9-11-01

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Examining Al-Qaida on the Arabian Peninsula

Since the failed attempt on Christmas day to bring down a Northwest Airlines flight, Yemen has continued to make mention in nearly every story of the incident and the country's links to terror are making headlines. It has been well-known that Al-Qaida has significant support and links inside the country, however the U.S. has not received a great deal of cooperation from the government which opts to let the already fragile security situation continue to deteriorate. President Saleh's sphere of influence reaches as far out as the capital, after that the country is filled with autonomous tribes and a government that is largely sympathetic to the jihadist sentiment that makes up Al-Qaida.


To those who have followed the development of Al-Qaida since the 2001 Afghanistan it is well-known that there are two major havens for the group now in which it can recruit and train freely - Northern Africa and the Arabian Peninsula. Both locations have reportedly witnessed an influx of Westerners who have received training, raising the concerns of intelligence. The advantages of both locations being they offer delicate governments who can not use the resources to fight the terrorists in their countries, which is conveniently where the U.S. steps in more times than none. Some countries take the fight seriously, such as President Bouteflika of Algeria. Others, like President Saleh in Yemen refuse to confront the jihadist threat coming from their country.


Following the 2000 bombing of the U.S.S. Cole in the Port of Aden, the government in Yemen refused to respond and even had Parliament members call for jihad against the West as FBI investigators were arriving in the country. It has been reported that when agents requested to talk to any Yemenis believed to be involved in the attack, President Saleh's government denied any access. One of those individuals reportedly was a member of the President's family and a colonel in the Political Security Organization (PSO). There has been no justice inside Yemen against those who perpetrated the Cole bombing.


Nearly all of the individuals charged in Yemen have experienced their sentences being commuted from death to a matter of years, and the heaviest sentence delivered was fifteen years for the group's leader, Jamal Muhammad al-Badawi, who had his death sentence commuted. He managed to escape prison for the second time in 2006 along with 17 other accused terrorists and remains at large. Jaber Elbaneh, a Yemeni-American accused of being involved in the 2001 "Lackawanna Six" plot, has been living in Yemen and living under the protection of President Saleh while avoiding justice in the United States despite a $5 million reward.
Inside Yemen, Al-Qaida has a great deal of support from within the Saleh government and in the general public. The country is filled with anti-Western sentiment, fueled by the U.S. military action in Iraq. As the media looks at "Al-Qaida's new haven" inside his country, President Saleh is capitalizing off of this title to appeal and secure Western funds. He apparently will allow action in the tribal areas, but when it comes to the wanted terrorists like Elbaneh there is no cooperation. Terrorism is a business in Yemen, and it is unlikely that the U.S. will be able to work cooperatively in the long-term to stop Al-Qaida's influence in the country.

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