Not so "secret" now!

 

B

 

http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/ap-sources-cia-air-base-works-persian-gu

 

CIA Building Secret Air Base in Persian Gulf Region, AP Reports 

Wednesday, June 15, 2011 
By KIMBERLY DOZIER, Associated Press 

 <http://www.cnsnews.com/image/mideast-yemen-21> Mideast Yemen

Female anti-government protestors, chant slogans during a demonstration
demanding the resignation of Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh, in Taiz,
Yemen, Tuesday, June 14, 2011. A senior Yemeni official in the Saudi capital
says President Ali Abdullah Saleh has developed a problem with his throat
but that his overall condition is stable. Markings in Arabic reads on the
demonstrators hands,

WASHINGTON (AP) - Preparing for a worst-case scenario in Yemen, the United
States is building a secret CIA air base in the Persian Gulf region to
target al-Qaida terrorists there, in case anti-American factions win the
current power struggle and shut U.S. forces out, The Associated Press has
learned.

The White House has already increased the numbers of CIA officers in Yemen,
in anticipation of that possibility. And it has stepped up the schedule to
construct the base, from a two-year timetable to a rushed eight months.

The Associated Press has withheld the exact location of the base at the
request of U.S. officials. They spoke on condition of anonymity because
portions of the military and CIA missions in Yemen are classified.

The current campaign is run by a military counterterrorism unit, the Joint
Special Operations Command, with the CIA providing intelligence support.
JSOC forces have been allowed by the Yemeni government of Ali Abdullah Saleh
to conduct limited strikes there since 2009. Saleh loyalists have recently
allowed expanded strikes by U.S. armed drones and even war planes against
al-Qaida targets who are taking advantage of civil unrest to grab power and
territory in the Gulf country.

CIA Director Leon Panetta said last week that agency officers were working
in Yemen together with JSOC, as well as other areas where al-Qaida is
active.

But the CIA would not confirm the White House decision to build the CIA base
or expand the agency's operations in Yemen.

The new base suggests a long-term U.S. commitment to fighting al-Qaida in
the region, along the lines of the model used in Pakistan, where CIA drones
hunt militants with tacit, though not public, Pakistani government approval.
Drones like Reapers and Predators are unmanned aircraft that can be flown
from remote locations and hover over a target before firing a missile.

Yemeni officials have indicated their preference toward drones, versus
allowing U.S. counterterror strike teams on Yemeni soil, saying they are
less apt to incense the local population. But the new base would enable
continued operations without Yemeni approval.

If the Yemenis halt cooperation with U.S. counterterrorist forces that would
also likely mean a shift to putting the CIA in charge of the al-Qaida
hunting mission in Yemen, senior U.S. officials said.

While that policy debate plays out in Washington, U.S. special operations
forces based just outside Yemen are taking aim almost daily at a greater
array of targets that have been flushed into view by the unrest. U.S. forces
have stepped up their targeting as well, because of the besieged Yemeni
government's new willingness to allow U.S. forces to use all tools available
-- from armed drones to war planes -- against al-Qaida as a way to stay in
power, the U.S. officials said.

The U.S. needs to keep the pressure on, to break al-Qaida's momentum there,
the State Department's counterterror coordinator, Daniel Benjamin, said
Tuesday. There are growing concerns that AQAP will use the chaos to acquire
more weapons, and also to fuel connections between al-Qaida-linked militants
there and al-Shabab insurgents in Somalia, he added.

The Obama administration has been working for months in concert with the
mediation efforts of Yemen's Gulf neighbors to persuade Saleh to transfer
power. Saleh was evacuated for emergency medical treatment in Saudi Arabia,
after being hit by explosive devices planted in the presidential mosque more
than a week ago.

The U.S. has continued to press for a deal in the hope that a political
solution could pre-empt any plan by the Yemeni leader of 33 years to return.
That, officials fear, could lead to further instability.

Benjamin said he is hopeful that counterterrorism efforts will continue in
Yemen, as the political transition moves along and a new government takes
hold.

But another U.S. official said Yemeni opposition groups have voiced
criticism of the U.S. counterterror program and vowed to stop it, should
they take power.

Since 2009, Yemen has allowed JSOC to employ a mixture of armed and unarmed
drones, ship-fired missiles, small special operations teams working with
Yemenis, and occasional war plane bombing runs, Yemeni and U.S. officials
say. But permission was on a case-by-case basis, and waxed and waned
depending on the mood of the mercurial Yemeni president.

With al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula essentially in control of large
swathes of Yemeni territory, the Yemeni government now hopes U.S. targeting
will remove some of the enemies threatening the Saleh regime. That new
target-at-will attitude was reinforced after the attempt on Saleh's life,
both U.S. and Yemeni officials say.

The U.S. forces are also taking advantage of the fact that more al-Qaida
operatives are exposing themselves as they move from their hideouts across
the country to command troops challenging the government.

That has led to the arrests of al-Qaida operatives by Yemeni forces, guided
by U.S. intelligence intercepts, and those operatives are talking under
joint U.S.-Yemeni interrogation, providing key information on al-Qaida
operations and locations, U.S. officials said.

That in turn led to the best opportunity in more than a year to hit
U.S.-born radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki in early May. A host of technical
difficulties meant three separate attempts, by two types of unmanned armed
drone-craft and war planes all failed, prompting some grousing among
intelligence agencies that CIA-led strikes might net better results.

But the CIA has neither the drones nor the personnel to take the lead in the
operation at present, two officials say.

Al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden had long urged al-Qaida not to directly
challenge Saleh but to keep Yemen as a haven from which to launch attacks
against the United States, while AQAP leaders argued that they should
overthrow with Yemeni government. A record of that debate between bin Laden
and the Yemeni al-Qaida leadership was found among the records at the
compound in Pakistan where bin Laden was killed by U.S. forces May 2.

U.S. Bin Laden warned the Yemeni offshoot that its leaders would be targeted
more aggressively and easily if they tried to take power, just as they are
now, the officials said.

 



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