Sunday, December 7, 2014

So much for Community Organizers.

Not only did Obama give his approval for this mission. Being under intense political pressure to "do something, anything to make his presidency relevant", he masterminded the failed attempt. A community organizer organizing a rescue in Yemen. Think about that. What's next? Whatever it is, be assured that the last 2 years of Obama could be an especially perilous time for the USA. 
U.S. Special Forces members got within about 100 meters of the Yemen compound in which al Qaeda affiliates were holding American hostage Luke Somers before his captors discovered them and foiled the raid, Defense Department officials said Saturday.
The rescue mission was the second in recent weeks and an eleventh-hour attempt to save Somers, following a threat late Wednesday by al Qaeda Arab Peninsula, backed by intelligence reports, that he would be killed on Saturday morning unless unspecified demands were met.
Defense officials said the team of roughly 40 U.S. commandos touched down in Osprey helicopters about 10 kilometers from the new hostage site, then continued on foot across rugged terrain under the cover of night.
At some point early in the roughly five-to-10-minute firefight, an al Qaeda member apparently went into the holding chamber and shot Somers, 33, and South African Pierre Korkie.
Both were alive and received emergency care from surgeons onboard the V-22 helicopters but neither could be saved, officials said.
One victim died en route to the USS Makin Island and the other died aboard the U.S. warship.
Officials have not said how the U.S. commandos were discovered.
However, none was killed or injured in the mission, which lasted roughly 30 minutes and included rescuing Korkie, a teacher, and Somers, an American photojournalist with duel U.S.-British citizenship.
At least five members of al Qaeda were killed in the fight but none was taken hostage.
The raid, in southern Yemen, was approved on Friday by President Obama and Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel. It started Saturday about 1 a.m. local time (5 p.m. eastern standard time) and was monitored in real time by U.S. officials in Washington and by Hagel who was flying to Kabul, Afghanistan.
Somers, a freelance journalist, was kidnapped just over a year ago in Yemen's capital. The 56-year-old Korkie was abducted 18 months ago in the city of Tazi.
The rescue attempt this weekend followed U.S. drone strikes in the area, U.S. officials said. 
There are conflicting reports about whether the raid included support by Yemeni ground forces.
U.S. officials said there was no possibility that Somers or Korkie were struck by American gunfire, based on the location in which they were being held.
The rescue mission follows one on Nov. 25 at a remote al Qaeda safe haven in a Yemen desert region near the Saudi border. 
Eight captives, including Yemenis, a Saudi and an Ethiopian, were freed. Somers was not at that location. He and five other hostages had been moved days earlier, officials later said.
Roughly a dozen people are believed held by al Qaeda militants in Yemen.

2 comments:

  1. Anonymous12/08/2014

    IRAN is about to come into our sights. Ashton Carter is a neocon.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous12/08/2014

    This was stupid. Risk 40 seals? For what?????????? The bad guys were on high alert.

    ReplyDelete