thumb|Undated photograph of Kamal Derwish, also known as Ahmed Hijazi
Kamal Derwish (; 1973 – November 3, 2002) was an American citizen killed by the CIA as part of a covert targeted killing mission in Yemen on November 3, 2002. The CIA used an RQ-1 Predator drone to shoot a Hellfire missile, destroying the vehicle in which he was driving with five others.
Derwish had been closely linked to the growing religious fundamentalism of the Lackawanna Six, a group of Muslim-Americans who had attended lectures in his apartment near Buffalo, New York.
That an American citizen had been killed by the CIA without trial drew criticism. American authorities quickly back-pedaled on their stories celebrating the death of Derwish, instead noting they had been unaware he was in the car which they said had been targeted for its other occupants, including Abu Ali al-Harithi, believed to have played some role in the USS Cole bombing.
Life
Derwish was born at Mercy Hospital in South Buffalo, New York in 1973. He lived "on and off" in the suburb of Lackawanna near Buffalo, among the large Yemeni community in the area. His father moved the family to Saudi Arabia to look for work after he had lost his job working at Bethlehem Steel. His father died in a car accident three years later, leaving him to be raised by his relatives in Saudi Arabia. During his time in Saudi Arabia, Derwish became immersed fundamentalist Wahhabist Islam.
During the 1990's Derwish moved to Sanaa, Yemen, attended al-Qaeda training camps in Afghanistan and fought in the Bosnian war alongside the mujahideen before returning to Saudi Arabia in 1997, where he was jailed for extremist activities and deported back to Yemen. He often discussed the importance of jihad during his discussions to help the "oppressed people" in areas such as Palestine or Kashmir. He also spoke of his will to fight alongside the Taliban and his time fighting in Bosnia, and praised militant attacks such as the USS Cole bombing.
