Advertisement

Yemen says it foiled Al Qaeda plot to attack key cities and ports

A policeman stands guard at the entrance to Sana International Airport in Yemen.
A policeman stands guard at the entrance to Sana International Airport in Yemen.
(Hani Mohammed / Associated Press)
Share

SANA, Yemen -- Authorities in Yemen foiled plots by Al Qaeda to take over key cities and attack strategic ports and gas facilities, a government spokesman said Wednesday amid a heightened alert that has seen Western embassies evacuated and a new suspected U.S. drone strike that killed seven alleged militants from the terrorist group.

Al Qaeda planned to target the southern cities of Mukalla and Bawzeer, then send militants disguised as Yemeni troops to attack two strategic oil ports on the Arabian Peninsula, government spokesman Rageh Badi said.

Other Al Qaeda militants would also try to sabotage pipelines to “create panic among Yemeni army and Yemeni security services,” Badi told the Associated Press, adding that authorities managed to foil the plots in the past 48 hours.

Advertisement

Details of the plot were first reported by the BBC.

Badi’s remarks came hours after Washington apparently stepped up its drone strikes in Yemen in the covert fight against militants from Al Qaeda’s local branch, which is considered the most active of the terrorist network.

Security officials and residents said early Wednesday that a suspected U.S. drone strike killed seven alleged Al Qaeda militants in southern Yemen, the fifth such attack in the country in less than two weeks.

Yemen has emerged as the focus of a feared attack that has led the United States to temporarily shut down 19 diplomatic posts in the Middle East and Africa. American and British workers at embassies in Yemen’s capital, Sana, have been evacuated.

Washington has been backing a campaign by Yemen’s military to uproot Al Qaeda militants and their radical allies who had taken over a string of southern cities and towns. The militants have largely been driven into the mountains and countryside, and Yemeni intelligence officials say the current threat may be retaliation for that offensive.

A U.S. intelligence official and a Mideast diplomat told the AP that the closures were triggered by the interception of a secret message between Al Qaeda chief Ayman Zawahiri and Nasser Wuhayshi, the leader of the Yemen-based Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, about plans for a major attack.

The drone strike killed militants in Shabwa province, setting two vehicles on fire, security officials said. All the officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter with the media.

Advertisement

Residents of the Markha region of Shabwa province said they saw several bodies in two burning cars. The residents spoke on condition of anonymity because they feared retaliation.

Though the United States acknowledges its drone program in Yemen, it does not confirm individual strikes or release information on how many have been carried out.

An AP reporter in Sana said a drone buzzed over the capital for most of the day.

Security checkpoints have been set up across Sana, searching cars and individuals. The Yemeni army has surrounded foreign installations, government offices and the airport in the capital with tanks and troops. Similar protections are in place in the strategic Bab Al Mandeb straits at the entrance to the Red Sea in the southern Arabian Peninsula.

Top government officials, along with military and security commanders, were told to stay vigilant and limit their movements.

ALSO:

Israeli soldiers hurt in Lebanese border explosion

Advertisement

Egypt’s president says diplomacy by U.S., others fails to end crisis

Obama cancels meeting with Putin after Russia grants Snowden asylum

Advertisement