The Wellington Enterprise

Yemeni army pushing into al-Qaida stronghold

SANAA, Yemen (AP) — Gov­ern­ment troops bat­tling al-Qaida fight­ers in south­ern Yemen have made inroads into the mil­i­tants' strong­holds, but the offen­sive on a strate­gic city has slowed because of con­cerns the extrem­ists could launch a sur­prise coun­ter­at­tack, mil­i­tary offi­cials said Thursday.

Backed by heavy artillery and war­planes, Yemeni troops have advanced into Zin­jibar, the cap­i­tal of Abyan province, which fell under the con­trol of al-Qaida-linked fight­ers last year as the coun­try was engulfed by polit­i­cal tur­moil that led to the ouster of long­time leader Ali Abdul­lah Saleh.

If the mil­i­tary were to cap­ture Zin­jibar, it would deal a heavy blow to al-Qaida by depriv­ing it of a key base and scat­ter­ing its fight­ers to smaller towns and moun­tain areas of the south.

Yemeni offi­cials said the assault on Zin­jibar, which is part of the government's broader offen­sive aimed at uproot­ing al-Qaida in the south, has slowed down in part because of poor intel­li­gence in the city. They said army com­man­ders were unsure whether most of the mil­i­tants there have been killed, sim­ply fled the bat­tle or retreated for tac­ti­cal rea­sons and were prepar­ing a counteroffensive.

The U.S. is deeply con­cerned about al-Qaida's branch in Yemen, known as al-Qaida in the Ara­bian Penin­sula, which was behind three failed bomb plots on U.S. soil. Wash­ing­ton has thrown its sup­port behind Saleh's suc­ces­sor, Abed Rabbo Man­sour Hadi, who has vowed to tackle the threat from al-Qaida in the country.

As part of the fight, Hadi is restruc­tur­ing the mil­i­tary and remov­ing Saleh's loy­al­ists from key posts, though there are con­cerns that the for­mer leader, who stepped down in Feb­ru­ary, is still obstruct­ing reforms and try­ing to retain influ­ence through his cronies.

On Wednes­day, Pres­i­dent Barack Obama signed an exec­u­tive order allow­ing the Trea­sury Depart­ment to freeze the U.S.-based assets of indi­vid­u­als who the White House says "threaten the peace, secu­rity and sta­bil­ity" of Yemen. The order was meant as a deter­rent against future action and does not imme­di­ately levy any penal­ties against spe­cific peo­ple or organizations.

Yemeni offi­cials point to an ongo­ing power strug­gle between Hadi and Saleh.

In one recent exam­ple, offi­cials say Saleh's son Ahmed, who com­mands the elite Repub­li­can Guard, has sought to under­mine a Hadi-appointed com­man­der of one of the Guard's bat­tal­ions. The offi­cials say Ahmed has been stir­ring up dis­sent within the bat­tal­ion, mak­ing it impos­si­ble for the Hadi appointee to assume control.

Three for­eign diplo­mats told The Asso­ci­ated Press that they have met with Ahmed to try to con­vince him to allow the new com­man­der to take his post.

One diplo­mat warned Ahmed this week that by block­ing the commander's appoint­ment, he is under­min­ing the power-transition deal that his father signed and that assured him immu­nity from prosecution.

Wash­ing­ton is also directly aid­ing the Yemeni mil­i­tary in its lat­est offen­sive. U.S. troops are oper­at­ing from a desert air base near the main bat­tle zones to help coor­di­nate assaults and airstrikes, accord­ing to Yemeni officials.

The offi­cials said it was the most direct Amer­i­can involve­ment yet in the country's expand­ing cam­paign against AQAP.

Also Thurs­day, Yemeni mil­i­tary offi­cials said a sus­pected U.S. drone-fired mis­sile struck two vehi­cles in the city of Shibam in Hadra­mawt province. The offi­cials said the strike destroyed one of the vehi­cles, killed its three occu­pants who were believed to be linked to al-Qaida, and wounded two in the sec­ond car.

Also in the south, the bod­ies of 11 Yemeni army sol­diers and civil­ian vol­un­teers fight­ing along­side the mil­i­tary were found after al-Qaida retreated from an area near the city of Lawder, offi­cials said. The vic­tims were believed to have been killed execution-style, they said.

"Most of the areas sur­round­ing Lawder are clear of al-Qaida now," one mil­i­tary offi­cial said.

All the offi­cials spoke on con­di­tion of anonymity because they were not autho­rized to talk to the media.

 

Adam Fox Posted by on May 17 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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