-Caveat Lector-

http://www.reuters.com/news_article.jhtml;jsessionid=HZTZWMZYK4DGWCRBAE0CFEY?type=worldnews&StoryID=1684219

U.S. Hails Attack on Car, Yemen Silent

November 05, 2002 06:13 PM ET

By Charlie Aldinger and Mohammad Sudam

WASHINGTON/SANAA (Reuters) - U.S. Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz
said on Tuesday an attack on a car in Yemen at the weekend which killed six
suspected al Qaeda members was "a very successful tactical operation."

His remarks came as the Yemeni authorities refused to comment on the cause
of the car blast -- apparently a rocket from an unmanned U.S. drone -- and
offered safety to repenting al Qaeda militants in the country.

Those killed when their car exploded in the easterly Marib province on
Sunday included Qaed Senyan al-Harthi, a suspect in the bombing of the U.S.
destroyer Cole in Aden two years ago which killed 17 U.S. sailors.

 Wolfowitz told CNN: "One hopes each time you get a success like that, not
only to have gotten rid of somebody dangerous, but to have imposed changes
in their tactics and operations.

"Sometimes when people are changing, they expose themselves in new ways."

Pressed to provide details, a senior Pentagon official praised the Yemeni
government for cooperating with the United States, but refused to say
whether Washington might launch similar attacks in the future.

"We have had pretty good cooperation with the government of Yemen and it has
certainly improved a lot," he said, adding: "We don't discuss future
operations."

White House spokesman Ari Fleischer would not say whether or not President
Bush had approved the attack, or give any details of the operation.

Yemeni officials said the blast was under investigation and refused to
comment on earlier remarks by a U.S. official in Washington that the car was
hit by a missile fired from an unmanned Central Intelligence Agency
aircraft.

Yemen said arms, traces of explosives and communications equipment were
found in the car.

Interior Minister Rshad al-Alimi gave a report on the blast to the Yemeni
cabinet on Tuesday.

Members of the cabinet refused to comment on what had caused the blast, but
in a statement urged Yemenis to cooperate with security forces against those
responsible for "terrorist activities targeting our country, its people and
its national economy," the official Saba news agency reported.

The cabinet said al-Harthi was also wanted for attacks on oil installations
in Yemen, a small independent crude producer.

Washington blames the Cole blast on the al Qaeda network of Saudi-born
dissident Osama bin Laden, whose ancestral home is Yemen.

SAFETY FOR THOSE WHO REPENT

Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh said in a speech broadcast on state
media on Tuesday that he would ensure the safety of al Qaeda members in the
country if they "repent and express regret for their sins against the
homeland."

In the speech marking the Muslim holy fasting month of Ramadan, he said: "We
invite anyone from our people who was a member of al Qaeda...to return to
the right path and then their safety will be guaranteed. They will be
granted all rights and obligations stipulated by the constitution."

In September Yemen dismissed reports that U.S. forces could launch covert
operations in the country against al Qaeda militants believed to have fled
Afghanistan.

But U.S. drones are known to have been used to search for fugitive al Qaeda
members believed to be protected by armed clans in the country's remote
tribal regions.

The search for al Qaeda suspects has presented vast problems for Yemen's
overstretched military. In December, Yemeni special forces lost 18 men in a
clash with tribesmen during an attempt to arrest al-Harthi.

The Arab state, keen to shake off its image as a haven for Muslim militants,
says it has detained 85 people in its hunt for suspected members of al Qaeda
and other militant groups.

U.S. military trainers were sent this year to advise Yemeni troops on
striking al Qaeda guerrillas reportedly hiding there.

The CIA previously used "Predator" drones to fire missiles at suspected al
Qaeda and Taliban fighters in Afghanistan.

The long-range, remote control aircraft is able to loiter over a target for
24 hours, providing still photographs or video footage that can be
transmitted within six seconds. It can read traffic signs from 2.8 miles
away and has been armed with Hellfire air-to-surface missiles.

The State Department announced the U.S. Embassy in Yemen would be closed to
the public on Wednesday for a security review.

"The embassy will reopen at the appropriate time. I am not going to
speculate as to when that will be," added the official, who asked not to be
named.

Security at the embassy in Sanaa was already tight because of fears that al
Qaeda members in Yemen might attack it.

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