Underwear-bomb maker believed dead in Yemen strike.this is the guy that made Murtallab's underwear bomb.
- FILE - This undated file photo released by Saudi Arabia's Ministry of Interior on …
- A Saudi militant believed killed in the U.S. drone strike in Yemen constructed the bombs for the al-Qaida branch's most notorious attempted attacks — including the underwear-borne explosives intended to a down a U.S. aircraft, and a bomb carried by his own brother intended to assassinate a Saudi prince.
- The death of Ibrahim Hassan al-Asiri would make the Friday drone strikes on a convoy in the central deserts of Yemen one of the most effective single blows in the U.S. campaign to take out al-Qaida's top figures.
The
strike also killed Anwar al-Awlaki, a Yemeni-American cleric who had
been key to recruiting for the militant group and a Pakistani-American,
Samir Khan, who was a top English-language propagandist.
But
Christopher Boucek, a scholar who studies Yemen and al-Qaida, said
al-Asiri's death would "overshadow" that of the two Americans due to his
operational importance to al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, the Yemen-based group that is considered the most active branch of the terror network.
Late
Friday, two U.S. officials said intelligence indicated al-Asiri was
among those killed in the strike. The officials spoke on condition of
anonymity because al-Asiri's death has not officially been confirmed.
The
29-year-old al-Asiri was one of the first Saudis to join the
Yemen-based al-Qaida branch and became its key bombmaker, designing the
explosives in two attempted attacks against the United States.
His
fingerprint was found on the bomb hidden in the underwear of a Nigerian
man accused of trying to blow up Northwest Airlines Flight 253 over
Detroit on Christmas Day 2009, according to U.S. counterterrorism
officials. The attack failed because the would-be bomber Umar Farouk
Abdulmutallab botched detonating the explosives, ending up only burning
himself before being wrestled away by passengers.
The
explosives used in that bomb were chemically identical to those hidden
inside two printers that were shipped from Yemen last year, bound for
Chicago and Philadelphia in a plot claimed by al-Qaida. The bombs were
intercepted in England and Dubai.
In
perhaps his most ruthless operation, al-Asiri turned his younger
brother, Abdullah, into a human bomb in a 2009 attempt to kill Saudi
Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, the kingdom's top counterterrorism official
and son of its interior minister.
SOURCE Yahoo news.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home