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Al-Qaida's Yemen branch confirms U.S. missile strike killed leader

 
Published June 16, 2015

BAGHDAD — Al-Qaida's affiliate in Yemen released a video statement Tuesday confirming the death of its leader, Nasir al-Wuhayshi, in a U.S. missile strike.

Wuhayshi, 38, who had led al-Qaida operations in Yemen since 2002 and was also the global extremist network's second-ranking leader, was killed along with two other operatives, the statement said.

The group said that its military commander, Qassim al-Raimi, had been chosen as Wuhayshi's successor.

"Let it be known to the enemies of God that their battle is not only with one person or figure, no matter how important," a senior al-Qaida operative, Khaled Batarfi, said in the statement. "To the infidel America: God has kept alive those who will trouble your life and make you taste the bitterness of defeat."

The al-Qaida statement apparently resolves uncertainty about the fate of Wuhayshi, but the result of an attack over the weekend on another prominent militant was in doubt. Over the weekend, U.S. F-15s carried out an airstrike in Libya against Mokhtar Belmokhtar, who planned an attack on an Algerian gas plant in 2013 in which 38 foreign workers died. It was unclear whether the missiles had hit their target.

U.S. officials were certain to view the killing of Wuhayshi as a major victory for their counterterrorism campaign in Yemen. Wuhayshi built the affiliate, al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, into what was seen as the global organization's most active branch and the one most likely to strike the United States, even though its attempts to blow up airliners over U.S. soil failed.

As recently as Monday, though, U.S. officials said they were still investigating the reports of Wuhayshi's death — highlighting the murky nature of the Obama administration's policy of remotely killing people it believes to be militants, with little certainty about whom the missiles have killed.

His death also comes as al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula has grown more powerful in Yemen, capitalizing on the civil war there to capture territory and forge new alliances with Sunni tribes to fight the Houthis, a Shiite rebel group that controls large parts of the country.

In early April, al-Qaida seized control of Al Mukalla, Yemen's fifth-largest city, reportedly capturing millions of dollars from the vaults of the central bank. The city, which is in a remote coastal area, has remained relatively untouched by the spreading civil war.

Saudi Arabia, which is leading an air offensive against the Houthis that began in late March and has carried out airstrikes across the country, has not taken any military action against al-Qaida, which is also fighting the Houthis.

Local media said three al-Qaida operatives, including leaders, were killed in Al Mukalla last week by a missile strike near the beach. Pictures posted on the website of a local newspaper showed a crater on a stone plaza, in an area that was popular with residents for picnics. Other pictures showed a bloody torso on the beach.

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In addition to the strike against Wuhayshi, attacks thought to have been U.S. missile strikes have killed several senior al-Qaida operatives in Yemen over the past few months.

In the video statement, Batarfi said the militant group had been able to agree on the selection of Raimi as Wuhayshi's successor despite the group's many distractions, including fighting the Houthis and their allies "on more than 11 fronts."