US drone in Yemen missed al Qaeda’s al-Awlaki-report

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – The U.S. drone aircraft  attack that killed two midlevel al Qaeda militants in Yemen on  Thursday was targeting the leader of al Qaeda in the Arabian  Peninsula, a U.S.-born radical known for encouraging attacks on  the United States, U.S. media reported.

CBS News and The Wall Street Journal, citing Yemeni and  U.S. officials, said yesterday that Anwar al-Awlaki was not hit  when a missile was fired at a car in southern Yemen on  Thursday, killing two brothers believed to be al Qaeda  militants.

“We were hoping it was him,” a U.S. official told CBS  News.

The U.S. Defense Department declined to comment on the  reports.

Anwar al-Awlak

Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, or AQAP, is estimated to  number about 300 fighters with strongholds in remote mountain  regions in the provinces of Shabwa, Abyan, Jouf and Marib. It  is thought to be behind numerous attacks on goverment targets.

The group is said to have inspired attacks by Muslims  inside the United States — including the Fort Hood, Texas,  shootings in which an Army psychiatrist is accused of killing  13 people and wounding 32 — and twice smuggled explosives  aboard aircraft headed to the United States.

Yemen’s Defense Ministry confirmed Thursday’s drone attack  had killed two al Qaeda militants, identifying them as brothers  Musa’id and Abdullah Mubarak al-Daghari.

Washington considers the Yemen-based al Qaeda branch the  world’s most active terror cell.

With the killing in Pakistan earlier this week of al Qaeda  leader Osama bin Laden, some officials believe Awlaki’s group  now represents the gravest danger to the United States and  other Western nations.