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Operation 'Decisive Storm' | Saudi lead coalition operations in Yemen - Updates & Discussions.

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only scum-bags can love AQ. Seriously, this is ultimate chest thumping that they support AQ and not Houthis. :hitwall:

I am just waiting for AQ to fights against Houthis on the orders from Riyadh.
Why are you surprised? The IS(yes it is a country now) has a common border with Saudi Arabia. Yet, they mobilize their strength to beat the rebels down in Yemen while staying put on the border they share with the biggest mass murderers on this planet as of now. We all know what SA is. Let's not pretend to not know it. :)
 
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I expected some attacks by Houthies against Saudi Arabia but haven't be able to do any single one so far unlike the war with Israel and Hizbulshaitan in 2006. Saudi Arabian army performance is better than the Israeli one when compared to 2006 war. Noting that Houthies are better armed and further accompanied by Saleh army.

@500 What do you think?

Go move to Israel and ask that question. You don't belong in Arab Muslim land.

Stop asking Israelis as if they're experts. They're not. Only in air force bombing.
 
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Saudi Arabia Evacuates Diplomats From Yemeni City as Houthi Advance Continues

By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICKMARCH 28, 2015
  • CAIRO — Saudi Arabia said Saturday that its navy had evacuated 86 Arab and Western diplomats from the port city of Aden in southern Yemen, as a Saudi-led coalition conducted a third day of airstrikes against the Iranian-backed Houthi movement.

    Separately, Saudi Arabia confirmed that an American helicopter had rescued two Saudi pilots who ejected from an F-15 fighter over waters south of Yemen. The official Saudi Press Agency said the pilots had ejected because of a “technical fault” and were “in good health.”

    The evacuation of the diplomats from Aden reflected the spreading chaos in Yemen as the Houthi-allied forces continued to advance, even under the pressure of the Saudi bombing. The breakdown of order has potentially grave consequences for the United States, because Yemen had been a central theater of the war with Al Qaeda, but the factional fighting has now forced the United States to withdraw its forces as well.

    Aden is Yemen’s second largest city and had been the provisional headquarters of President Abdu Rabbu Mansour Hadi, the Saudi-backed Yemeni leader, since the Houthi forces overran the capital, Sana, in January. Mr. Hadi fled last month to Aden to make a last stand among his supporters in the south, but he, too, has now left Yemen, attending a meeting of Arab leaders on Saturday in Sharm el Sheikh, Egypt.

    The Houthi movement, based in northwestern Yemen, follows a form of Shiite Islam and has received financial support from Iran, the region’s Shiite power and the chief rival to Saudi Arabia. The Houthi surge has alarmed the Saudis about the possibility of an Iranian-backed group digging in on the southern tip of the Arabian Peninsula.

    But the Houthis have also struck an alliance with Yemen’s former strongman, Ali Abdullah Saleh, who retained significant support among the Yemeni military and security forces even after he wasforced from power in 2012. Those forces have now fractured, and major factions have sided with Mr. Saleh and the Houthis against Mr. Hadi and his Saudi backers.

    Residents of Aden said Friday that fighting had broken out in pockets around the city. Houthi-allied forces were advancing. Military forces nominally working for Mr. Hadi had switched sides or deserted and looters were pillaging military bases. Local militias with no affiliation with Mr. Hadi’s government were arming themselves to defend their neighborhoods or fight the Houthis.

    Commercial flights to Yemen have been cut off, and the Saudi-led coalition has blockaded the ports.

    The United States is providing intelligence and logistical support for the Saudi-led campaign, including conducting surveillance flights and providing refueling tankers, The Associated Press reported Saturday. State Department officials had said previously that the United States military was also helping the Saudis with targeting information.

    Defense Department officials said the helicopter that rescued the two Saudi pilots had flown from a base in Djibouti, a small African nation that lies across a narrow strait from Yemen, The Associated Press reported. A destroyer, the Sterett, and an amphibious transport dock, the New York, were also involved, the report said.

    The Houthi-controlled Interior Ministry in Sana said Saturday that at least 24 civilians were killed in Friday’s strikes, raising the two-day toll to 45 civilians as well as scores of fighters. Those numbers could not be confirmed.

    Human Rights Watch said in a statement on Saturday that the Saudi-led air campaign had killed at least 11 and possibly as many as 34 civilians in Sana in the first two days of strikes. The group said that the 11 confirmed civilian deaths included two children and two women.

    Amnesty International reported that at least 14 civilian homes in a predominantly Houthi neighborhood of Sana had been destroyed.

    Other strikes have hit the northern city of Saada, a center of the Houthi movement. The coalition’s forces have also struck the northern city of Hudaydah and the southern city of Taiz, as well as Aden, all places where the Houthis have made recent gains.

  • http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/29/w...ni-city-as-houthi-advance-continues.html?_r=0
 
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Go move to Israel and ask that question. You don't belong in Arab Muslim land.

Stop asking Israelis as if they're experts. They're not. Only in air force bombing.
Hazzy, don't quote me, I can make you cry again.. :)
 
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Yemen is Even More Dangerous Than We Think

By Barbara F. Walter and Kenneth M. Pollack


A man displaced by the war between Houthi forces and the former Yemeni government walks with his camel in northwest Yemen. By IRIN.

People think Yemen is dangerous to United States because of terrorists and civil war. They are wrong. Yemen is dangerous because it could potentially destabilize Saudi Arabia.

That’s a provocative statement but also accurate. By itself, Yemen is far less important to the United States than most countries in the Middle East. True, a lengthy civil war could eventually bring the Yemeni branch of Al Qaeda or the Iranian allied Houthi to power. True, a civil war could fragment the country, creating a lengthy period of chaos and instability, allowing even more extremists to thrive. But the fact remains: Yemen will never be of great strategic importance to the United States because it is weak and poor and has very little oil.

Saudi Arabia is an entirely different story. Saudi Arabia is critical to the United States, both strategically and economically. If Saudi Arabia becomes destabilized and if it falls into civil war, oil production will plummet and the tenuous Sunni-Shi’a balance in the region will be disrupted.

The greatest danger Yemen poses to the United States, therefore, comes from Saudi Arabia. This is especially true now that King Abdullah has died. Why? Because the Saudis are obsessed with Yemen and have found it impossible to resist meddling in Yemeni affairs.

The historical record is fairly clear that it is a mistake to send military and economic aid to the weaker side in a highly unbalanced civil war or to continue to finance factions in wars that appear unwinnable. Both of these strategies are likely to prolong the civil war, increasing the chances that it spreads, and creating conditions for extremism. As Patrick Regan has shown no mix of economic or military intervention while a civil war is raging shortens the length of the conflict, unless it is all directed at the stronger side. Outside economic and military aid that is given to multiple sides during a civil war simply serves to lengthen the war.

The problem is that the Saudis continue to back what appears to be the weaker side in the Yemeni civil war – the Sunnis who have lost control of the Yemeni government to Shi’a Houthi forces. The greatest danger to American interests is that the Saudis will keep doubling down in Yemen and in so doing will overstrain themselves—politically, militarily and possibly even economically. The Kingdom cannot afford to get dragged deeper into a Yemeni quagmire it cannot stabilize on its own. This is especially true given the challenges the Kingdom is likely to face as a result of 3 recent events: (1) historically low oil prices, (2) exorbitant new financial commitments due to attempts to stave off the Arab Spring, and (3) succession issues surrounding King Abdullah’s death.

What should the U.S. do? The U.S. should not devote significant resources to try to end the civil war in Yemen or engineer its outcome. Not only is there no evidence that such an intervention would have any positive effect, but there is not enough money, political will or strategic interest to warrant it. Instead, the U.S. should continue counter-terrorism measures in Yemen while devoting most of its time and energy toward the Saudis. There U.S. policy should be quite simple: the U.S. should do everything possible to convince the Saudis to refrain from any further commitments in Yemen and instead convince them to concentrate on stabilizing their own internal affairs. Saudi meddling in Yemen will do no good and is likely to only prolong the war and weaken Saudi Arabia’s government. The United States should be far more concerned with that potential outcome than with anything that happens in Sana’a.

Kenneth M. Pollack is Senior Fellow in the Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution.

Yemen is Even More Dangerous Than We Think | Political Violence @ a Glance
 
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Why are you surprised? The IS(yes it is a country now) has a common border with Saudi Arabia. Yet, they mobilize their strength to beat the rebels down in Yemen while staying put on the border they share with the biggest mass murderers on this planet as of now. We all know what SA is. Let's not pretend to not know it. :)

hahaha that was my sarcasm. Any ways I am waiting AQ to intervene against Houthis.
 
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hahaha that was my sarcasm. Any ways I am waiting AQ to intervene against Houthis.
AQ has been fighting against the Houthis for a long time already. :)

This is the first time in this decade when Saudi Arabia has involved itself directly.
 
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Not at all. It happened just hours ago.

Here is the link to New York Times, the most important newspaper of United States, your critical ally in this operation

Nope, must've been a misinformed journalist, nevertheless here's the official news from the main Saudi newspapers where's it's clearly state the the operation took place before the campaign started... (Can't post links yet). sabq o r g/cv2gde

Also the US is not our "critical" ally in this campaign.
 
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AQ has been fighting against the Houthis for a long time already. :)

This is the first time in this decade when Saudi Arabia has involved itself directly.

wikipedia says this

While control of the capital expanded to the rest of the Sana'a, as well as other towns such as Rada' City, control was strongly challenged by Al-Qaeda. It was believed by Western states and Saudi Arabia that the Houthis had accepted aid from Iran while Saudi Arabia was aiding their Yemeni rivals [26] Al-Qaeda.

:p:
 
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Hazzy, don't quote me, I can make you cry again.. :)

Yala make me cry. :lol:

Use your brain for once. Houthis can't do anything. Besides 3 scenarios:

1. Try cross border hit and run attacks , maybe even full ground attack although least likely. They've already tried border attacks. Without much success.

2. Missile attacks on Saudi oil fields and anti ship missile attacks on Bab al Mandeb strait. If they have such weapons , they're Iranian. So Iran does not want them to use such weapons now since it would escalate situation. At least until after nuclear negotiations are over.

3. Attacks inside sauid Arabia , least likely.

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There you go. You see how easy it is. :)
 
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