser al-Wahishi, a 33-year-old former jihadist who fought alongside Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan, disappeared into the largely autonomous tribal region outside Sana'a.

In the four years since, they have helped build what is known today as Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, or AQAP, the Yemen-based group which was thrust into the spotlight following the botched Christmas Day bombing of a Detroit-bound passenger jet. Nigerian suspect Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab claims that he received training and the explosives used in the attempted attack from the group during his travels to Yemen.

Though it may seem that AQAP has suddenly emerged as Al Qaeda's newest and most virulent branch, the organization has increasingly been demanding the attention of intelligence agencies. "The group's growing ambition and increasing strength really shouldn't come as a surprise to anyone who has been paying attention," says Princeton's Gregory Johnsen, one of the U.S.'s foremost experts on Yemen. "Just because people in the West haven't been focused on Yemen, doesn't mean Al Qaeda has not been active there."

In August, the group narrowly failed to assassinate Saudi Arabia's security chief, in a plot bearing similarities to the Christmas Day attack. The 23-year-old suicide bomber was on a Saudi most wanted list but managed to persuade officials that he was ready to repent and surrender directly to Prince Mohammed bin Nayef. He was even brought to see Nayef aboard the prince's private plane, apparently concealing the bomb in his rectum.

The bomber was the only one killed when the explosives were detonated (reportedly by a cell phone, but accounts of the attack have varied). He did, however, manage to get close enough to injure Nayef in the blast.

Yemen has had a long and complicated relationship with Al Qaeda, stemming back to the late 1980s when Arab veterans of the war against the Soviets in Afghanistan were welcomed back as heroes. In the conservative country, where bin Laden remains a popular figure, Saleh's government has always understood the importance of cooperating with Islamic leaders, and keeping the Arab-Afghan jihadists close. In 1994, four years after Saleh was proclaimed the president of the newly unified north and south, many of those fighters were dispatched to stop a southern attempt to separate.

President Saleh was, however, among the first foreign leaders to pledge his support to the Bush administration following the 9/11 attacks--a position he made clear during a November 2001 visit to Washington. A year later, an unmanned CIA drone killed the head of Yemen's Al Qaeda branch. Shortly thereafter, his replacement was arrested. While Saleh paid a high price at home for allowing the U.S. strike, the loss of the group's leaders, in addition to the war in Iraq that attracted hundreds of Yemeni jihadists, made it appear in 2003 as if Al Qaeda had been largely defeated in the country.

But three years later, al-Wahishi took advantage of the lapsed vigilance by the American and Yemeni forces and built his group. As Saleh's government tried to quell a northern insurgency and a secession movement in the south (still regarded in Yemen as far greater threats to the country's stability than Al Qaeda), al-Wahishi's group waged attacks on local oil and gas facilities.

In June 2007, a suicide bomber targeted Spanish tourists, and six months later two Belgians were killed when gunmen ambushed their vehicles. A series of other strikes followed, culminating in the September 2008 suicide bombings of the U.S. Embassy in Sana'a that killed 18, including the six assailants. Meanwhile, Saudi fighters were increasingly bolstering the group's ranks, since many had fled south across the border following Saudi Arabia's heavy-handed crackdown on extremists.

The Saudi and Yemeni branches of Al Qaeda made their "merger" official in January, adopting the name Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. A January 23 video broadcast on an Al Qaeda website identified the new Saudi leaders as Said Ali al-Shihri, a 35-year-old former Guantanamo Bay detainee who had been released in November 2007, and Abu Hareth Muhammad al-Awfi, identified on the video as Guantanamo detainee 333.

Embarrassingly for both Saudi Arabia and the U.S., due to past praise of the Kingdom's handling of Al Qaeda, the AQAP leaders had both participated in the well-funded Saudi rehabilitation program. Though al-Awfi surrendered to Saudi authorities a month later, al-Shihri is still an important figure within the group.

AQAP represents what many consider Yemen's second generation of Al Qaeda--and while the group may have ties to "Al Qaeda central," the organization appears to act independently. Counterterrorism officials believe AQAP has learned from its recent past and built an organization that can withstand the loss of its leadership. Savvy in delivering its message, the group even has its own magazine, Salah al Malahim (The Echo of Battle), which covers everything from biographies of suicide bombers to advice columns on how to become an Al Qaeda foot soldier.

Reports on AQAP's membership vary widely, with some Yemeni security experts saying they number no more than 50, while others believe there are more than 200 operatives in the country. Most of their goals still seem to remain local, as reflected in their statement following the Christmas Day attack that warned all non-Muslims in the Arabian Peninsula that they were at risk.

President Saleh faces huge challenges. He continues to struggle with crushing domestic woes, and he's simultaneously trying to attain a diplomatic balance between supporting the U.S.'s demands for action without appearing to be a puppet. His government also has limited influence in the tribal areas outside of Sana'a where AQAP has set up its base. Yemen's foreign affairs minister said he feared that situation wouldn't change until Yemenis stopped turning to their tribal leaders to provide what the government cannot.

"Yemen cannot really build a modern state unless we re-define the role of government," Abu Baker al-Qirbi argued when we talked in his office this summer about the rise of AQAP. "If one spends a fraction of the money that is spent on combating terrorism, on how to rehabilitate and how to address some of the issues that lead to extremism--education and poverty--maybe we would have achieved a greater success in fighting terrorism."
Link


Arabia
Qaeda leader released on bail in Yemen
2008-03-10
Senior Al Qaeda figure Jaber al-Banna, who has a $5 million bounty on his head, walked free from an appeal hearing in Yemen on Sunday after being granted bail. Banna, who has joint Yemeni-US citizenship and was handed a 10 year jail term in absentia last year, is one of 36 convicted militants who are appealing prison sentences of between two and 15 years. He surrendered to Yemeni authorities in December after negotiations lasting several months. There has still been no word of what deal, if any, was struck. Banna made his first court appearance at the opening of the appeal on February 23, when he was allowed to walk free without any bail conditions at all.
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Arabia
Al-Qaeda appeals trial begins in Yemen
2008-02-24
A Yemeni court on Saturday began the appeal hearing of 36 Yemenis sentenced to jail last year for planning and carrying out attacks for Al-Qaeda, an AFP correspondent said. The men were sentenced last November to jail terms of between two and 15 years after they were convicted over an abortive twin attack on oil intallations in Marib and Hadramut provinces.

Among those in court on Saturday was Jaber al-Banna, a senior Al-Qaeda figure who was allowed to leave the court at the end of the session despite being sentenced to 10 years in absentia in the original case.
Just walked free, did he?
Banna holds joint US-Yemeni citizenship and is wanted by the US on charges of providing material support to Al-Qaeda. Washington is offering a reward of up to five million dollars for his arrest.
Triple it, and get Mahmoud the Weasel to work.
Yemen and the United States have previously clashed over Jamal al-Badawi, an Al-Qaeda fighter convicted of involvement in the October 2000 bombing of the USS Cole off the southern port of Aden which killed 17 American sailors. He was subsequently temporarily released by the Yemeni authorities.

Al-Qaeda also launched an abortive attack in September 2006 on an oil refinery at Marib, 170 kilometres (105 miles) east of the capital Sanaa, and targeted petrol storage tanks at a terminal operated by Canadian firm Nexen in the southeastern Hadramut province at the same time.
Link


Arabia
Saudis Tighten Border Control with Yemen
2006-02-28
An investigation is currently underway in Saudi Arabia to determine the identities of several individuals who were hiding in a farm near the Saudi- Yemeni border after illegally entering the Kingdom. Lieutenant Mansour al Turki, official spokesman for the Interior Ministry, told Asharq al Awsat on Sunday the security services had detained several men who had illegally entered Saudi Arabia from Yemen. They were discovered on Saturday in the Dagharir village, in Samta province, south of Jizan.
"Y'aint from around here, air yew?"
There was nothing to suggest the men were connected to terrorism. A preliminary interrogation had revealed they were illegal residents.
"So just what do youse guys do for a living?"
"We are but simple itinerant fruit pickers, effendi!"
"This is Soddy Arabia. Look around. There ain't nothin' but sand and rocks. You got a better story?"
"We are but simple itinerant rock pickers, effendi!"
Conflicting reports in the media indicated twelve to twenty people had been detained. However, al Turki said, “I do not remember the exact number now” but the most important issue was that they did not belong to any terrorist group.
Free lancers, were they?
There were fears that the arrests were connected to the recent prison escape in the Yemen capital. Twenty three inmates affiliated to al Qaeda, some of whom took part in the attack on USS Cole as it refuelled in the Yemeni port of Aden in October 2000 and a 2002 attack on the French tanker Limburg off Yemen 's coast, escaped from their prison in Sanaa. Amongst them were Fawaz Yahya al-Rabei, sentenced to death, Jamal al Badawi, sentenced to ten years and Abu Assem al Hadel, who was caught last year after a four-year chase and is described at al Qaeda in Yemen’s second in command.
"But it ain't them. Really."
For his part, Saleh al Santaly, head of border patrols in Jizan, indicated that Yemenis are regularly detained after illegally crossing into Saudi Arabia and estimated their number at 600 per day. He added that elderly men, women and children often enter the Kingdom illegally in search of a better life and denied that any wanted militants had crossed the border.
"No, no! Certainly not! We asked around and everything!"
In Najran, a senior source in the border guards in Najran said illegal border crossings were a daily occurrence with 20 to 30 individuals attempting to enter Saudi Arabia everyday, including women and children, who cross the border region on foot. Many are found to suffer from AIDS and other diseases after health checks are conducted, he added.
That's where it comes from, huh?
Meanwhile, the FBI has added the names of al Badawi and Jaber al Banna to its list of most wanted terrorists. A third, Abdullah al Rimi, is sought for questioning. The FBI has earmarked rewards ranging from five to 25 million to anyone who provides valuable information that may lead to the arrest of any of 26 most wanted terrorists, including Osama bin Laden, Ayman al Zawahiri and Abu Musab al Zarqawi.
Link


Arabia
American indicted as terrorist in Yemen
2004-11-28
A Yemeni security court Saturday indicted an American of Yemeni origin on charges of belonging to al Qaida and attempting to kill three foreigners. Mohammad Jaber al-Bannaa pleaded guilty in the court, specialized in terrorism cases in the capital, Sanaa, to attempting to murder a Dutchman, an Austrian and a German. He testified that he had received $60,000 from an "anonymous charitable person" to carry out the attack, saying that his "closeness to God" had drove him to do so.
We can prob'ly guess where the "anonymous charitable person" lives...
While the prosecution asked the court for a maximum sentence, the defendant's lawyer, Saleh al-Tayar, insisted that his client was suffering from "mental handicaps and disturbances according to a medical report."
"Yer honor, you can't execute my client! He's a nut! A loon! His turban's waaaaaaay too tight!"
The court decided to refer al-Bannaa, who was arrested by the Yemeni authorities last January, to a psychiatrist for evaluation before continuing his trial.
"Put him on the couch... Now, tell me, young man, how long have you thought you were a goat?"
The U.S., which put a $5 million bounty on him, is seeking the extradition of the defendant, accused of belonging to a sleeping cell affiliated with al-Qaida. His lawyers said in a statement there was no evidence linking al-Bannaa with the 9/11 attacks on the United States.
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