Motives for Washington targeting al-Qaeda leaders in Yemen
The US administration has focused in recent months on
curtailing the activity of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) through two
means, either setting financial rewards for obtaining information about the
organization's leaders or launching airstrikes targeting its most prominent
leaders.
Through these measures, Washington is trying to cause a
crisis within the terrorist organization by killing its leaders, after which it
will take time for the organization to rearrange its ranks.
Targeting al-Qaeda leaders
The latest operation launched by Washington against AQAP was
on January 31, during which Hassan al-Hadrami, the most prominent explosives
expert in the organization, and his brother were killed in an airstrike by
drones in the oil governorate of Marib, northeastern Yemen.
Late last year, the US Air Force launched a series of
strikes on al-Qaeda leadership positions, specifically in the southern Yemeni
governorates of Shabwah, Abyan, Hadhramaut, and Marib, the last of which was on
November 29, 2022, when a drone strike targeted some strongholds where AQAP
leaders were hiding in the city of Marib.
In mid-December 2022, the US Treasury announced a financial
reward of $5 million for anyone who provides information about AQAP leader Abu
Ayman al-Masri. His death has always been reported, but Washington denies this
and announces from time to time a financial reward for anyone who provides any
information about him.
Continuous targeting
Hesham El-Naggar, a researcher in political Islam, said that
the targeting of al-Qaeda leaders is part of a program to track and prosecute
the leaders of the transnational terrorist organization, but underestimates the
value of the effort that al-Qaeda is not alone in the scene, where it maneuvers
and absorbs blows through indirect and secret relations and coordination with
the Houthis, as well as the Yemeni Brotherhood.
Naggar pointed out in a special statement to the Reference
that Washington is aware that any stability, expansion and gain achieved by the
Houthis in Yemen benefits al-Qaeda, which may raise false slogans that apply
the exact opposite on the ground, because its field movements and withdrawals
from some areas have been clearly coordinated with the Houthis to achieve
mutual gains and interests. This means that any complacency and turning a blind
eye to the practices, gains, and influence of the Houthis is indirectly in the
interest of al-Qaeda, which plays with the available cards on the ground and
benefits from the powerful forces that control large areas in the Yemeni arena.
Naggar added that the policy of targeting al-Qaeda leaders,
even if it succeeds in some arenas, is not sufficient in the Yemeni arena,
which needs comprehensive and more complex solutions on the ground, including
reducing the influence of the Houthis to a minimum and working to establish a
just and urgent political settlement.