Al-Qaeda’s Yemen branch has retreated from an oil-rich southern province in the face of an assault by a US-backed elite government force, a senior military official said Monday.
Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), seen by the US as the global network’s most dangerous franchise, has exploited Yemen’s war to expand its presence in the country’s south.But the elite force, trained by the UAE, on Thursday launched a “major operation” against the terrorists in Shabwa province.
The group staged a “tactical retreat” from the province with no major clashes, the military official said, requesting anonymity, as he was not authorized to talk to the press.The terrorists appear to have moved even further south into the neighboring Abyan province.
Residents of an Abyan town near the Shabwa border said they counted at least 45 cars carrying armed AQAP militants through their district.AQAP’s Shabwa stronghold has been a focal point in a long-running American-led drone war, which has intensified since US President Donald Trump took office in January.
A US air raid on the province in June killed AQAP emir Abu Khattab Al-Awlaqi, according to the Pentagon.Shabwa has also been the site of AQAP attacks in recent months, with the Yemen government reporting seven soldiers killed there in a suicide attack last
week.
The Pentagon on Thursday confirmed that the US was helping Emirati and government forces battle AQAP in Shabwa.The UAE, part of a Saudi-led military alliance battling Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen, said the operation was being “closely supported by a combined UAE and US enabling force.”
Pentagon spokesman Navy Capt. Jeff Davis said Friday that the operation involved “a very small number” of US forces on the ground whose main task was to help the flow of information.
The assault aimed to “degrade” AQAP’s ability to coordinate terror attacks abroad, he said, adding that the US had conducted more than 80 strikes in Yemen since February 28.
US President Donald Trump ordered a special forces raid on Yemen in his first month in office which ended in the deaths of a US Navy SEAL and several Yemeni civilians in Baida province, bordering Shabwa and Abyan.
More than 8,000 people have been killed in the Yemen war since Saudi Arabia and its allies intervened in 2015 to support the government against Houthi rebels who had seized the capital and swathes of the country’s north.
Yemen also faces a deadly cholera outbreak and stands at the brink of famine.
The UN has called it “the largest humanitarian crisis in the world.”