Senior
official at US Yemen embassy killed by militants, Al-Qaeda links
suspected
Qassem
Aqlan, who headed a security team at the US embassy in Yemen, was
shot dead by militants in the country's capital Sanaa on Thursday,
Reuters reported. The killing had the “fingerprints of Al-Qaeda,”
a source said.
RT,
11
October, 2012
The
attack resembled previous attempts by local Al-Qaeda cells targeting
security officials and politicians.
Masked
attackers on motorbikes gunned down Qassem Aqlan outside of his house
on Thursday. The attackers fled the scene after killing Aqlan.
The
embassy’s chief of security coordinated a US and Yemeni probe into
the assault on the embassy. Last month, angry protesters attacked the
embassy after the anti-Islamic video ‘Innocence of Muslims’
triggered a wave of violent demonstration across the Muslim world.
Militants
in Yemen have frequently targeted forces loyal to President Abd-Rabbu
Mansour Hadi, who succeeded Ali Abdullah Saleh in February.
Washington backs the new Yemeni government with arms, recon data and
drones in its struggle against Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.
The
latest attack on government forces in Yemen occurred on Wednesday
when militants fired rockets and automatic weapons at a security
checkpoint in the southern city of al-Dalea, wounding two law
enforcement officers. The attackers fled the scene.
The
US conducted a large number of ‘signature strike’ drone attacks
in Yemen over the last two years, killing both militants and
civilians. In 2011, American citizens Anwar al-Awlaki and Samir Khan
were assassinated in two separate strikes.
Since
then, the CIA has asked for the authority to broaden its
controversial drone program to areas in Yemen where Al-Qaeda members
operate. The agency is reportedly aware that it relies on limited
intelligence to conduct the strikes, and often kills targets even
when their identities are unclear.
This
controversial policy has sparked anti-US outrage in Yemen and
elsewhere. Widespread backlash against similar strikes in Pakistan
have all but forced Washington’s capricious ally to condemn drone
attacks in the country.
The
US has encouraged the Yemeni government to crack down on the
insurgents, who formerly controlled several towns in southern Yemen.
In the spring of 2012, Al-Qaeda-armed militants were mostly driven
out of Yemen, in part through US drone strikes.

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