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Inside the Yemen raid

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Inside the Yemen raid:
Women al Qaeda fighters surprised US forces

By Ryan Browne, CNN
Updated 10:04 PM ET, Wed February 1, 2017

Washington (CNN)New details have emerged surrounding Sunday's deadly joint US-United Arab Emirates counter-terrorism raid on an al Qaeda compound in Yemen, shedding light on why the mission happened when it did -- and what went wrong.

The military said the operation was geared toward collecting as much intelligence on the terror group as possible in order to facilitate future raids and strikes against al Qaeda down the road and prevent terror attacks.

The raid was greenlit by President Donald Trump shortly after taking the oath of office, but multiple officials told CNN the mission had been planned months in advance and had been briefed to then-President Barack Obama.

Both defense and Obama administration officials said the operation was never vetoed by Obama and that "operational reasons" were why it was pushed back after January 20 and why Obama left the task of authorizing the raid to his successor.

SEALs detected during mission
One such operational reason: The need for a moonless night to help provide the cover of darkness for the Navy SEALs undertaking the raid on the al Qaeda headquarters located in the al Bayda Governorate in Yemen.

According to one diplomatic source, after being briefed on the operation, Trump approved the mission "fairly quickly."

The raid involved elite US Navy SEALs and special forces from the UAE, with armed drones flying overhead in support, according to officials from several countries.

But as the combined force approached the al Qaeda compound, it was detected and an intense firefight broke out that saw Chief Petty Officer William "Ryan" Owens receiving a fatal wound and three additional SEALs being wounded.

During the gun battle, which featured small arms fire, hand grenades and close air support strikes from US aircraft, al Qaeda fighters -- including some female combatants -- took up firing positions on the roof of a nearby building and the US troops came under fire, calling in an airstrike against the building, which likely led to civilian casualties, a US official told CNN.

The civilian casualties were "caught up in aerial gunfire that was called in to assist US forces in contact against a determined enemy that included armed women firing from prepared fighting positions, and US special operations members receiving fire from all sides," US Central Command, which oversees military forces in the region, said in a statement Wednesday.
"The raid resulted in the seizure of materials and information that is yielding valuable intelligence to help partner nations deter and prevent future terror attacks in Yemen and across the world," the statement continued.

The Pentagon said 14 al Qaeda fighters were killed in the battle. Central Command said an internal review team "concluded regrettably that civilian non-combatants were likely killed in the midst of a firefight" during the raid, adding that "casualties may include children."
The statement said than an assessment was ongoing to determine the exact number of civilian casualties.

Yemeni officials said 13 civilians were killed in the raid, including 8-year-old Nawar Anwar Al-Awalki, the daughter of Anwar Al-Awalki, the US-born cleric and al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula leader. Anwar Al-Awalki, who directed attacks against the US, was killed in a drone strike in 2011.

"Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula has a horrifying history of hiding women and children within militant operating areas and terrorist camps, and continuously shows a callous disregard for innocent lives," US Col. John J. Thomas, a spokesman for Central Command, said in the statement. "That's what makes cases like these so especially tragic."

The challenges of military operations in Yemen were on display in 2014, when US commandos attempted to rescue western hostages, including American journalist Luke Sommers, held by the terror group. That operation was similarly detected by al Qaeda fighters and the hostages were fatally shot during the raid.

In the latest operation, US Marines aboard the USS Makin Island in the Gulf of Aden were standing by to assist and multiple MV-22 Osprey aircraft were sent to rendezvous with the Navy SEALs and help evacuate the wounded.

But one of the Osprey's suffered a technical malfunction at the landing zone and was forced to make a "hard-landing," which resulted in three US service members being injured, none of them seriously. The aircraft was deemed unrecoverable and the military conducted an airstrike to destroy the Osprey in order to prevent its technology from falling into enemy hands.
Secretary of Defense James Mattis was attending the Alfalfa Dinner, an elite social gathering in Washington, at the time of the raid and was informed that the US had suffered casualties during the operation. Mattis left the event to help address the situation.

US defense officials told CNN that reams of intelligence were recovered during the operation, including computer hard drives.

While the assessment of that information is still ongoing, officials believe it is highly possible that information contained within could help prevent future terror attacks by al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, which is thought to be the most capable of al Qaeda's franchises and was behind the 2015 terrorist attack on the Charlie Hebdo offices in Paris.

'A success by all accounts'
Trump was quick to label the raid a success, issuing a statement Sunday saying it acquired "important intelligence that will assist the US in preventing terrorism against its citizens and people around the world," while expressing condolences for the life lost and wishing the wounded a speedy recovery.

Trump called Owens' family Tuesday to express his condolences personally and went to Dover Air Force base Wednesday to be with the fallen soldier's family when his body was returned to the US.

Military analysts who spoke with CNN noted that the complexity of this type of mission, saying that at least from a tactical standpoint, the intelligence gathering mission could be deemed a success.

"In a very difficult, very austere environment, our special forces were able to do something that was very very significant," retired Col. Cedric Leighton told CNN.
Speaking to the US casualties suffered, retired Maj. Gen. James "Spider" Marks said, "Those kinds of things will happen in operations like this."

"There is clearly a risk assessment. You mitigate the risk as best you can -- there will often be casualties. It's just the nature of this business," Marks added.

"The mission was a success by all accounts," retired Lt. Gen. Mark Hertling told CNN Wednesday.

But the raid was also met with criticism by outside groups, with the Brussels-based International Crisis Group issuing a statement Wednesday calling the operation "a good example of what not to do."

"The use of US troops and the high number of civilian casualties are deeply inflammatory and breed anti-American resentment across the Yemeni political spectrum that works to the advantage of" al Qaeday in the Arabian Peninsula, the statement added.

Raids becoming more common
Military raids aimed at gathering intelligence on terror groups to facilitate future raids and strikes in the future have become increasingly common in recent years and have featured in the fight against ISIS in Iraq and Syria.

"These types of missions occur many times a year. Their purpose is to generate understanding of their networks and disrupt them," a US defense official familiar with these types of raids told CNN.

The raids were considered critical to defeating al Qaeda in Iraq, the predecessor of ISIS, during former Gen. Stanley McChrystal's leadership of Joint Special Operations Command.
Trump's national security adviser, retired Army Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, served under McChrystal at the time and lauded the raids in his recent book, "Field of Fight."

He wrote the raids would gather intelligence that would allow military intelligence officers to analyze the information and better understand those terror groups.

"Everyone could then pursue new linkages in the terror network, leading to new captures, new discoveries of documents, computes, and the like ... if the answers pointed to new action, that would be relayed back to tacticians and fighters," he said.

CNN's Elise Labott and Jamie Crawford contributed to this story

http://www.cnn.com/2017/02/01/politics/us-raid-yemen/
 
US loses Osprey aircraft in Yemen raid
Gareth Jennings, London - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
30 January 2017

A US military aircraft was lost during a raid in Yemen that also resulted in the death of a service member and injuries to three others, the Department of Defense (DoD) announced on 29 January.

Images posted online showed the burnt-out remains of the a Bell-Boeing V-22 Osprey tiltrotor after it was destroyed by US forces following a heavy landing in the raid against Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQIP).

"A US military aircraft assisting in the operation experienced a hard landing at a nearby location, resulting in an additional US injury. That aircraft was unable to fly after the landing [and] was then intentionally destroyed in place," the DoD said.

According to the Pentagon, an estimated 14 AQIP fighters were killed in the 28 January raid on a headquarters complex. The DoD did not formally identify the lost aircraft as an Osprey or identify the units involved, nor did it say if the dead and/or wounded were aircrew or soldiers.

This action was the first to be ordered by President Donald Trump, and follows a number of airstrikes ordered in the final days of President Barack Obama against both Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State in Syria and Libya respectively.

http://www.janes.com/article/67317/us-loses-osprey-aircraft-in-yemen-raid

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U.S. MV-22 Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft crash lands in Yemen during Special OPS raid on Al Qaeda
Jan 29 2017
By David Cenciotti
A U.S. Marine Corps Osprey that was supporting the first known counter-terrorism operation under President Trump crash-landed in Yemen. It was later destroyed by U.S. raid.

Early in the morning on Jan. 29, one American Special Operations commando was killed and three others were injured in a fierce firefight with Al Qaeda fighters targeted by a predawn raid against the AQ headquarters in Yemen.

The surprise attack was carried out by commandos from the U.S. Navy SEAL Team 6 in Bayda Province who killed 14 Qaeda militants in what is the first confirmed anti-terror operation under Trump presidency.

It’s not clear what aircraft were supporting the raid; what has been confirmed is that a U.S. Marine Corps MV-22 Osprey aircraft called in to evacuate the wounded American soldiers crash landed, injuring 2 service members (1 according to other sources).

The tilt-rotor aircraft was intentionally destroyed in place by a U.S. raid once it was determined that it could not leave the crash landing site.
V-22-Osprey-crash-landed-706x397.jpg


This was not the first time a U.S. helo supporting a Special Operation crash lands.

On May 2, 2011, one of the helicopters used by the U.S. Navy SEAL Team 6 in the raid that killed Osama Bin Laden crash landed near OBL’s compound at Abbottabad, Pakistan.

Military on board the helicopter escaped safely on another chopped while the downed one was destroyed leaving only few parts near the Bin Laden’s compound.

Unfortunately for them, those parts didn’t seem to belong to any known type.

In particular, the tail rotor had an unusual cover that could be anything from an armor plate to a noise reduction cover sheltering the motion-control technology used to input low-frequency variations of rotor blade pitch-angle, as tested by NASA; the blades were flatter, and not wing-shaped, whereas the paint job was extremely similar to the kind of anti-radar paint and Radar-Absorbing Material coating used by the most modern stealth fighters: nothing common to either Black Hawks, Chinooks or Apaches helicopters: that crash landed unveiled a Stealth Black Hawk (or MH-X).

Back to the Sunday raid, it’s worth noticing it was the first carried out with commandos, considered that the U.S. has typically relied on drone strikes to target AQ militants in the region (the latest of those were launched each day from Jan. 20 to 22 killing five terrorists). However, it seems this time U.S. troops seized militants laptops, smartphones and other material that was worth the rare ground assault against Al Qaeda.

https://theaviationist.com/2017/01/...in-yemen-during-special-ops-raid-on-al-qaeda/
 
Why American Why ? Why can't you just mind your own business .. AQ in yemen is not your Problem
 
14 terrorists and more than 20 civilians dead..

They have lost helicopters in Iran in a big operation for hostage rescue in the 80s, they've also lost helicopters in an operation in Somalia.. it is a bit strange..
 
US Navy SEAL killed in Yemen advances in rank posthumously
February 3, 2017


The U.S. Navy announced Thursday that a SEAL killed in last week’s Yemen operation will be posthumously advanced to senior chief petty officer.

Chief Special Warfare Operator William “Ryan” Owens, 36, of Peoria, Illinois, died Jan. 29, 2017, in the Arabian Peninsula of Yemen, of wounds sustained in a raid against al-Qaida.

The raid was the first one authorized by Donald Trump as POTUS. Another six service members were wounded while 14 fighters from Al Qaeda were killed.

The Navy approved an exception to policy request for Owens’ posthumous advancement, effective the day of his death.

Owens was eligible for the fiscal year 2018 active duty Senior Chief Petty Officer Selection Board, which will convene in April.

http://navaltoday.com/2017/02/03/us...yemen-advances-in-rank-posthumously/?uid=1067
 

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