Al Qaeda's branch in Yemen, which officials have called the
terror group's most dangerous affiliate, has issued two threatening new
communiques praising recent lone-wolf style attacks against the West and
calling for more of them.
"We urge
you to strike America in its own home and beyond," says a letter
attributed to Ibrahim al-Asiri, the master bomb-maker with al Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula (AQAP).
The letter,
according to a translation by SITE Intelligence Group, states, "America is
first."
CNN is unable to
independently verify that Asiri himself wrote it, but the letter has drawn the
attention of terror trackers such as MEMRI, Flashpoint and SITE.
Another senior
AQAP leader, Khaled Batarfi, released a video, which appears to have been shot
in a studio, carrying a similar statement. Batarfi does not attribute the
message of the video to Asiri, despite its similarities to the letter.
AQAP sprung
Batarfi from a Yemeni jail in April.
A U.S. counterterrorism official described the letter as
"consistent with rhetoric the new leader stated upon taking over al
Qaeda's most active affiliate that is known to threaten Western
interests."
A big bounty
Asiri has a $5 million bounty on his
head, and analysts say if he did write the letter, he may have been putting
himself at risk.
"The
concern for Asiri would be that somehow the message would be traceable back to
him -- whether by courier, or some digital stamp inside of the message,"
said Katherine Zimmerman of the American Enterprise Institute. "We have
seen U.S. drone strikes kill a series of top al Qaeda leaders in Yemen over the
past few months."
But if the letter is genuine, it would indicate that Asiri, who
rarely makes public statements, is still alive.
Intelligence
officials say Asiri was a key player in the 2009 Christmas Day bomb attempt in
which a passenger from Africa almost managed to detonate a bomb aboard a
Detroit-bound plane that he'd hidden in his underwear. Asiri was also behind
the placing of bombs in printer cartridges aboard planes headed for the United
States that were intercepted before they reached their targets.
He even designed
a bomb to be carried on the body of his own brother, Abdullah al-Asiri, in
attempt to kill Saudi Arabia's counterterrorism chief in 2009. The bomb killed
his brother, but the Saudi minister survived.
A
dangerous foe
"He's without question the most
dangerous terrorist operative that the United States faces today," said
CNN terrorism analyst Paul Cruickshank. "Intelligence suggests that he is
developing a new generation of explosive devices including a new generation of
underwear and shoe-bomb devices."
Zimmerman says
Asiri is believed to have taught his skills to a cadre of bomb-makers.
"He has
trained a series of individuals who are able to do what he does, which is bring
imagination and innovation to an explosive device that could make it through
U.S. or Western security," she said.
Batarfi is
featured in a second threatening video. In it, he praises the July attack in
Chattanooga, Tennessee, in which a gunman killed five American servicemen at a
military installation, as "a blessed Jihadi operation." And he also
praises two gunmen who tried to mount an attack in Garland, Texas, in May for
their "sacrifice and heroism."
"Blood for
blood," Batarfi says in a speech posted online.
He then
encourages further lone-wolf attacks against America and the West. "To the
warriors of Lone Jihad: may Allah bless and guide your efforts," he says.
A U.S.
intelligence official said this video is believed to be genuine.
"Batarfi
has become a main AQAP media figure since his escape from a Yemeni prison this
spring," the official said.
While a number
of AQAP leaders have been targeted by strikes this year, the fighting in Yemen
between warring factions has deprived the United States of a partner on the
ground to work with on tracking and targeting militants.
James Clapper,
the director of national intelligence, recently told a conference in Aspen,
Colorado, that "in terms of proximate threat, I would view ... AQAP --
even though they're kind of consumed right now with what's going on in Yemen
with the Houthis -- as probably our most concerning al Qaeda element in terms
of threat to the homeland."
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