Al Qaeda militants killed by drone strike in Yemen

Commanders were reported to be among the dead following a strike in Al Bayda province

Yemeni fighters loyal to the government backed by the Saudi-led coalition fighting in the country ride in the back of a pickup truck with mounted heavy machine gun while closing in on a suspected location of an Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) leader during their the offensive in the Mesini Valley in the vast province of Hadramawt on February 21, 2018.
Yemeni special forces trained by the United Arab Emirates -- a key member of a Saudi-led alliance fighting alongside Yemen's government forces -- had in the previous week launched the offensive, codenamed "Al-Faisal", against Al-Qaeda cells in oil-rich Hadramawt province.
Two soldiers were killed on February 17 in the offensive, which targets the Mesini and Amed Valleys in Hadramawt and which are critical in the control over Yemen's southeastern coastline. / AFP PHOTO / SALEH AL-OBEIDI
Powered by automated translation

A number of Al Qaeda militants, including at least one commander, were reported killed by an apparent US drone strike in the central Yemen province of Al Bayda on Sunday.

The militants, who belonged to Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, were killed in an attack on their moving vehicle near a known militant base in a mountainous area called Thee Kaleb in the Al Kuraishiya district in the north of Al Bayda, according to a source in the province who spoke to The National on condition of anonymity.

The source said he believed six fighters and two commanders had been killed. An official in Al Bayda told AFP that five fighters including one commander were killed.

Among the dead were two leaders known by the noms de guerre  - Abu Mohammed Al Dahab and Abu Al Kaka - the source said.

While US Central Command has not yet confirmed the strike, the US military is the only force known to operate armed drones over Yemen.

Drone attacks against Aqap intensified after US President Donald Trump took office in January last year. The president authorised 120 drone strikes in Yemen in 2017.

In its last update on November 6, Centcom acknowledged two strikes against Aqap in Al Bayda in September, bringing the total number of air strikes in Yemen this year to 36 at that time.

By comparison, former president Barack Obama authorised 38 strikes in Yemen in 2016 and the first 20 days of last year.

"Despite a decline in counter-terrorism air strikes against Aqap, they continue to pose a significant threat," a Centcom spokesman said on November 6. "We remain vigilant and will continue to work by, with and through our regional partners to disrupt, deter and destroy Aqap."

Aqap and ISIS have exploited the chaos of Yemen’s civil war, in which the Arab Coalition-backed government is battling Houthi rebels.

The extremist groups maintain a presence in Al Bayda, where they vie for influence and occasionally fight each other.

"Clashes between the two main terrorist factions in Yemen – Aqap and ISIS – have been repeatedly reported between in Al Bayda this year," a military source in Al Bayda told The National.

______________

Read more:

UAE and Saudi pledge $500m to stem famine in Yemen

UN draft resolution calls for Yemen truce, two weeks to unblock aid

______________