Wednesday 23 April 2014

Is al Qaeda's chief bomb maker dead?





  • At least 65 suspected al Qaeda members were killed in a Yemeni-U.S. joint operation

  • Yemeni officials: DNA tests are being done to see if Ibrahim al-Asiri is among the dead

  • He's the suspected mastermind behind the 2009 underwear bomb plot




(CNN) -- Officials call the attack "massive and unprecedented."


At least 65 suspected terrorists killed. Assaults from both the ground and the sky. And elite, clandestine U.S. forces joining Yemeni commandos in targeting al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula -- considered al Qaeda's most dangerous affiliate.


But what would make the raid in southern Yemen most significant is if it yielded a target that Americans and Yemenis have been looking for: Ibrahim al-Asiri, the group's chief bomb maker.


While U.S. officials said the operation didn't directly target him, al-Asiri is among those suspected to have been killed in the Sunday firefight, a high-level Yemeni government official told CNN. But DNA test results are not due for several days.





Report: Al Qaeda bomb maker may be dead




The impact of US drones in Yemen




Official: At least 65 militants killed

Who is al-Asiri?


He's the alleged mastermind of al Qaeda's most creative and disturbing explosive devices.


Bomb plots he's accused of creating -- such as the 2009 underwear bomb plot and printer bombs dispatched to the United States in 2010 -- almost worked.


He even sacrificed his younger brother, a suicide bomber, in a failed attempt to kill Saudi Arabia's head of counterterrorism in 2009.


Al-Asiri constructed a bomb like none al Qaeda had produced before: a device designed to be inserted into the rectum of a suicide bomber containing around 100 grams of PETN, a difficult-to-detect white powdery explosive.


In the end, only his younger brother was killed.


Official: Extensive U.S. involvement in anti-terror operation in Yemen


What led up to this raid?


A video and a threat.


A recently released video showed about 100 suspected al Qaeda members meeting at a training camp in Yemen.


In the middle of the video, the man known as al Qaeda's crown prince, Nasir al-Wuhayshi, appears brazenly out in the open, greeting followers in Yemen.


Al-Wuhayshi is the No. 2 leader of al Qaeda globally and the head of AQAP.


In a speech to the group, al-Wuhayshi makes it clear that he's going after the United States, saying: "We must eliminate the cross. ... The bearer of the cross is America!"


Retired U.S. Gen. Richard Myers said the video raised serious concerns.


"If that's true, then you have to go after them," Myers told CNN's "The Situation Room." "I don't think that's sufficient in the end to defeat al Qaeda, but I think it's important that we go after them in this case."


What role did the U.S. play?


A U.S. official who spoke on the condition of anonymity said no Americans took part in combat on the ground, but U.S. forces did wear night vision gear and flew Yemeni forces to a remote, mountainous spot in southern Yemen.


The Yemeni helicopters that the U.S. personnel flew were Russian-made, which helped to minimize the U.S. footprint during the operation.


And CIA drones are suspected to have targeted al Qaeda fighters, weapons locations and a training camp.


Pentagon spokesman Adm. John Kirby declined to detail the U.S. involvement in the latest anti-terror operation, though he did highlight its partnership with Yemen.


"We continue to work with the Yemeni government and the Yemeni armed forces to help them improve their counterterrorism capabilities inside the country," Kirby said. "That work continues, and it will continue."


Yemen strikes may target top al Qaeda leaders


Opinion: Obama's high-stakes drone war in Yemen


CNN's Paul Cruickshank, Nic Robertson, Tim Lister and Greg Botelho contributed to this report.



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