Security forces in the United Arab
Emirates have arrested a cell of UAE and Saudi Arabian citizens which
was planning to carry out militant attacks in both countries and other
states, the official news agency WAM said on Wednesday.The U.S.-allied UAE, a federation of seven emirates and
a major oil exporter that has supported Western counter-terrorism
efforts in the region, has been spared any attack by al Qaeda and other
insurgency groups.
But some of its emirates have seen a rise in Islamist
sentiment in recent years, and Dubai, a business and tourism hub and
cosmopolitan city that attracts many Westerners, could make an
attractive target for Islamist militants, analysts say.
Those arrested had acquired materials and equipment for use in what WAM called terrorist operations.
"The security authorities in the UAE, in coordination
with the related security parties in Saudi Arabia, announced the arrest
of an organized cell from the deviant group that was planning to carry
out actions against national security of both countries and some
brotherly states," WAM said without elaborating.
The phrase "the deviant group" is often used by authorities in Saudi Arabia to describe al Qaeda members.
Emirati political analyst Abdulkhaleq Abdullah told
Reuters he believed it was the first time the UAE had announced a
suspected attack plot of regional significance.
It "looks like it is a big one, mainly because it
includes Emirati citizens and is not confined to the UAE but also has a
regional dimension."
In August, Saudi authorities arrested a group of
suspected al Qaeda-linked militants - mostly Yemeni nationals - in
Riyadh.
Saudi Arabia has arrested thousands of suspected
militants since the 2003-2006 attacks on residential compounds for
foreign workers and on Saudi government facilities in which were dozens
of people were killed.
The United States has poured aid into Yemen to stem the
threat of attacks from al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) and to
try to prevent any spillover of violence into Saudi Arabia, the world's
top oil exporter.
In 2010, AQAP, a merger of al Qaeda's Yemeni and Saudi
branches, said it was behind a plot to send two parcel bombs to the
United States. The bombs were intercepted in Britain and Dubai.
The UAE has escaped the upheaval that has shaken the
Arab world but moved swiftly to stem any sign of political dissent by
detaining more than 60 local Islamists this year over alleged threats to
state security and links to a foreign group.
Those detainees, who belong to an Islamist group called
al-Islah, have confessed to setting up a secret organization with an
armed force whose aim was to take power and establish an Islamic state,
local media reported in September. Islah denied the accusations.
Many of the detained Islamists come from the more
religiously conservative northern emirates such as Sharjah and Ras
al-Khaimah, which produced one of the September 11 hijackers.
In May 2002, al Qaeda militants sent a letter to UAE
authorities saying continued UAE cooperation with Washington in
arresting what it called holy warriors would "bring the country into an
arena of conflict," according to al Qaeda documents captured by the U.S.
military and published by the Combating Terrorism Center at the U.S.
military academy at West point.
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