A wave of CIA drone strikes targeting al-Qaeda figures in Yemen is
stoking widespread anger there that U.S. policy is cruel and misguided,
prioritizing counterterrorism over a genuine solution to the country's
raging political crisis.
Politics has never been a concern to Sam al-Homiganyi and his fellow
teenagers. This month, though, they were shocked by the sudden death of
a friend and are struggling to understand why.
Fighting back tears, his gaze fixed downward, al-Homiganyi, a
lean-looking 15-year-old from the outskirts of Sana'a, told TIME, "He
was my best friend, we played football together everyday." Another of
his friends spoke up, gesturing to the gloomy group of jeans-clad boys
around him: "He was the same as us. He liked swimming, playing computer
games, watching movies ... you know, normal stuff." (See photos of Yemen on the brink.)
The dead friend was Abdulrahman al-Awlaki, a 16-year-old born in
Denver, the third American killed in as many weeks by suspected CIA
drone strikes in Yemen. His father, the radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki,
also an American citizen, was killed earlier this month, along with
alleged al-Qaeda propagandist Samir Khan, who was from New York. When
Abdulrahman's death was first reported in the Western press, his age was
given as 21 by local Yemeni officials.
Afterward, however, the Awlaki
family put out a copy of Abdulrahman's birth certificate.
According to his relatives, Abdulrahman left the family home in the
Sana'a area on Sept. 15 in search of his fugitive father who was hiding
out with his tribe, the Awalak, in the remote, rugged southern province
of Shabwa. Days after the teenager began his quest, however, his
father was killed in a U.S. drone strike. Then, just two weeks later,
the Yemeni government claimed another air strike killed a senior
al-Qaeda militant. Abdulrahman, his teenage cousin and six others died
in the attack as well. A U.S. official said the young man "was in the
wrong place at the wrong time," and that the U.S. was trying to kill a
legitimate terrorist — al-Qaeda leader Ibrahim al-Banna, who also died —
in the strike that apparently killed the American teenager. (See a video on the volatile uprisings in Yemen.)
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