(by Ahmed al-Haj, YahooNews.com) SANAA, Yemen (AP) — In a significant new blow to al-Qaeda, U.S. airstrikes in Yemen on Friday killed Anwar al-Awlaki, an American militant cleric who became a prominent figure in the terror network’s most dangerous branch, using his fluent English and Internet savvy to draw recruits for attacks in the United States.

The strike was the biggest U.S. success in hitting al-Qaeda’s leadership since the May killing of Osama bin Laden in Pakistan. But it raises questions that other strikes did not: Al-Awlaki was an American citizen who has not been charged with any crime. Civil liberties groups have questioned the government’s authority to kill an American without trial.

Anwar al-Awlaki

The 40-year-old al-Awlaki was for years an influential mouthpiece for al-Qaeda’s ideology of holy war, and his English-language sermons urging attacks on the United States were widely circulated among militants in the West.

But U.S. officials say he moved into a direct operational role in organizing such attacks as he hid alongside al-Qaeda militants in the rugged mountains of Yemen. Most notably, they believe he was involved in recruiting and preparing a Nigerian who on Christmas Day 2009 tried to blow up a U.S. airliner heading to Detroit, failing only because he botched the detonation of explosives sewn into his underpants.

Yemen’s Defense Ministry and U.S. officials said another American militant was killed in the same strike alongside al-Awlaki — Samir Khan, a U.S. citizen of Pakistani heritage who produced an English-language al-Qaeda Web magazine that spread the word on ways to carry out attacks inside the United States. U.S. and Yemeni officials said two other militants were also killed in the strike but did not immediately identify them.

Washington has called al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula [AQAP], as the branch in Yemen is called, the most direct threat to the United States after it plotted that attack and a foiled attempt to mail explosives to synagogues in Chicago.

President Barack Obama declared al-Awlaki’s killing a “major blow” to al-Qaeda’s most active affiliate, and vowed a vigorous U.S. campaign to prevent the terror network and its partners from finding safe haven anywhere in the world.

Obama said al-Awlaki “directed” the Christmas plane bombing attempt as well as a failed attempt to mail explosives to the United States, “and he repeatedly called on individuals in the United States and around the globe to kill innocent men, women and children to advance a murderous agenda.”

In July, U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said al-Awlaki was a priority target alongside Ayman al-Zawahri, bin Laden’s successor as the terror network’s leader.

The Yemeni-American had been in the U.S. cross-hairs since his killing was approved by Obama in April 2010 — making him the first American placed on the CIA “kill or capture” list. At least twice, airstrikes were called in on locations in Yemen where al-Awlaki was suspected of being, but he wasn’t harmed.

The operation that killed al-Awlaki was run by the U.S. military’s elite counter-terrorism unit, the Joint Special Operations Command — the same unit that got bin Laden.

A U.S. counter-terrorism official said American forces targeted a convoy in which al-Awlaki was traveling with a drone and jet attack and believe he’s been killed. The official was not authorized to speak publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

The Yemeni government announced that al-Awlaki was “targeted and killed” around 9:55 a.m outside the town of Khasaf in a desert stretch of Jawf province, 87 miles east of the capital Sanaa. It gave no further details.

A senior tribal chief who helped bury the bodies in a cemetery in Jawf said seven people were killed in the strike, their bodies totally charred. The chief said the brother of one of the dead, who had given the group shelter in his home, had witnessed the strike.

According to the chief, the witness said al-Awlaki was traveling in a pick-up with six other people on their way to neighboring Marib province. They stopped for breakfast in the desert and were sitting on the ground to eat when they spotted drones, so they rushed to their truck. A missile struck the truck, leaving it a charred husk and killing all inside. The chief spoke on condition of anonymity because he did not want to be connected to the group, and he did not identify the witness.

Al-Awlaki, born in New Mexico to Yemeni parents, began as an imam as he conducted his university studies in the United States. While preaching in San Diego, he came to know two of the men who would eventually become suicide-hijackers in the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. The FBI questioned al-Awlaki at the time but found no cause to detain him.

In 2004, al-Awlaki returned to Yemen, and in the years that followed, his English-language Internet sermons increasingly turned to denunciations of the United States and calls for jihad, or holy war.

Al-Awlaki exchanged up to 20 emails with U.S. Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, who killed 13 people in his Nov. 5, 2009, rampage at Fort Hood. Hasan initiated the contacts, drawn by al-Awlaki’s Internet sermons.

Al-Awlaki has said he didn’t tell Hasan to carry out the shootings, but he later praised Hasan as a “hero” on his Web site.

In New York, Faisal Shahzad, the Pakistani-American man who pleaded guilty to the May 2010 Times Square car bombing attempt told interrogators he was “inspired” by al-Awlaki after making contact over the Internet.

After the Fort Hood attack, al-Awlaki moved from Yemen’s capital, Sanaa, into the mountains where his Awalik tribe is based and — it appears — built direct ties with al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, if he had not developed them already. The branch is led by a Yemeni militant named Nasser al-Wahishi.

Yemeni officials have said al-Awlaki had contacts with Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the accused would-be Christmas plane bomber, who was in Yemen in 2009. They say the believe al-Awlaki met with the 23-year-old Nigerian, along with other al-Qaeda leaders, in al-Qaeda strongholds in the country in the weeks before the failed bombing.

Al-Awlaki has said Abdulmutallab was his “student” but said he never told him to carry out the airline attack.

The cleric is also believed to have been an important middleman between al-Qaeda militants and the multiple tribes that dominate large parts of Yemen, particular in the mountains of Jawf, Marib and Shabwa province where the terror group’s fighters are believed to be holed up. …..

Yemen, the Arab world’s most impoverished nation, has become a haven for hundreds of al-Qaeda militants. The country has also been torn by political turmoil as President Ali Abdullah Saleh struggles to stay in power in the face of seven months of protests. In recent months, Islamic militants linked to al-Qaeda have exploited the chaos to seize control of several cities in Yemen’s south, including Zinjibar.

A previous attack against al-Awlaki on May 5, shortly after the May raid that killed Osama bin Laden, was carried out by a combination of U.S. drones and jets.

Top U.S. counter-terrorism adviser John Brennan has said cooperation with Yemen has improved since the political unrest there. Brennan said the Yemenis have been more willing to share information about the location of al-Qaeda targets, as a way to fight the Yemeni branch challenging them for power.

Yemeni security officials said the U.S. was conducting multiple airstrikes a day in the south since May and that U.S. officials were finally allowed to interrogate al-Qaeda suspects, something Saleh had long resisted, and still does so in public. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence issues.

AP correspondents Matt Apuzzo, Adam Goldman, Lolita Baldor and AP Intelligence Writer Kimberly Dozier in Washington and Lee Keath and Sarah El Deeb in Cairo contributed to this report.

Copyright ©2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. Reprinted here for educational purposes only. The information contained in this AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without the prior written authority of the Associated Press or the Chicago SunTimes.  For the original post, go to posttrib.suntimes.com/news/7960434-418/us-strike-kills-american-al-qaida-cleric-in-yemen.html.

Questions

1. Who was Anwar al-Awlaki? Be specific.

2. a) Why are civil liberties groups questioning the killing of Anwar al-Awlaki by the U.S.?
b) List what you know about al-Awlaki’s links to terrorist attacks.
c) Do you think civil liberties groups have a valid argument for questioning al-Awlaki’s killing? Explain your answer.

3. a) How does President Obama view the killing of Anwar al-Awlaki?
b) Why you think Obama’s view on how the U.S. deals with terrorists has changed since he took office?

4. Why have U.S. counterterrorism measures with Yemen improved there recently?

5. Re-read para. 28 (the last paragraph of the article.) What is wrong with the AP publicizing this information?

6. Do you think the U.S. should continue targeted attacks on known terrorist operatives? Explain your answer.

Background

Anwar al-Awlaki was born in 1971 in New Mexico, but spent most of his childhood in Yemen, where his parents were born. He moved to the U.S. in 1991 to study Civil Engineering at Colorado State University.  During that time, he also reportedly served as the President of the Muslim Student Association (MSA) and worked as an imam at the Denver Islamic Society. Al-Awlaki reportedly moved to London in 2002 after FBI inquiries about his connection to September 11 hijackers, and then moved to Yemen in 2004.  Read more at adl.org/main_Terrorism/anwar_al-awlaki.htm?Multi_page_sections=sHeading_4.

 

ANWAR AL-AWLAKI’S TERRORIST ROLE:

  • With a blog, social networking pages, and many internet videos, Awlaki was described as the “bin Laden of the Internet.”
  • Al-Awlaki reportedly spoke with, trained, and preached to a number of al-Qaeda members and affiliates, including three of the 9/11 hijackers, Fort Hood shooter Nidal Malik Hasan, and “Christmas Day underwear bomber” Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab; he was also reportedly involved in planning the latter’s attack.
  • According to U.S. officials, al-Awlaki was promoted to the rank of “regional commander” within al-Qaeda in 2009.  He repeatedly called for jihad against the United States.  In April 2010, U.S. President Barack Obama approved Al-Awlaki’s targeted killing, an action unsuccessfully challenged by al-Awlaki’s father and civil rights groups.

 

ABOUT YEMEN:

  • Yemen is one of the poorest and least developed countries in the Arab World, with an unemployment rate of 35%, dwindling natural resources, a young population and increasing population growth.
  • Yemen’s economy is weak compared to most countries in the Middle-East, mainly because Yemen has very small oil reserves.
  • Yemen’s economy depends heavily on the oil it produces, and its government receives the vast majority of its revenue from oil taxes. But Yemen’s oil reserves are expected to be depleted by 2017, possibly bringing on economic collapse.
  • Yemen does have large proven reserves of natural gas. Yemen’s first liquified natural gas (LNG) plant began production in October 2009.
  • Rampant corruption is a prime obstacle to development in the country, limiting local reinvestments and driving away regional and international capital. Foreign investments remain largely concentrated around the nation’s hydrocarbon industry.
  • President Ali Abdullah Saleh became the first elected President in reunified Yemen in 1999 (though he had been President of unified Yemen since 1990 and President of North Yemen since 1978).
  • He was re-elected to office in September 2006. Saleh’s victory was marked by an election that international observers judged to be “partly free”, though the election was accompanied by violence, violations of press freedoms, and allegations of fraud.
  • Parliamentary elections were held in April 2003, and the General People’s Congress (GPC) maintained an absolute majority.
  • The legal system includes separate commercial courts and a Supreme Court based in Sana’a. Sharia [Islamic law]  is the main source of laws, with many court cases being debated according to the religious basis of law and many judges being religious scholars as well as legal authorities.
  • Beginning in February and March 2011, an uprising against the government occurred, and clashes with police and pro-government supporters have steadily intensified. Many protestors demand the immediate resignation of the current leadership, and in particular that of President Saleh. (from wikipedia)
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