Posted on 12/31/2009 4:21:28 AM PST by Pinetop
The US is planning retaliatory strikes in Yemen against al-Qaida over its attempt to blow up a transatlantic flight on Christmas Day. American officials [...] warn that finding those responsible is unlikely to be swift and say that identifying other high-value al-Qaida targets for retaliatory attack would also be a priority. The Guardian (U.K.), 12/30/2009
As U.S. officials are quoted mulling cruise-missile strikes on Yemen, it should be noted that the Yemeni government, such as it is, has already been fighting the hard slog on the ground, rooting out Al Qaeda in Yemeni neighborhoods and villages.
Below is an interesting 7 minutes of film fresh from Yemen, just posted to youTube today: a moment-by-moment video documenting the Arhab raid by the Yemeni Counter-Terrorist Unit (CTU) on an Al-Qaeda-in-the-Arabian-Peninsula (AQAP) safe-house, on 17 December, the same day as a coordinated U.S. cruise missile attack on another site.
The raid resulted in at least three dead, including purportedly at least one former Guantanamo detainee, and 19 AQAP suspects taken into custody. At 3 minutes into the 7-minute video, you see a quick zoom-and-pan showing the tactical forces surrounding the safe-house, followed by their stealthy advance. I have a hunch some bloody scenes are deleted.
The American public has been re-learning Yemens unfamiliar name in the past few days; its profile in the United States rose and fell quickly when the U.S.S. Cole was attacked on a port visit there in 2000. A reported visit to Yemen by The Nigerian, Northwest Airlines terror suspect Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab during preparations for his attack has attracted the spotlight of official Washington.
Whats next? As I noted, even prior to the Christmas event the Obama Administration had recently been employing aerial drones and cruise missile attacks against suspected Al Qaeda sites in Yemen, including the one just a week before the Christmas Day airliner attack. The use of cruise missiles attracted little notice; I noted it in a post on Twitter when news surfaced in Washington on Dec.19, and got several raised-eyebrow messages back like this one, from an IC person who uses a protected account: @lewisshepherd: Cruise missiles? Thats really old school.
Ill just make an observation, oversimplified for a point that deserves more explication than a blogpost allows. In this particular circumstance and set of conditions, you can either lob cruise missiles from afar, with little effect or you can get serious and engage militarily on the ground. If youre not willing to do the latter, there may be little point in doing the former.
Half measures do not make for good counter-terrorist policy. We learned that lesson before. Read Chapter 4 of the 9/11 Commission Report.
The 1990s featured U.S. foreign/military policy focused on low-risk, arms-length employment of military and paramilitary force in support of diplomacy. The Clinton Administration defaulted to pinpointed use of aerial-bombing without the deployment of ground forces during the Serbian campaign, and in repeated engagement of Al Qaeda sites in Afghanistan, Yemen and Sudan during the late 1990s. That approach stands in stark contrast to the large-scale boots-on-the-ground wars after 9/11 in Afghanistan and Iraq.
The 9/11 Commission Report makes clear that in 1999 and up through September 2001, Cruise missiles were and would remain the only military option on the table (p. 137). There was argument about, but no appetite for, boots on the ground.
Often you dont get to choose your best option choices are thrust upon you. Sometimes you think youve made a choice, as the depressing Chapters 4 and 5 of the 9/11 Commission Report demonstrate, only to find that your chosen course of action merely postponed the inevitable.
As a reminder, the Bush Administrations approach in Iraq and Afghanistan was replete with episodes like the Yemeni CTU raid, at scale but they were American forces leading the combat. We appear to be moving into a new era (back to the future?) of hands-off cruise-missile responses and strategically chosen retaliatory strikes, so heres a link demonstrating the difference The Surge: The Untold Story, demonstrating in now-surprisingly nostalgic video form how the U.S. won the Iraq surge of 2008 by fighting for each neighborhood.
Heres hoping we are not forced to return and fight for Yemeni neighborhoods in the coming decade.
Note: I first noted the above video on the insightful Waq al-Waq blog, one of the best nongovernmental western sources for Yemeni coverage. You might want to check it out, as its coverage and domain expertise will come in handy in coming weeks as Yemen is a trending topic in U.S. news sources
for at least a little while
With the terrorists warned by the MSM, the WH, and
Obama’s private links, there sure are a lot empty
tents to ruffle wasting expensive systems.
Why waste expensive, perfectly good stealth weapons by telling the targets they are coming?????
Yes, especially when one or two low-yields would do the whole of Yeman. No great loss...problem solved.
Here we go again.
Cruise missiles up a camel’s butt.
Let’s face it, Obama would not go after Yemen seriously even if Yeman nuked a major American city.
How's that Nobel Peace Prize working out?
My questions for Obama are these:
Will you adhere to the strict ROEs you have imposed on our military when you attack Yemen? Isn't dropping a high explosive missile or bomb on a house, w/o first checking for civilians, the very definition of “indiscriminate killing”? If civilians are injured and/or killed, will you arrest & court martial those responsible, including yourself? Isn't it illegal to attack a country that we are not at war with? If we are to have very strict ROEs, shouldn't they apply to EVERYONE in the military, including the Commander-in-Chief?
Interesting that YouTube disabled the comments on this video. Wonder what the comments were like—a bunch of Jihadists on YouTube?
He is doing the same kinds of attacks in Pawk-e-stahn and Waziristan. I don’t think he cares.
Probably his empty tents again.
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