NationStates Jolt Archive


Plotter of the USS Cole attack escapes

Minoriteeburg
05-02-2006, 19:28
USS Cole plotter escapes prison

Sunday, February 5, 2006; Posted: 12:48 p.m. EST (17:48 GMT)

Among the escapees was Jamal Ahmed Badawi, considered the mastermind of the USS Cole attack.

(CNN) -- Interpol has issued "an urgent global security alert" after 23 "dangerous individuals" -- including a man identified as the mastermind of the attack on the USS Cole in 2000 -- escaped from a Yemeni prison.

The international crime-fighting organization said Sunday at least 13 of the 23 who escaped Friday were "convicted al Qaeda terrorists, some of whom were involved in attacks on U.S. and French ships in 2000 and 2002."

"Al Qaeda terrorists have been deemed a serious threat to the entire world community by the U.N. Security Council, by Interpol and by a wide range of countries," Interpol Secretary General Ronald K. Noble said in the statement.

They escaped via a 140-meter (150-yard) -long tunnel "dug by the prisoners and co-conspirators outside," Interpol said.

"Their escape cannot be considered an internal problem for Yemen alone."

Among the escapees was Jamal Ahmed Badawi, considered the mastermind behind the attack on the USS Cole on October 12, 2000.

Badawi was sentenced to death in September 2004 for plotting the attack. Two suicide bombers blew up an explosives-laden boat next to the destroyer while the destroyer was in the Aden, Yemen, harbor for a routine fuel stop.

The attack killed 17 sailors and wounded 39 others.

The FBI released a statement saying that information about the escape was "currently coming in through government channels."

"We are closely monitoring the situation at this time and we will work with our domestic and international partners to actively pursue these dangerous terrorists through the means we have available," the statement said.

Also among the escapees was Fawaz Yahya Al-Rabeei, one of those responsible for attacking the French tanker Limburg in 2002.



well just when you thought things couldn't get worse. first hamas takes over palestine and now this. head for the hills people.
Tactical Grace
05-02-2006, 19:35
OMG NO3S!!! RUN 4 TEH H1LLZ!!!11oneoneone!!
DrunkenDove
05-02-2006, 19:35
first hamas takes over palestine.

God bless Democracy, eh?
Tactical Grace
05-02-2006, 19:36
Seriously though, the only thing waiting for you in the hills is hypothermia. I'll take my chances indoors.
Minoriteeburg
05-02-2006, 19:37
God bless Democracy, eh?


you got that right
Keruvalia
05-02-2006, 19:50
Man ... we are *great* at this whole homeland security thing, ain't we?

Awesome.
Dubya 1000
05-02-2006, 19:54
Why was he even in a Yemeni prison in the first place? He's probably a hero to them, and I doubt that the prison authorities did all they could to prevent him from escaping. In America he wouldn't have even seen the light of day.
New Granada
05-02-2006, 19:55
Oh dear, next thing you know he'll be here in the HOMELAND taking our freedom away!
Minoriteeburg
05-02-2006, 20:04
Why was he even in a Yemeni prison in the first place? He's probably a hero to them, and I doubt that the prison authorities did all they could to prevent him from escaping. In America he wouldn't have even seen the light of day.


I thought the same thing.IF he was detained in an american jail. security would be tighter than 100 virgins.
Itinerate Tree Dweller
05-02-2006, 20:18
Man ... we are *great* at this whole homeland security thing, ain't we?

Awesome.

Well, he was not in an American jail.
Turquoise Days
05-02-2006, 20:30
*whistles the theme from The Great Escape*
Well someone was going to escape eventually. I don't see why you're suprised.
WesternPA
05-02-2006, 20:38
*hides under the bed*
Bobs Own Pipe
05-02-2006, 20:39
Eek. I'll never sleep ag-

*z-z-z*
Fass
05-02-2006, 20:41
Why was he even in a Yemeni prison in the first place?

If you had read the OP more carefully, you would have seen that the crime was committed in Yemen. Him to be in a US prison would have been the questionable thing.
Deep Kimchi
05-02-2006, 21:19
*whistles the theme from The Great Escape*
Well someone was going to escape eventually. I don't see why you're suprised.
Which is why it's better to shoot them when you find them. No escape, no allegations of torture, etc.

And if you do it right, there are no witnesses. Just dead bodies and empty shell casings.
Bobs Own Pipe
05-02-2006, 21:21
Which is why it's better to shoot them when you find them. No escape, no allegations of torture, etc.

And if you do it right, there are no witnesses. Just dead bodies and empty shell casings.
What, just like the Nazis did?

You're reprehensible, DK.
Deep Kimchi
05-02-2006, 21:25
What, just like the Nazis did?

You're reprehensible, DK.
Hardly. This is a war, ok?

What do soldiers do?

If you had been one, you'll note that you are under no circumstances under any obligation to accept the surrender of an enemy.

Also, night raids on military targets (such as commando raids) are the raison d'etre for special forces. Show up out of the sky, kill the enemy as they rise from sleep, and exfil by helicopter.

It's military, not nazi. Go read your modern military history.
Fass
05-02-2006, 21:44
Which is why it's better to shoot them when you find them. No escape, no allegations of torture, etc.

And if you do it right, there are no witnesses. Just dead bodies and empty shell casings.

Except of course this is not a war, but an international hunt for criminals that had access to due process (well, the semblance of such that Yemen has, but that's a different topic).
Jerusalas
05-02-2006, 21:50
Dammit!

See what happens when you show The Great Escape to prisoners!?

We should curtail more civil liberties, dammit! Traitorous Hollywood and their bloody insurrection-inspiring movies! They'll be the death of us all!

:rolleyes:
WesternPA
05-02-2006, 21:52
*from under her bed*

Is it safe to come out yet?
Tactical Grace
05-02-2006, 21:54
Hardly. This is a war, ok?

What do soldiers do?
It's not. If a war is declared, the Geneva Convention applies. If no war is declared, local criminal law applies. You can't pick and choose the juristiction. It's also the reason why the British government always treated the Irish terrorists as criminals rather than soldiers.
Jerusalas
05-02-2006, 21:54
Hardly. This is a war, ok?

What do soldiers do?

If you had been one, you'll note that you are under no circumstances under any obligation to accept the surrender of an enemy.

Also, night raids on military targets (such as commando raids) are the raison d'etre for special forces. Show up out of the sky, kill the enemy as they rise from sleep, and exfil by helicopter.

It's military, not nazi. Go read your modern military history.

Actually, special forces are mostly there for gathering intelligence and telling bombers what targets to hit. After that comes the occasional sabotage/radical restructuring mission (blowing up bridges, fuel dumps, &c.). Somewhere further down the line are raids against barracks, although those tend to be against terrorist and guerilla barracks (because actual military barracks will probably have a whole helluva lotta hurt nearby).
Of the council of clan
05-02-2006, 22:09
It's nice to hear about a good old fashion prison break with an escape tunnel.


eh, just start bombing in Yemen. Odds are all you'd hit was a couple of sheep anyway. Besides since we can't drop live bombs on that range in Puerto Rico we need a new place for gunnery practice for ships and Bomb and strafing practice for our aircrafts.
Minoriteeburg
05-02-2006, 22:12
Which is why it's better to shoot them when you find them. No escape, no allegations of torture, etc.

And if you do it right, there are no witnesses. Just dead bodies and empty shell casings.


:sniper: goodbye terrorists