06-20-2015, 08:59 AM
Full story
Http://www.foxnews.com/world/2015/06/19/...peratives/
Key leaders of Al Qaeda in the Arabian
Peninsula have been killed in recent weeks
by well-timed CIA drone strikes so precise
that they have stoked suspicions that rival
terrorist organization ISIS is secretly
leaking information to the U.S.
The paranoia spreading within AQAP was
fully exposed this week when the members
of that branch of Al Qaeda’s international
organization publicly executed four men in
Yemen who they accused of being “spiesâ€
for the U.S. and Saudi Arabia.
One man, identified as Human Al-Hamid,
was hung crucifixion-style from a bridge
after being accused of calling in the drone
strike that killed a top AQAP leader last
week. Another unnamed alleged “spy†was
crucified alongside Al-Hamid, and two others were shot before a group of about
400 enthusiastic onlookers, according to a
video posted Wednesday of the executions.
“The CIA’s success has left AQAP both
guessing and pointing fingers at how the
organization’s very careful leadership has
been caught so off guard,†said Veryan
Khan, editorial director of the Florida-based
Terrorism Research
Http://www.foxnews.com/world/2015/06/19/...peratives/
Key leaders of Al Qaeda in the Arabian
Peninsula have been killed in recent weeks
by well-timed CIA drone strikes so precise
that they have stoked suspicions that rival
terrorist organization ISIS is secretly
leaking information to the U.S.
The paranoia spreading within AQAP was
fully exposed this week when the members
of that branch of Al Qaeda’s international
organization publicly executed four men in
Yemen who they accused of being “spiesâ€
for the U.S. and Saudi Arabia.
One man, identified as Human Al-Hamid,
was hung crucifixion-style from a bridge
after being accused of calling in the drone
strike that killed a top AQAP leader last
week. Another unnamed alleged “spy†was
crucified alongside Al-Hamid, and two others were shot before a group of about
400 enthusiastic onlookers, according to a
video posted Wednesday of the executions.
“The CIA’s success has left AQAP both
guessing and pointing fingers at how the
organization’s very careful leadership has
been caught so off guard,†said Veryan
Khan, editorial director of the Florida-based
Terrorism Research