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Raid in Yemen: Risky From the Start and Costly in the End


By ERIC SCHMITT and DAVID E. SANGER FEB. 1, 2017

WASHINGTON — Just five days after taking office, over dinner with his newly
installed secretary of defense and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, President
Trump was presented with the first of what will be many life* or* death decisions:
whether to approve a commando raid that risked the lives of American Special
Operations forces and foreign civilians alike.

President Barack Obama’s national security aides had reviewed the plans for a
risky attack on a small, heavily guarded brick home of a senior Qaeda collaborator in
a mountainous village in a remote part of central Yemen. But Mr. Obama did not act
because the Pentagon wanted to launch the attack on a moonless night and the next
one would come after his term had ended.

With two of his closest advisers, Jared Kushner and Stephen K. Bannon, joining
the dinner at the White House along with Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and Gen.
Joseph F. Dunford Jr., Mr. Trump approved sending in the Navy’s SEAL Team 6,
hoping the raid early last Sunday would scoop up cellphones and laptop computers
that could yield valuable clues about one of the world’s most dangerous terrorist
groups. Vice President Mike Pence and Michael T. Flynn, the national security
adviser, also attended the dinner.

As it turned out, almost everything that could go wrong did. And on Wednesday,
Mr. Trump flew to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware to be present as the body of the
American commando killed in the raid was returned home, the first military death
on the new commander in chief’s watch.
The death of Chief Petty Officer William Owens came after a chain of mishaps and
misjudgments that plunged the elite commandos into a ferocious 50*minute firefight
that also left three others wounded and a $75 million aircraft deliberately destroyed.
There are allegations — which the Pentagon acknowledged on Wednesday night are
most likely correct — that the mission also killed several civilians, including some
children. The dead include, by the account of Al Qaeda’s branch in Yemen, the 8*
year*old daughter of Anwar al*Awlaki, the American*born Qaeda leader who was
killed in a targeted drone strike in 2011.
Mr. Trump on Sunday hailed his first counterterrorism operation as a success,
claiming the commandos captured “important intelligence that will assist the U.S. in
preventing terrorism against its citizens and people around the world.” A statement
by the military’s Central Command on Wednesday night that acknowledged the
likelihood of civilian casualties also said that the recovered materials had provided
some initial information helpful to counterterrorism analysts. The statement did not
provide details.

But the mission’s casualties raise doubts about the months of detailed planning
that went into the operation during the Obama administration and whether the right
questions were raised before its approval. Typically, the president’s advisers lay out
the risks, but Pentagon officials declined to characterize any discussions with Mr.
Trump.

A senior administration official said on Wednesday night that the Defense
Department had conducted a legal review of the operation that Mr. Trump approved
and that a Pentagon lawyer had signed off on it.

Mr. Trump’s new national security team, led by Mr. Flynn, the former head of
the Defense Intelligence Agency and a retired general with experience in
counterterrorism raids, has said that it wants to speed the decision* making when it
comes to such strikes, delegating more power to lower*level officials so that the
military may respond more quickly. Indeed, the Pentagon is drafting such plans to
But doing that also raises the possibility of error. “You can mitigate risk in missions
like this, but you can’t mitigate risk down to zero,” said William Wechsler, a former
top counterterrorism official at the Pentagon.

In this case, the assault force of several dozen commandos, which also included
elite soldiers from the United Arab Emirates, was jinxed from the start. Qaeda
fighters were somehow tipped off to the stealthy advance toward the village —
perhaps by the whine of American drones that local tribal leaders said were flying
lower and louder than usual.

Through a communications intercept, the commandos knew that the mission
had been somehow compromised, but pressed on toward their target roughly five
miles from where they had been flown into the area. “They kind of knew they were
screwed from the beginning,” one former SEAL Team 6 official said.
With the crucial element of surprise lost, the Americans and Emiratis found
themselves in a gun battle with Qaeda fighters who took up positions in other
houses, a clinic, a school and a mosque, often using women and children as cover,
American military officials said in interviews this week.

The commandos were taken aback when some of the women grabbed weapons
and started firing, multiplying the militant firepower beyond what they had
expected. The Americans called in airstrikes from helicopter gunships and fighter
aircraft that helped kill some 14 Qaeda fighters, but not before an MV*22 Osprey
aircraft involved in the operation experienced a “hard landing,” injuring three more
American personnel on board. The Osprey, which the Marine Corps said cost $75
million, was badly damaged and had to be destroyed by an airstrike.

The raid, some details of which were first reported by The Washington Post,
also destroyed much of the village of Yakla, and left senior Yemeni government
officials seething. Yemen’s foreign minister, Abdul Malik Al Mekhlafi, condemned
the raid on Monday in a post on his official Twitter account as “extrajudicial
killings.”

Baraa Shiban, a Yemeni fellow for Reprieve, a London*based human rights
who told him: “People were afraid to leave their houses because the sound of
choppers and drones were all over the sky. Everyone feared of being hit by the
drones or shot by the soldiers on the ground.”

After initially denying there were any civilian casualties, Pentagon officials
backtracked somewhat on Sunday after reports from the Yemeni authorities begin
trickling in and grisly photographs of bloody children purportedly killed in the
attack appeared on social media sites affiliated with Al Qaeda’s branch in Yemen.
Capt. Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman, said on Monday that some of the
women were combatants.

The operation was the first known American *led ground mission in Yemen since
December 2014, when members of SEAL Team 6 stormed a village in southern
Yemen in an effort to free an American photojournalist held hostage by Al Qaeda.
But the raid ended with the kidnappers killing the journalist and a South African
held with him.

That mission and the raid over the weekend revealed the shortcomings of
secretive military operations in Yemen. The United States was forced to withdraw
the last 125 Special Operations advisers from the country in March 2015 after
Houthi rebels ousted the government of President Abdu Rabbu Mansour Hadi, the
Americans’ main counterterrorism partner.

The loss of Yemen as a base for American counterterrorism training, advising
and intelligence*gathering was a significant blow to blunting the advance of Al
Qaeda’s branch in the country and keeping tabs on their plots. The Pentagon has
tried to start rebuilding its counterterrorism operations in Yemen, however; last
year, American Special Operations forces helped Emirati troops evict Qaeda fighters
from the port city of Mukalla.

Follow Eric Schmitt @EricSchmittNYT and David E. Sanger @SangerNYT on Twitter
 
Instead of making the decision in the situation room, consulting with the military folks, Trump made the decision at the dining table with his bunch of billionaires.

Result: One soldier dead and an $75 million chopper destroyed.

And Trump called it a success!
 
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