WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The United States has halted some counter-terrorism operations against al Qaeda militants in Yemen following a takeover of the country by Iran-backed Houthi rebels, US officials said yesterday.
The collapse of the US-backed government of Yemen on Thursday has left America’s counter-terrorism campaign “paralyzed”, two US security officials said, dealing a major setback to Washington’s fight against al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), a potent wing of the militant network.
Three US officials said the halt in operations included drone strikes, at least temporarily, following the abrupt resignation of President Abd Rabbuh Mansur al-Hadi, the prime minister and cabinet amid mounting fears the Arab world’s poorest country was veering toward civil war.
Many US personnel work with Yemeni forces at the southern al-Annad airbase, an intelligence post for monitoring the Yemeni affiliate of al Qaeda, or AQAP, which claimed responsibility for attacks this month in Paris that killed 17 people.
Other US officials, speaking to Reuters on condition of anonymity, said the situation on the ground was fluid and described the halt as a temporary measure to assess chaotic conditions on the ground.
White House spokesman Josh Earnest said the United States wanted to continue its close counter-terrorism cooperation with Yemen and was committed to pursuing its strategy there. “I don’t have any policy changes to announce at this point,” he told reporters.
The United States has killed dozens of suspected AQAP fighters and leaders with drone strikes and officials fear that the growing chaos in the country will give the group more space to plan and launch attacks on Western targets.
“It would mean that AQAP would have a much freer hand in parts of the country,” said Lorenzo Vidino, author of “Al Qaeda in Europe” and an analyst at the Institute for the International Political Studies in Italy.
“That means more ability to plan attacks against the US.”
Along with Pakistan, Yemen has been an important strategic location for US drone attacks on al Qaeda figures.
Nineteen US drone strikes killed 124 militants and four civilians in Yemen in 2014, according the New America Foundation, which maintains a database of drone operations. The last deadly drone strike was an attack that killed nine suspected al Qaeda militants on Dec 6, it said.
A new government could withdraw tacit approval for US drone strikes, leaving Washington with a tough decision to make about whether to launch unilateral strikes against AQAP.
Rear Admiral John Kirby, the Pentagon press secretary, said the disputed government in Yemen did not necessarily prevent the United States from engaging in counter-terrorism operations.