Yemeni al Qaeda leader killed in suspected drone strike

The Yemeni leader of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), Nasser al-Wuhayshi, who was once an associate of Osama bin Laden, was killed in a suspected US drone strike, CNN reported on June 15, citing two Yemeni national security officials.

If confirmed, it would be a major blow to one of the most active branches of the network founded by Osama bin Laden that had claimed the attack on a French satirical magazine and plotted against international airlines.

CNN said the attack occurred on June 12 in the Hadramout region in eastern Yemen.

Reuters could not independently confirm the report, but some supporters of the group have published mourning notices on social media.

The United States was assessing reports of his death, said a US official, speaking on condition of anonymity and declining to comment on any possible US involvement.

The US military was not involved in any strike, a second official said. It was unclear whether a strike may have been carried out by the Central Intelligence Agency.

Wuhayshi, according to Gregory Johnson, author of a book on AQAP, was born in southern Yemen and traveled to Afghanistan for the first time in 1998 to join al Qaeda.

There, he met bin Laden and acted as his aide-de-camp until 2001, when the group was scattered after the US-led invasion of Afghanistan following the September 11 attacks on the United States.

He became head of AQAP in 2009, several years after a daring prison break from a jail in Yemen.

The group has orchestrated a number of spectacular attacks inside Yemen in recent years, targeting government ministries, military camps and other institutions in which hundreds of people were killed.

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