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Yemen doubts its links to explosive packages

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ASSOCIATED PRESS
San'a International airport, Yemen seen in this Tuesday, June 30, 2009 file photo. A suspicious package originating in Yemen containing a toner cartridge with wires and powder was found during routine screening of air cargo in the United Kingdom, prompting authorities to scour three planes and a truck in the United States on Friday Oct 29 2010. A further package also sent from Yemen was intercepted in Dubai. U.S. officials said they were increasingly confident that the packages were part of a plot by Yemen's al-Qaida branch, the same group responsible for an attempted bombing of a U.S.-bound airliner last Christmas. (AP Photo/ File)

SAN’A, Yemen — The Yemeni government expressed astonishment Thursday at reports linking it to two explosive packages found on cargo planes bound for the U.S.

 

Authorities in Britain and Dubai seized two explosive packages addressed to Chicago area synagogues on cargo jets. They said the packages originated from Yemen carried by Fedex and UPS parcel services.

 

In a statement distributed to journalists and appearing on the official website, the government said there were no UPS cargo planes that had taken off from Yemen or any indirect or direct flights to British or American airports.

 

The statement warned against “rush decisions in a case as sensitive as this one and before investigations reveal the truth.”

 

The government also promised an investigation into allegations that the packages had originated in Yemen.

 

The discovery of the packages has once more put the spotlight on the violence-wracked, poverty-stricken country on the Arabian Peninsula.

 

If the explosive devices shipped in cargo planes from Yemen are conclusively linked by investigators to the al-Qaida faction in Yemen, it could represent a new tactic by al-Qaida in the Arab Peninsula.

 

The group previously has spawned plots against commercial U.S-bound flights and had a role in mass shootings in several American cities.

 

—In the past 18 months, the al-Qaida offshoot in Yemen has grown stronger, and its members have been implicated in several plots against U.S. targets, including the futile attack last Dec. 25 on an airliner landing in Detroit, Michigan.

 

—Next to Osama bin Laden and his al-Qaida leaders in Pakistan, al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula is considered the most active al-Qaida threat to the United States and its Western allies, according to the Obama administration.

 

—The United States has reinforced its military and intelligence assistance to Yemen, including the potential addition of armed Predator drones to be operated by the CIA. The Pentagon is sending more than $150 million in military aid, including helicopters, planes and other equipment.

 

—There have been a number of airstrikes into Yemen that have taken out insurgent leaders, with either coordination from the United States or direct involvement, but officials will not talk about them.

 

—AQAP includes as many as 300 members or cells operating out of Yemen. A top leader is Anwar al-Awlaki, the American-born radical cleric who is believed to have helped plan the Dec. 25 attack and inspired other attacks, including the shooting massacre at Fort Hood, Texas, last year. He is on a U.S. government secret list of targets to be captured or killed.

 

—During the past year, the number of elite U.S. trainers moving in and out of Yemen has doubled, from 25 to about 50 now. And the U.S. forces are providing more complex instruction that combines tactical ground and air operations.

 

—Yemen is the poorest Arab country, with 45.2 percent living below the poverty line, according to the CIA factbook.

 

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