U.S. drone targets in Yemen raise questions
Greg Miller, Wash. Post, 6/3/12
There is little doubt among U.S. intelligence officials that Kaid and Nabil al-Dhahab brothers who reportedly survived a U.S. airstrike in Yemen on Memorial Day are associated with the al-Qaeda insurgency in that country. Less clear is the extent to which they are plotting against the United States.
Its still an open question, a U.S. counterterrorism official said. The siblings were related by marriage to Anwar al-Awlaki, an al-Qaeda operative killed in September, but they have not been connectedto a major plot. Their focus has been more local, the official said. But look at their associations and what that portends.
The quickening pace of the U.S. drone campaign in Yemen this year has raised new questions about who is being targeted and why. A review of strikes there so far suggests that the Obama administration has embraced a broader definition of what constitutes a terrorism threat that warrants a lethal response.
In more than 20 U.S. airstrikes over a span of five months, three high-value terrorism targets have been killed, U.S. officials said. A growing number of attacks have been aimed at lower-level figures who are suspected of having links to terrorism operatives but are seen mainly as leaders of factions focused on gaining territory in Yemens internal struggle.
full: http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/us-drone-targets-in-yemen-raise-questions/2012/06/02/gJQAP0jz9U_singlePage.html