Yemen rules out US intervention | ||||||
Yemen's foreign minister has ruled out direct US military intervention to tackle the al-Qaeda group operating in his country. "Yemen is going to deal with terrorism in its own way, out of its own interests and therefore I don't think it will counterfire," al-Qirbi said. "The negative impact on Yemen is if there is direct intervention of the US and this is not the case." Yemen is battling to control an al-Qaeda movement estimated to have hundreds of fighters in the country, as well as so-called Houthi rebel fighters in the north of the country and a secessionist movement in the south. At least two suspected al-Qaeda members were killed during a raid near Sanaa on Monday. Officials said up to three other suspects had been wounded during the operation in the Arhab district, around 30km northeast of the capital.
Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, said on Monday that a decision on reopening the US embassy would be taken "as conditions permit". "We see global implications from the war in Yemen and the ongoing efforts by al Qaeda in Yemen to use it as a base for terrorist attacks far beyond the region," she said after meeting the visiting prime minister of Qatar. The Yemen-based group, which claims to be affiliated with Osama bin Laden's organisation, had earlier claimed responsibility for the failed attack and called for strikes on embassies in Yemen. Gordon Brown, the British prime minister, has said he will hold a meeting in London on January 28 to discuss how to counter radicalisation in Yemen.
"I know the Americans have committed more money for our counter-terrorism units and that is one area we need support in." "The most important thing here for geopolitics globally and within the region, is that Yemen has been a fractured, desperately poor and deeply fractitious country that all the countries in the region and the superpowers have used as a battleground," she said. But Mann-Leverett also said that the Obama administration's policies towards the region were partially to blame for threats against Washington and its allies. "We have given the Saudis a green light to militarily intervene in Yemen and to characterise what is happening in Yemen as a Sunni-Shia war [with] the Saudis there to defend the Sunnis against craven Shia," she said. Aljazeera |
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04 January, 2010
Yemen rules out US intervention
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