Al-Qaida’s Second in Command in Yemen Killed

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This image taken from an undated video posted on a militant-leaning Web site Jan. 23, 2009, and provided by the SITE Intelligence Group, shows Said Ali al-Shehri.
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This image taken from an undated video posted on a militant-leaning Web site Jan. 23, 2009, and provided by the SITE Intelligence Group, shows Said Ali al-Shehri.

A Yemeni defense ministry website reported Monday that Said al-Shehri, a Saudi national, was one of several militants killed during an army operation in Hadramout province in eastern Yemen. No other details were provided.

Al-Qaida’s Yemen-based network, al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, remains active in southern Yemen. Suspected militants have carried out suicide bombings and targeted Yemeni government officials for assassination.

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The network is also suspected of planning attacks on U.S. interests, including a failed plot in 2010 to blow up U.S.-bound cargo planes with explosives hidden in printer ink cartridges.

A Yemeni security source told Reuters that Shehri was killed in the operation last Wednesday and that a U.S. drone was involved. Unmanned aircraft provided by the United States have been assisting Yemeni forces fighting against al-Qaida and other militants in remote sections of Yemen.

Shehri had been a prisoner at the U.S. detention facility at Guantanamo Bay. He was turned over to Saudi Arabia’s custody in 2007 and sent to a rehabilitation program for militants run by Saudi authorities.

In recent years, Shehri has recorded messages on behalf of al-Qaida threatening violence against Saudi Arabian nationals, Israeli targets and Yemen’s government.

Said al-Shehri

  • Saudi national captured in Pakistan in 2001
  • Transferred to Guantanamo Bay detention facility and held until 2007
  • Told Guantanamo authorities he would work in his family’s furniture store if released
  • Transferred to Saudi Arabia, went to a government rehabilitation center to de-radicalize militants
  • Surfaced in a 2009 video marking the merger of al-Qaida’s Saudi and Yemeni wings into al-Qaida of the Arabian Peninsula

Some information for this report provided by AP, AFP and Reuters.

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