20th
February 2009
In
a recent interview posted to jihadi websites, al-Qaeda's
leader in Yemen claims the organization possesses
nuclear weapons and vows to attack U.S. and Western
interests to compel them to withdraw their forces from
the region (hanein.info,
January 27).
According to the interview, the leader of al-Qaeda in
Yemen, 33-year-old Nasir Abdul Kareem al-Wahayshi
(a.k.a. Abu Basir), was Osama Bin Laden's secretary
until he was arrested by Iran and extradited to Yemen in
February 2002. Al-Wahayshi has been a fugitive since he
escaped from a Yemeni prison in 2006 (see Terrorism
Focus, February 7, 2006; March 18, 2008). In 2008,
the second man in al-Qaeda, Dr. Ayman al-Zawahiri,
commended al-Wahayshi and named him the Amir of
Mujahideen in Yemen. Since then, there has been a
growing unity between al-Qaeda's Saudi and Yemeni
affiliates and the mainstream al-Qaeda group in the
Pakistan/Afghanistan border region. Led by an Amir, a
deputy Amir, and a military and Shura council, the Saudi
and Yemeni affiliates have joined together as al-Qaeda
in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP).
On the war in Gaza, al-Wahayshi said that the Muslim
nation is longing for jihad, as is evident from the
protests that broke out everywhere, but accused Hamas of
refusing to receive the Salafi-jihadis that tried to aid
Palestinians in the fighting. The Arab mujahideen went
to Afghanistan only to prepare for jihad in Palestine,
but before the mujahideen can go to Palestine, the
blockade imposed by Arab regimes should be broken - an
implicit call to topple Arab regimes, or what al-Qaeda
identifies as "the near enemy." In the meantime, al-Wahayshi
believes it is necessary to also attack the interests of
the supporters of Israel, the United States and Europe
in the Arabian Peninsula: "The Crusaders' campaign on
our people in Palestine, Somalia and Afghanistan uses
the Arabian Peninsula as a launching pad. The U.S.,
British and French fleets in the region are only there
to protect the Jews in Palestine. The Arab leaders,
among them the Yemeni leader [President Ali Abdullah
Saleh], vigorously contribute military and logistical
aid to the Crusaders' campaign."
Al-Wahayshi further asserts that until the mujahideen
are able to infiltrate into Palestine and fight the
Jews, Western tourists are a legitimate target for the
mujahideen, as the tourists are part of the Crusaders'
campaign. Western tourists are either Christian
missionaries, depraved individuals, or Western
government agents spying on Muslims. Al-Wahayshi
justifies killing Muslims who protect Christian and
Jewish interests such as embassies and cultural centers,
referring to al-Qaeda's attack on the U.S. embassy in
Sana'a in September 2008 in which six Yemeni security
personnel, six attackers, and four bystanders were
killed. "Shame on those who protect the embassies of the
Crusaders' countries. Shame on them to watch U.S.
rockets and Israeli white phosphorus shells tearing up
and burning Gaza children and still protect their
interests," says al-Wahayshi.
Asked why al-Qaeda targets the oil industry
infrastructure that serves the economy of a Muslim
country when the majority of employees in that industry
are Muslims, al-Wahayshi insisted that Muslims do not
benefit from Yemeni oil. On the contrary, it only
sustains the lifeline of the Crusaders and Zionists who
are attacking Muslims, thanks to President Saleh. On the
topic of tourism, al-Wahayshi insists Muslims should not
allow infidel Jews and Christians into the Arabian
Peninsula in the name of tourism or any other purpose.
On the Yemeni leadership, al-Wahayshi refuses to
recognize the authority of the Yemeni president,
alleging that he came to power through sham elections:
"Democracy is a religion invented and imposed on Muslim
nations by the United States to create grudges and
animosity among them. Democracy drains the energy of
Muslim youths by keeping them occupied with elections
and leaves the nation powerless and acquiescent to the
Crusaders' campaign."
Refuting President Saleh's declaration that al-Qaeda
extremists have no vision and only blow up and kill
innocent people, al-Wahayshi said the Yemeni president
has been stealing government funds and destroying the
country for years without a vision or plan for the well
being of the country and its people. Al-Wahayshi claims
Yemen's president has turned Yemen into a base for
Crusaders and Zionists. Al-Qaeda therefore aims to
replace the current regime with a just and secure
Islamic Shari'a government in Yemen that will end U.S.
influence in the region. The Amir adds that mujahideen
attacks on U.S. interests have weakened the U.S.
economy, as seen in the current world economic crisis.
Finally, al-Wahayshi claims al-Qaeda possesses a nuclear
weapon and only refrained from using it in the 9/11
attacks because those attacks were only al-Qaeda's
"first message" to the Americans.
Many ordinary Yemenis believe the nation's "enemies" are
propagating false allegations that Yemen is becoming a
regional base for al-Qaeda in order to damage its
relations with Saudi Arabia (al-yemen.org
January 25). Others anticipate more international
support for the Yemeni government in its fight against
AQAP in Yemen in response to AQAP's formation. Answering
AQAP's threats, Yemen's Interior Ministry said the
Yemeni security apparatus is on high alert and is
conducting security sweeps of all possible AQAP
hideouts, adding that Yemen and Saudi Arabia are
cooperating fully to apprehend AQAP members (Dar al-Hayat,
January 31).
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