Skip to main content

The context you need, when you need it

When news breaks, you need to understand what actually matters — and what to do about it. At Vox, our mission to help you make sense of the world has never been more vital. But we can’t do it on our own.

We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?

Join now

This is bad: Al-Qaeda leads mass jailbreak in Yemen

Suspected al-Qaeda members behind bars in al Mukalla in 2010.
Suspected al-Qaeda members behind bars in al Mukalla in 2010.
Suspected al-Qaeda members behind bars in al Mukalla in 2010.
(STR/AFP/Getty Images)
Zack Beauchamp
Zack Beauchamp is a senior correspondent at Vox, where he covers ideology and challenges to democracy, both at home and abroad. His book on democracy, The Reactionary Spirit, was published 0n July 16. You can purchase it here.
  1. About 300 people appear to have been released in a jailbreak during a major attack on Thursday by Al-Qaeda’s Yemen branch, al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), in the southern port city of Al Mukalla.
  2. Yemeni government sources say about a third of the freed prisoners were AQAP fighters. Among them was Khaled Batarfi, who, per the Wall Street Journal, led AQAP forces in the Yemeni province Abyan before his 2011 arrest.
  3. AQAP targeted several important government buildings in Al Mukalla, but the prison appears to have been the main target.

The jailbreak is a big deal — and shows why the fighting in Yemen is so scary

Prison breaks have, in the past, been an excellent way for jihadi militants to strengthen themselves. Take ISIS, which was on the brink of total defeat in 2010. A series of prison breaks in Iraq, beginning around 2012, helped the group replenish its ranks, providing it with both experienced fighters and new recruits among the ordinary criminals let out of jail. These new forces helped put ISIS in position to launch its June 2014 rampage across northern Iraq.

Like ISIS, AQAP is a full-on insurgent group, one that operates throughout a fairly broad swath of southern Yemen. The ISIS example shows how prison breaks like this could make AQAP even more powerful.

While the group isn’t engaged in an ISIS-like campaign to establish a caliphate in Yemen, and probably won’t start one, a stronger AQAP is still a real problem. The group is often described as al-Qaeda’s strongest affiliate globally, and the one that’s shown the most intent and capability to plan attacks on the West in recent years.

The US government, recognizing this threat, had for some time coordinated with the Yemeni government on a counterterrorism campaign aimed at weakening AQAP. Experts disagree on just how effective, say, American drone strikes against AQAP were — but after the current outbreak of violence in Yemen, the question is somewhat moot.

The US-backed government of President Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi has been forced out of the country by Houthi rebels who have seized most of the country. Forces loyal to Hadi are no longer in a position to work with the US against al-Qaeda, and the worsening security situation led the US to withdraw its personnel from Yemen last month.

The Yemeni government’s immediate goal has shifted to fighting the Houthis, which they’re now doing with support from a Saudi-led coalition. The more the Yemen conflict becomes a civil war between the Houthis and Hadi, the less focus there will be on combating AQAP. And the freer the group’s hand, the stronger it’ll likely grow.

More in Syria

Today, Explained newsletter
Trump and Netanyahu weren’t on the same page for longTrump and Netanyahu weren’t on the same page for long
Today, Explained newsletter

Fighting in Syria exposes a US-Israel rift.

By Joshua Keating
Today, Explained podcast
Assad is gone. Will Syrian refugees go home?Assad is gone. Will Syrian refugees go home?
Podcast
Today, Explained podcast

The big decision facing millions of Syrian refugees, explained.

By Avishay Artsy and Noel King
World Politics
After 13 years of war, Bashar al-Assad’s regime in Syria has been defeated. What comes next?After 13 years of war, Bashar al-Assad’s regime in Syria has been defeated. What comes next?
World Politics

How the Assad regime collapsed slowly, then all at once.

By Joshua Keating
World Politics
How the Syrian rebels’ surprise offensive shocked the worldHow the Syrian rebels’ surprise offensive shocked the world
World Politics

The world had moved on from Syria — but Syrians had other ideas.

By Joshua Keating
Kamala Harris
Biden and Harris say America’s no longer at war. Is that true?Biden and Harris say America’s no longer at war. Is that true?
Kamala Harris

Harris says US troops aren’t fighting in any “war zones.” What about Iraq, Syria, and the Red Sea?

By Joshua Keating
World Politics
Turkey and Syria earthquakes: Aftermath and updates on the humanitarian crisisTurkey and Syria earthquakes: Aftermath and updates on the humanitarian crisis
World Politics

Deadly earthquakes hit Turkey and Syria, where war and economic crises already loomed. Here’s the latest news.

By Vox Staff