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U.S. Strikes in Yemen Said to Kill 8 Militants

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http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/15/world/middleeast/15yemen.html

U.S. Strikes in Yemen Said to Kill 8 Militants

By NASSER ARRABYEE and MARK MAZZETTI

Published: July 14, 2011

SANA, Yemen — American drones and fighter jets hit suspected Qaeda-affiliated

militants in southern Yemen early Thursday, killing at least eight fighters

sleeping in a police station they had overrun, according to local residents and

American and Yemeni security officials.

The strikes were part of an expanded air war in Yemen by the American military

aimed at militants who now control large swaths of southern Yemen amid a power

struggle in the impoverished desert country.

In recent months, the Obama administration has escalated a campaign of

airstrikes carried out by the Pentagon's Joint Special Operations Command with

the assistance of the C.I.A. The C.I.A. is building a base in the region to

serve as a hub for future operations in Yemen.

According to both American and Yemeni officials, who spoke on the condition of

anonymity because the attacks in Yemen are rarely acknowledged publicly, the

strike on Thursday hit a police station that had been occupied by 20 militant

fighters in the town of Al Wadyia, in Abyan Province in southern Yemen. One

Yemeni security official said that eight people had been killed, including the

gathering's leader, identified as Hadi Mohammad Ali.

Separately, a person close to Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, the group

responsible for a wave of violence in Yemen and several terrorist plots against

the United States, said an American strike on Thursday hit a car thought to be

carrying Fahd al-Qusaa, a leader of the group and a suspect in the 2000 bombing

of the American destroyer Cole. The person said that Mr. Qusaa and a group of

aides had left the car moments before the attack, and local residents said he

had survived.

American officials did not confirm the attack against Mr. Qusaa.

American intelligence officials have said that militants from Yemen and nearby

Somalia have built operational ties over the past year as they try to exploit

the chaos in both countries. In Yemen, the power struggle has paralyzed the

government and allowed militants to take over entire towns in the south. Last

month, the Pentagon launched a drone strike in Somalia aimed at members of the

biggest militant group there, the Shabab.

The Pentagon's air campaign in Yemen was renewed in May after a nearly yearlong

hiatus; since then the military has carried out at least four airstrikes in the

country.

Nasser Arrabyee reported from Sana, and Mark Mazzetti from Washington.

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