officials reject request for drone strikes on suspected militants
Last Updated : GMT 06:49:16
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Last Updated : GMT 06:49:16
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Yemen wants more counterterrorism aid from US

Officials reject request for drone strikes on suspected militants

Arab Today, arab today

Arab Today, arab today Officials reject request for drone strikes on suspected militants

CIA drone
Sanaa - Agencies

CIA drone Yemen's government wants more US counterterrorism aid, including drone strikes and military trainers and advisers, to fight a growing threat from al-Qaeda, Yemeni officials said to the Associated Press late Wednesday.
But the Gulf country rejected a CIA and US military request to expand the use of drone strikes to target groups of fighters who appear to be militants, the officials said.
US counterterrorism forces are currently limited to striking clearly identified individuals with known links to al-Qaeda. The White House approves who goes on the target list, after a lengthy, legal vetting process at the Pentagon and the CIA, and the Yemeni government approves each strike, Yemeni and US officials say.
All officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive strategic matters.
US officials say the CIA and US military had asked the White House for permission to target larger groups if intelligence points to al-Qaida-related activity. Such hits are known as "signature strikes," used by the CIA against militant targets in Pakistan's tribal regions. Officials reached Wednesday night said the White House had not yet informed them of their decision. White House officials could not be reached for comment.
The request by the combined forces of the US counterterrorism community to use signature strikes was driven by concerns that Yemen's al-Qaeda branch is building a safe haven in the south of the country that is proving impenetrable to Yemeni armed forces. The more secure al-Qaeda becomes, the more likely the group is to focus once again on attacking the US, officials say.
Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, as the Yemeni branch is known, is also drawing foreign mercenaries who used to travel to Afghanistan or Pakistan to wage jihad. Special operations raids in Afghanistan and CIA drone strikes in the Pakistan's tribal regions — not to mention last year's US Navy SEAL raid that killed al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden — have made them less desirable destinations, US officials have said, whereas al-Qaeda's Yemen branch is seen as gaining ground against a government that is allied with the US.
Yemen's new President Abdrabuh Mansour Hadi is reportedly aware his forces have lost ground against al-Qaeda, and has requested increased US counterterrorist cooperation to combat it, seeking an influx of US military trainers and advisers, the Yemeni officials said.
Hadi also gave the green light to expanded CIA drone activity, one of the officials said. "We are simply allowing the CIA to increase the pace of their strikes to match the US military," he said.
The US has carried out 23 airstrikes in Yemen since last May, with twelve of those strikes in 2012, according to The Long War Journal, a website that tracks US counterterrorism and militant activity.
But Hadi drew the line at signature strikes, fearing targeting larger groups would risk hitting civilians or nonmilitant tribesmen, which could serve to recruit more of the government's tribal enemies to al-Qaeda, the Yemeni officials said.
The Yemeni government also refuses to allow the drones to take off from or land on Yemeni soil. The CIA flies its drones from a new base in a neighbouring country, while the US military flies its fleet from other bases, including one in Djibouti.

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officials reject request for drone strikes on suspected militants officials reject request for drone strikes on suspected militants

 



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