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Obama defends US drone use
In a major policy speech on Thursday, Obama said the United States faced a new threat from "diverse" terror franchises.
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Twenty dead in Yemen 'al-Qaeda' attack
Suspected al-Qaeda militants have attacked the intelligence headquarters in Yemen's southern city of Aden, killing at least 20.
Suspected al-Qaeda militants have attacked the intelligence headquarters of Yemen's southern city of Aden, killing at least 20 people.
The attack on Saturday in the heart of the port city of Aden, underscored al-Qaeda's ability to launch deadly strikes despite a two-month Yemeni military offensive.
The strikes by Yemeni government forces are backed by the US and this year dislodged militants who had taken over a string of southern towns near Aden.
In a co-ordinated attack, two groups of masked militants stormed the intelligence building from two sides, firing automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades, according to intelligence officials in the city and witnesses from the adjacent state TV and radio building.
While one group clashed with guards of the intelligence building's main gate, a second threw a bomb at a small mosque, killing soldiers who were resting and sleeping inside, officials said.
The gunmen then sprayed their victims with bullets before detonating a car bomb in front of the intelligence building, collapsing its facade, the officials reported.
Witnesses said they saw gunmen open fire on three soldiers at a front gate, killing them on the spot, before launching rocket-propelled grenades at the building and mistakenly hitting the television offices. Two female reporters were critically wounded, witnesses said.
By the end of the day, 20 were dead. All were military and security men except for one civilian, while six other civilians were injured aside from the reporters.
The same intelligence building had come under attack in 2010 by al-Qaeda. Saturday's attack, which took nearly 45 minutes, carries the fingerprints of the group, a security official said.
The various officials and the witnesses, who are government employees, all spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to talk to the press.
The US considers al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula as the terror network's most dangerous offshoot, held responsible for several failed attacks on American territory.
Al-Qaeda-linked militants took advantage of political turmoil in Yemen to overrun several major towns in Abyan province, neighbouring Aden. They held many of the towns for months until the military drove them out of most areas since the offensive started in May.
Government forces recaptured the Abyan provincial capital of Zinjibar and the nearby town of Jaar. More than 100,000 people had fled the violence there, with many taking refuge in makeshift shelters and schools in Aden.
Many of the militants escaped into nearby mountains and have continued to carry out attacks.
Suicide bombings and assassinations have targeted top officials in Aden tasked with fighting al-Qaeda. An al-Qaeda front group, Ansar al-Shariah, was behind the kidnapping of a Saudi Arabian diplomat in the port of Aden in March.
Yemen's interior ministry warned of possible attacks during the four-day Muslim holiday of Eid al-Iftar, which comes as the holy month of Ramadan ends this weekend.
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