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http://www.theherald.co.uk/news/archive/18-3-19102-0-38-25.html

The Herald
March 18, 2002 

SAS troops prepare for raids on Yemen
IAN BRUCE 
BRITAIN'S SAS is on standby to mount a series of
surgical raids inside Yemen to wipe out al Qaeda
terrorists believed to have found sanctuary among the
mountain clans in the country's remote and lawless
north. 

Troopers from two of the unit's four operational
"sabre squadrons" have been training for the mission
in Afghanistan by carrying out dress rehearsals in
terrain identical to that of the target area. The late
deployment of SAS troopers to the 12-day battle around
Shah-e-Kot in Afghanistan last week was due to the
demands of that training schedule.

Despite the fact that between 200 and 400 US special
forces commandos have been quietly flown into Yemen
over the last few days, senior American commanders
want to use the UK elite regiment's unrivalled
expertise to eliminate the terrorists.

They also hope to defuse growing anti-American feeling
among the fiercely independent sheikhs who control
much of Yemen's northern Ma'arib highlands by
minimising direct US involvement in the mission.

The Ma'arib tribal leaders have thousands of
well-armed clan militiamen under their command, and
have already repelled one attempt by Yemeni government
troops to arrest two al Qaeda agents accused of
involvement in the bombing of the USS Cole in Aden
harbour in October, 2000.

The military column was ambushed by tribal fighters,
killing 18 soldiers and wounding dozens more. The
suspects, Mohammed Hamdi al-Ahdal and Ali Qaed Senyan
al-Harthi, escaped during the gun battle and are still
at liberty.

Yemen, the poorest country in Arabia, is a traditional
hotbed of Islamic militancy. It is also Osama bin
Laden's ancestral family home.

US warships have been monitoring traffic in the sea
lanes off its coast since last October to prevent the
entry of terrorists fleeing Afghanistan, and unmanned
spy drones keep the country under constant
surveillance.

The SAS fought an undeclared war against insurgents
there during the 1960s, and gained more experience of
the area through its subsequent involvement in
repelling Yemeni guerrilla fighters who tried to
destabilise neighbouring Oman in the seventies.

Ali Abdullah Saleh, Yemen's president, has warned the
northern sheikhs not to oppose moves against Islamic
terrorists, but lacks the military muscle to impose
his will on them by force.

Dick Cheney, the US vice- president, paid a
whistlestop visit to the country last week to pave the
way for American-led anti-terrorist operations in the
hinterland, and to push for effective co-operation
with FBI agents investigating the USS Cole bombing.

President Bush has spoken of Yemen as "the next
Afghanistan" and US intelligence agencies suspect it
is fast becoming the region's number one hideout for
al Qaeda fugitives.

 


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