Terrorists in France Connected to al-Qaeda in Yemen

Officials connect the dots on latest terror operation in France,

The fact that the two Kouachi brothers, Cherif and Said, were influenced by al-Qaeda in Yemen (Said trained with the group there in 2011) is only the latest reflection of the group’s intent on attacking western targets, including on the United States.

AQAP was also behind the failed Christmas Day bomb plot in 2009, in which leaders sewed bomb materials into the underwear of would-be assailant Abdul Farouk Umar Abdulmutallab, a 23-year-old Nigerian student who lived with an al-Qaeda leader in the country’s capital, Sanaa, for about a month while he trained. The bomb failed to detonate as Abdulmutallab traveled on a plane bound for Detroit.

U.S. officials also said AQAP tried to mimic that attempt the following year by sending explosive-laden packages to the U.S., but the packages were intercepted in Dubai and England, thanks to a tip by Saudi intelligence.

That global strategy attracted radical clerics like Anwar al-Awlaki, the American-born imam whose online, English-language sermons inspired Nidal Hassan, the U.S. Army major who killed 13 people at the Army’s Fort Hood base in Texas in 2009.

Al-Awlaki was killed in September 2011 by one of the United States’ most effective and pervasive weapons in the fight against terror: unmanned CIA drones.

According to analysis by the New America Foundation, the United States has launched 102 airstrikes in Yemen since 2002, plus 15 airstrikes. The data found that between 820 and 1082 individuals have been killed, with about 80 being civilians.

With the exception of one strike, they were all launched during the Obama administration.

ABC'S Lee Ferran contributed to this report.