Drone kills 5 militants in Yemen

Yemeni tribesmen attend a tribal meeting following a police raid on a hideout of al-Qaida militants in Arhab region, north of Sanaa, Yemen, Tuesday, May 27, 2014. Yemen said on Sunday that it killed one of the country’s most wanted al-Qaida militants, hours after military officials said anti-terrorism units supported by army troops and US drones launched an attack against hideouts of the group in the mountainous Arhab region north of Sanaa, leaving at least five militants and six soldiers killed. AP/Hani Mohammed

SANAA, Yemen — A suspected U.S. drone in Yemen’s south targeted a car carrying al-Qaida militants Saturday, killing all five passengers, Yemeni security officials said.

The officials said the attack took place in a mountainous area in al-Saied in the southern Shabwa province. One of those killed in the attack was a suspected al-Qaida leader named Musaad al-Habashi, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the press.

The U.S. considers Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula to be the group’s most dangerous branch in the world and has linked it to a number of botched or foiled attacks on the U.S. homeland.

The U.S., which trains Yemen’s counterterrorism forces, has launched more than 100 drone strikes against suspected al-Qaida targets in the impoverished country since 2002, according to the New America Foundation, a nonpartisan public policy institute.

The militant group overran large swaths of territory in southern Yemen in 2011, taking advantage of politicalturmoil that forced longtime leader Ali Abdullah Saleh to step down. Since, the Yemeni military has pushed back, and over the past few weeks has stepped up an offensive to rout the fighters from their strongholds. Al-Qaida militants have also hiked up their attacks against troops and government officials.

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