American Al Qaeda Anwar al-Awlaki killed in Yemen

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Al Qaeda's Anwar al-Awlaki killed in Yemen


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CBS News
September 30, 2011


Anwar al-Awlaki, a U.S.-born radical Islamic preacher who rose to the highest level of al Qaeda's franchise in Yemen, has been killed.

Al-Awlaki, born in New Mexico, has been linked to al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula's (AQAP) attempted bombing of a U.S. passenger jet over Detroit on Christmas day, 2009, and was thought to be a leader of the group.

A U.S. government official confirms to CBS News senior security correspondent David Martin that al-Awlaki was killed. Yemen's Defense Ministry was first to tell CBS News of the strike, but given previous reports which turned out to be erroneous, the relatively rapid U.S. confirmation is crucial, and bolsters witness accounts that it was a U.S. drone strike that killed the al Qaeda figure.

The Associated Press reported that an unidentified source said the U.S. believes al-Awlaki was killed in a strike by U.S. jets and drones on his convoy.

U.S. officials considered al-Awlaki a most-wanted terror suspect, and added his name last year to the kill or capture list - making him a rare American addition to what is effectively a U.S. government hit-list.


Al-Awlaki's father, who still lives in the U.S., filed a lawsuit against the federal government, claiming his son's civil rights were violated by the U.S. call for his killing.

A federal court dismissed Nasser al-Awlaki's suit on Dec. 7, 2010, on the grounds that he had no legal standing to challenge the targeting of his son.


A statement from Yemen's foreign press office said the al Qaeda suspect "was targeted and killed 8 KM (about 5 miles) from the town of Khashef in the Province of Jawf, 140KM (about 80 miles) east of the Capital Sana'a."


Al-Arabiya television network cited local tribal sources as saying suspected U.S. drone aircraft - which are known to operate in Yemen - fired two missiles Friday at a convoy of vehicles believed to be carrying al-Awlaki and his guards.


CBS News' Khaled Wassef says Al-Awlaki was first reported dead following U.S. air strikes on southern Yemen in December 2009, and then again in November 2010. He was also the target of a U.S. drone attack that killed two al Qaeda operatives in southern Yemen on May 5, 2011.


Wassef reports that al-Awlaki last appeared in a video released online in August 2010.


Yemen has risen in recent years to the top of the threat list for U.S. security officials - with AQAP seen as the most active branch of the global terror network in planning attacks against the U.S. homeland.

Al-Awlaki was believed to be a prominent member of the group, taking some role in the planning of actual terror plots, in addition to his role as a religious adviser and powerful recruiting officer. His clear English, American roots, and powerful speaking skills are believed to have attracted many young Muslims from within the U.S. to the cause of jihad.

Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the 19-year-old Nigerian who attempted to blow up the flight to Detroit in 2009, may have met al-Awlaki, and was trained at camps run by the cleric, when he traveled to Yemen just before his attack.

Al-Awlaki's voluminous online preaching, in both video and print form, is also thought to have inspired Ft. Hood shooter Nidal Hasan, and Time Square car bomber Faisal Shahzad.

His death will deal AQAP a serious blow, particularly, says CBS News terrorism analyst Juan Zarate, his work to draw young Muslims into the jihadi mindset.

"His role as a propagandist actually will be very difficult to fill," says Zarate.

Ben Venzke, who heads intelligence contracting group IntelCenter in the Washington area, says al-Awlaki's death will not, however, seriously diminish the threat posed by the al Qaeda franchise.

"AQAP remains one of the most dangerous al Qaeda regional arms both in its region and for the direct threat it poses to the U.S. following three recent failed attacks," said Venzke, who monitors jihadi propaganda for myriad U.S. government agencies. "AQAP leader Nasir al-Wuhayshi, who is responsible for expanding the group's focus to conduct attacks on U.S. soil, remains in charge of the group and further attempts to conduct attacks in the U.S. are expected."





http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/09/30/501364/main20113732.shtml
 
He should have known it was coming, once the American propaganda/public opinion machine start to kick up on you, you are done. I see no direct evidence linking him to any terrorist attacks. Was he on tape taking credit like Bin Laden? Did he write something on a website?

1. Engage in disinformation/propaganda to ensure the American people disassociate with your death.

2. Killed.

He was an American citizen living overseas that got killed by the military. He should have been captured, tried in a civilian court. Future presidents can use this killing as a precedent for other things.

I have seen personally the propaganda/public opinion machine that operates in the country.
 
Man this dude has been brainwashing people to kill themselves for years. He met with the Nigerian kid who tried to blow up the plane landing in Detroit. If he was American he should of calmed the hell down trying to kill innocent people. I been wanting this dude dead for a minute. This coward convinces other people to kill themselves while he's chilling. I hope he saw the drone before they blew his coward azz up . They got the top bomb maker too good riddance.
On a side note they should of tried him without his presence then killed him. I do have a small problem with this because no judicial process took place. I could see where this could be exploited in the future to kill innocent folks. That being said this dude got what he deserved.
 
He was an American citizen living overseas that got killed by the military. He should have been captured, tried in a civilian court. Future presidents can use this killing as a precedent for other things.

You make a good point here. The president or any other offical of government being able to order a citizen killed absent due process can be troubling, to say the least. But, does a citizen who goes to war, especially in a foreign land, against his country remain, just a citizen, or does he/she become a citizen who is then an "enemy combatant" ???

Should the law demand that citizens-turned-combatants be captured and tried; or should the law demand that they be treated like and meet the same fate as any other enemy combatant ?


I have seen personally the propaganda/public opinion machine that operates in the country.

Really? Expound.
 
Perfect example is the Iraq War, stating Saddam had Weapons of Mass Destruction, when none were found. They knew what he had, but needed Congress to sign off on it. The military calls it winning the hearts and minds, used extensively in War, and it is used domestically on people without them even knowing it.

MLK is another example, the FBI associated him with Communism to put him under surveillance bugged his rooms, followed him around. Sent letters telling him to kill himself. If they didn't associate him with Communism, than their actions would not be supported and obvious. Last year of his life, his popularity plummeted, (disassociation), than he was gunned down. The gunman lived overseas, had fake passports, way too sophisticated for some racist hick off the street if you ask me.

The government can come along associate you with terrorism, or other heinous act, broadcast that on TV, than down the road after people turn on you, kill you. Employers do this all the time with people they are going to fire and get rid of.
 
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Guess the government didn't need him anymore. He put in much work for them. Hitler would be so proud of the effects propaganda is having on the American citizens by their government.
 
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There are troubling legal aspects to this but I have no sympathy for al-Awlaki or Samir Khan (he was from Charlotte so the local news has been on him for a while). He didn't just speak out against America, he was an active combatant. He placed himself in the warzone and got killed. Oh well.
 
treason is punishable by death.

why are you troubled that someone born in this country renounced it and joined a foreign paramilitary organization with an agenda to kill American citizens was treated by an enemy.

would an American citizen that joined a foreign army be exempt from being killed?

because dude did not go into a court and formally renounce his citizenship mean less than him renouncing it in action.

it really is a stretch to compare what he was doing and calling for to the civil disobedience of MLK ,The Panthers or any other group that protests conditions in the country they live in.
 
treason is punishable by death.

why are you troubled that someone born in this country renounced it and joined a foreign paramilitary organization with an agenda to kill American citizens was treated by an enemy.

would an American citizen that joined a foreign army be exempt from being killed?

because dude did not go into a court and formally renounce his citizenship mean less than him renouncing it in action.

it really is a stretch to compare what he was doing and calling for to the civil disobedience of MLK ,The Panthers or any other group that protests conditions in the country they live in.

:yes:
 
After stopping some plot (entrapment) of radio controlled airplanes, the US send drones in to kill al-Awlaki - basically a radio controlled airplanes....

:lol::lol::lol:

It looks like retaliation, plain and simple. I think there should have been an attempt to capture this guy.

The government timed it; came out with some prosecution over some plot to use radio controlled planes than killed al-Awlaki (an American) when people were shaken up. Nice work...


I can't believe people are signing off on this, it is like the case being presented for the Iraq War, people trusting politicians.


The government is a ruthless vato, it don't respect nada. That is why I don't shake their hands.

:lol::lol:
 
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