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The political impasse and commitment of elite forces to the fight in Sanaa has left al-Qaida free to try to entrench its presence in a country that appears inching toward collapse. Emboldened, the militants have made inroads deep in the Yemeni hinterland and on its rugged mountain ranges. In Abyan, residents said suspected al-Qaida militants were openly training in camps and using live ammunition for target practice. They were also carrying out identity checks on travelers on roads leading to neighboring provinces. "They have a great deal of influence and they use modern vehicles for transport as well as satellite telephones," said Abdullah al-Amari, an Abyan-based rights activist. Residents of the southern province of Shabwa said suspected al-Qaida militants and sympathizers had set up checkpoints on the road to the nearby province of Hadramawt. They also controlled the towns of Rawdah and Houtah, where they freely roamed the streets. Shabwa-based army Lt. Col. Hassan Radwan said his unit knew the whereabouts of al-Qaida fighters in the province as well as their training camps. "But when we tell our commanders, they tell us that they are just local tribesmen," he said. At Hadramawt, a southern province on the Arabian Sea coast, activist Nasser Baqezqouz said the militants were so much at ease in the area that "they play dominoes in cafes without any fear." Saleh's regime has long taken an ambivalent approach toward militants, making him a less-than-reliable partner in the U.S. fight against al-Qaida. There is a blurred line between Yemen's large and diverse community of militants and al-Qaida, which is thought to have no more than 300 hard-core members in Yemen. The militants have varying levels of links to the terror network. Saleh has allied with many of these groups to promote his own interests against political rivals that include moderate Islamists, leftist parties and secular-minded intellectuals. He has sought the militants' help to "Islamize" the south, where secular traditions endure two decades after it was united with the conservative north. The upheaval of the past months has left Saleh too preoccupied to focus on the fight against al-Qaida, and the United States has stepped up its covert operations in Yemen. American officials said Thursday that a U.S. airstrike on June 3 killed a midlevel al-Qaida operative named Abu Ali al-Harithia in southern Yemen. A drone strike by U.S. special operations forces on May 5 targeted al-Awlaki, but a malfunction caused rockets to miss him by a matter of minutes, two American officials told The Associated Press. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence matters. The recent U.S. operations in Yemen come after a nearly yearlong pause in American airstrikes, which were halted amid concerns that poor intelligence had led to bungled missions and civilian deaths that were undercutting the goals of the secret campaign.
[Associated
Press;
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