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The new training program in Yemen will cost about $75 million, the defense official said. And the goal is to create a national counterterror unit that will be better able and equipped to travel out to tribal regions and ferret out insurgents hiding there. To date the U.S. military, with about 100 trainers rotating in and out of Yemen, has been working with that country's special operations forces and their military, particularly aviation units. The new program would become part of that overall training effort, but officials believe it will provide a critical step toward getting at militants in safe havens, particularly in the Abyan and Shabwah provinces. Future spending totals are in flux as Congress has not yet approved the 2011 defense budget. Military transport has been a persistent challenge for the Yemenis, but just in the last month, the U.S. delivered four Huey helicopters to Yemen and has been training the aviation units. The aircraft will help the Yemeni forces get troops, equipment and supplies to combat outposts in the more remote tribal regions. The helicopters also will eventually allow Yemen to do more operations that involve precise strikes with a small number of troops, the defense official said. The official said that the U.S. is assessing now how it can best help Yemen battle AQAP. The counterterror unit expansion is a key element of that, along with deciding how many military outposts are needed in the tribal regions, and how big the counterterror force should be. The overall U.S. effort also includes economic and governance assistance.
Officials also say that while AQAP is one of the most active al-Qaida franchises, there has been little insurgent travel between Yemen and Pakistan, where Osama bin Laden and his top lieutenants are believed to be hiding. Persistent assaults by the U.S. and Pakistan -- including an escalating campaign of drone strikes into the Pakistani border region
-- have put pressure on core al-Qaida, making it more difficult for them to travel or communicate with others.
[Associated
Press;
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