http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/in-reminder-of-al-qaidas-strength-wit
hout-bin-laden-yemeni-bomber-leaves-fingerprint-behind/2011/05/24/AFC7AIAH_s
tory.html?nl_headlines

 


In reminder of al-Qaida's strength without bin Laden, Yemeni bomber leaves
fingerprint behind


( Yemen Interior Ministry / Associated Press ) - This undated image released
Sunday Oct. 31, 2010, by Yemen's Interior Ministry, in a combination of two
photos which they say both show bomb maker suspect Ibrahim Hassan al-Asiri.
The FBI has a fingerprint and forensic evidence linking al-Qaida's top bomb
maker in Yemen to both the 2009 Christmas Day airline attack and the nearly
successful attack on cargo planes last year. 


By Associated Press, Updated: Tuesday, May 24, 3:29 AM


WASHINGTON - The FBI has a fingerprint and forensic evidence linking
al-Qaida's top bomb maker in Yemen to a trio of explosive devices used in
recent attacks on the United States, tangible reminders that Osama bin
Laden's death has not eliminated the threat from the group's most active and
dangerous franchise.

Investigators have pulled a fingerprint of Ibrahim al-Asiri off the bomb
hidden in the underwear of a Nigerian man accused of trying to blow up a
plane over Detroit on Christmas Day 2009, U.S. counterterrorism officials
said. Investigators also determined that the explosives used in that bomb
are chemically identical to those hidden inside two printers that were
shipped from Yemen last year, bound for Chicago and Philadelphia.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the cases remain under
investigation.

Bin Laden's death leaves al-Qaida's core in Pakistan with a leadership
vacuum, one that could make the Yemeni branch known as al-Qaida in the
Arabian Peninsula even more prominent. The Yemeni franchise already had
eclipsed bin Laden's central organization to become al-Qaida's leading
fundraising, propaganda and operational arm. In a eulogy to bin Laden posted
online earlier this month, the group's leader promised more violence.

"What is coming is greater and worse, and what is awaiting you is more
intense and harmful," said Nasser al-Wahishi, who once was bin Laden's
personal secretary.

Al-Qaida's Yemen branch has become so well-known in the United States that
some commentators speculated in the days after bin Laden's death that the
radical U.S.-born Yemeni cleric Anwar al-Awlaki would succeed him. But U.S.
officials and counterterrorism experts say that's extremely unlikely, given
his American citizenship, his relative newcomer status, his 1997 arrest in
San Diego on solicitation of prostitution and the fact that he's not even
the operational leader in Yemen.

The FBI has been building cases against a number of high-profile terrorists,
including al-Asiri and al-Awlaki. For now, though, there is no guarantee
those cases will ever make it to a courtroom. President Barack Obama has not
indicated what he would do if a major terrorist suspect was captured abroad.
It's a politically sensitive issue because, even though civilian courts have
been used for years to prosecute terrorism cases, Republicans have portrayed
Obama as weak on terrorism whenever he discusses that option.

Intelligence officials long have believed al-Asiri helped build the
Christmas and cargo bombs but have never disclosed how they were able to
directly link him to the failed attacks. The fingerprint also would help
establish al-Asiri's identity if he ever were apprehended, possibly allowing
the Justice Department to extradite him to the U.S. for prosecution.

It's not clear who provided the FBI with the original fingerprint used to
match the one lifted from the underwear bomb. But it probably came from
Saudi Arabia, where al-Asiri and his brother were arrested for their
involvement in an al-Qaida-affiliated terrorist cell. They were released and
later fled to Yemen in 2006.

In March, the State Department designated al-Asiri a terrorist and banned
Americans from doing business with him. The U.S. said he was also involved
in planning to bomb Saudi oil facilities.

He's also implicated in the 2009 attack on Saudi Deputy Interior Minister
Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, the country's top anti-terrorism official.
Intelligence officials say al-Asiri strapped a bomb on his younger brother,
who volunteered for the suicide mission. The attack killed the younger
brother but only managed to injure Nayef.

Though the device was dubbed the "butt bomb," explosives experts believe the
younger brother had actually held the bomb between his legs.

 



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