SANA'A — Yemen's interim president has won US praise for cooperating in a war on Al-Qaeda, but his recent public support for drone strikes that sometimes kill civilians could undermine his domestic popularity and stir sympathy for militants. Yemen, an Arabian Peninsula country where Al-Qaeda militants exploited a security vacuum during last year's rising against Ali Abdullah Saleh, has witnessed an escalated campaign of US missile strikes in recent months, often using the pilotless aircraft known as drones. In a departure from Saleh's policies, Hadi spoke openly in favor of the drone strikes during a trip to the United States last month. Praised by the US ambassador in San'a as being more effective against Al-Qaeda than his predecessor, Hadi was quoted as saying that he personally approved every attack. The comments came after a September strike that killed 12 civilians in Radaa, a small town south of Sana'a, and the storming of the US Embassy in the capital by protesters angry over the US-made anti-Islam film. Youth activist Ibrahim Al-Mothana said Hadi, elected in February for a two-year transitional period, was trying to win favor with international donors but imperils support at home. “He's trying to get international legitimacy, and he needs American and European support, so I think that's what drove him, rather than being more open and frank about it,” he said. “Hadi's main task is the national dialogue, which will create a new national contract. But if the process is undermined by drones, that will be problematic.” Leaked US diplomatic cables said that Saleh had agreed in 2009 to a covert US war on militants and accepted to take responsibility for attacks when necessary. Bashraheel Hesham Bashraheel, chairman of the Al-Ayyam newspaper group, said Hadi had won short-term respect from some Yemenis for being more open about drones than Saleh. “He wants to make a clear distinction, he wants to say I approved every raid. It gives the impression he is in control and not the Americans,” Bashraheel said. “It impressed people and earned him some respect. He's not lying like Saleh used to.” However, with public anger rising, politicians are becoming more vocal in their opposition to US operations. The Houthi movement and influential Sunni cleric Abdul-Majeed Al-Zindani — on a US terrorism list — have stepped up criticism of drones in the past month. “At first people didn't talk, but after Radaa, things have changed, said Ali Abd-Rabbu Al-Qadi, a parliamentarian from Maareb where many attacks have taken place. Yemenis complain the US focus on militants is a violation of sovereignty that is driving many toward Al-Qaeda and diverting attention from other pressing issues such as unemployment, corruption, water depletion and economic revival. Hadi is under US pressure to prioritize the war on militants, who set up Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) in 2007 by merging the Yemeni and Saudi branches of the network. “The Americans only think of use of violence, they need to think of using development,” said Mohammed Al-Mutawakel, a political science professor. “They failed in Afghanistan and Iraq. I hope they don't make the same mistake again in Yemen.” In the chaos of the disintegration of Saleh's system of tribal and religious alliances, tribes have taken steps to express displeasure with Hadi's government. Electricity lines were attacked in Maarib last month after a court issued death sentences against kinsmen accused of Al-Qaeda militancy. “A strike like this isn't a simple thing. It makes us lose hope in the state or that there even exists a Yemeni state here,” said Muhammad Muqbil, who lost three relatives. — Reuters