Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Car Bomb Attack On U.S. Embassy In Yemen, No U.S. Casualties


Here we go again. The U.S. embassy in Yemen was attacked by car bombers today - most reports say it was one car bomb, but others are saying a second car bomb was involved as well. Of the ten people killed, six were Yemeni guards at the embassy and four were civilians. Here's some of the details from Breitbart:


A car bomb targeting the U.S. Embassy hit the front gate of the compound in Yemen's capital Wednesday, a U.S. spokesman said. A senior Yemeni security official said six Yemeni guards and four civilians were killed.

Ryan Gliha, the embassy spokesman, told The Associated Press by telephone that there was a second explosion that followed the initial one, but did not know what caused it.
Another Yemeni security official said the embassy was hit by two car bombs and that heavy gunfire lasting around 10 minutes followed the blasts.

The U.S. Embassy in Yemen, which is the ancestral homeland of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, has been the focus of violence in the past. The terror network is active in the impoverished nation in the south and southwestern corner of the Arabian Peninsula.

We see the mention of al Qaeda here and I have no doubt that this was an al Qaeda operation - whether it was their direct actions or they master minded it. Multiple car bombings are the trademark of al Qaeda and as we saw a number of months ago, al Qaeda's #2 leader, al Zawahiri, had called for Arab islamists to travel to Yemen to fight the jihad.

The fact that it was the U.S. embassy is another signal that it was al Qaeda.

This attack certainly has got to signal a high alert for every American embassy in any Arab country over the next few months - al Qaeda's big anniversary of 9/11 came and went without a sound from al Qaeda leadership and I don't know if this was supposed to be their big splash for 2008 but it's my contention that there will be more of these bombings planned - my thoughts are that Turkey and Pakistan would be prime targets.


Official: 10 dead in attack on US Embassy in Yemen

SAN'A, Yemen (AP) - A car bomb targeting the U.S. Embassy hit the front gate of the compound in Yemen's capital Wednesday, a U.S. spokesman said. A senior Yemeni security official said six Yemeni guards and four civilians were killed.
The Yemeni guards were assigned to sentry duty outside the embassy by the Interior Ministry. The civilians were three Yemenis and one Indian national, the Yemeni security official said.
The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.
Ryan Gliha, the embassy spokesman, told The Associated Press by telephone that there was a second explosion that followed the initial one, but did not know what caused it.
Another Yemeni security official said the embassy was hit by two car bombs and that heavy gunfire lasting around 10 minutes followed the blasts.
Several nearby homes were badly damaged by the blasts, he said, but had no information on whether the heavily guarded embassy sustained damage too.
A medical official, meanwhile, said at least seven Yemeni nationals were wounded and taken to the city's Republican hospital. They are residents of a housing compound near the embassy and included children, he said.
Both the security and medical officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the information to the media.
Explosions and heavy gunfire were heard near the embassy in the eastern section of San'a and police swiftly cordoned off the area, according to a government security official and an AP reporter at the scene.
The AP reporter said ambulance cars rushed to the area after the blasts and that hundreds of heavily armed security forces were deployed around the compound. Police kept reporters well away from the immediate area of the embassy, he said.
Regional TV news networks Al-Jazeera and Al-Arabiya showed shaky footage of the embassy's area following the blasts, with a heavy cloud of black smoke rising from a spot just beyond concrete blocks painted yellow.
The embassy is ringed by two layers of these blocks, according to San'a residents familiar with the area.
The networks also reported that a fire broke out in one of the embassy's buildings. The AP reporter said a fire truck was seen headed to the scene, but Gliha, the embassy spokesman, denied the report.
They also reported that gunmen in police uniforms arrived at the scene soon after the first blast and immediately fired at the embassy guards. This could not be independently confirmed.
The U.S. Embassy in Yemen, which is the ancestral homeland of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, has been the focus of violence in the past. The terror network is active in the impoverished nation in the south and southwestern corner of the Arabian Peninsula.
In March, three mortar rounds targeting the U.S. Embassy crashed into a high school for girls next door, killing a Yemeni security guard and wounding more than a dozen girls.

No comments: