Yemen Crisis/Conflict & the "Decisive Storm" Coalition

Just a lighter moment being off-topic for a second, this is one of the first search results that came back when I Googled Ataq, Yemen. I can appreciate the neutrality of such a locale. Please understand this is written by an eccentric humorist so it contains potentially offensive opinions if taken in earnest.

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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Because the Egyptians are not as committed to the blockade as the Israelis would like.
It's a lot easier to tunnel under the walls and across the Syrian boarder then to tunnel through the Straight of Hormuz.
As long as there is a naval and Air presence on alert smuggling arms even to Oman is not a reliable method of Logistics. The narrowest point of the straight is into the UAE, and easily in interception range of potential contraband.

Stranded Yemeni-Americans consider alternate escape routes
Two stranded Yemeni-Americans consider fleeing by sea or dangerous back roads as airstrikes grip Sanaa and Aden
March 28, 2015 11:45AM ET
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Desperate Yemeni-Americans who find themselves stranded in Yemen due to a no-fly zone and hijacked main roads say they have begun to consider alternate means of escape, including smuggling themselves to East Africa by sea or driving through dangerous back roads that lead to neighboring Oman.

Yemen is currently gripped by political violence, with Saudi Arabia launching airstrikes this week in the capital, Sanaa, aimed at pushing back Houthi rebels, who overran Yemen's government in February, leading the country's president, Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, to flee the capital.

Saudi Arabia — who views the Houthi takeover as an attempt by Iran to establish a proxy on the kingdom's southern border — assembled a 10-country coalition this week to conduct airstrikes against the rebels. As part of its military campaign, Saudi Arabia imposed no-fly zone over Yemen, shutting down airports and closing major seaports.

In addition to being virtually landlocked, Yemeni-Americans face a possible witch-hunt following a call issued by the Houthis
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individuals suspected of being U.S. or Saudi agents.

Having received no warning of Saudi's military campaign, which was coordinated with assistance from the U.S. government, Yemeni-Americans who spoke to Al Jazeera say they are terrified that they will become targets of the witch-hunt by virtue of their citizenship.

To protect themselves, some have taken up arms, according to San Francisco native Mokhtar Alkhanshali, who is currently in Sanaa. "Many of us have to be strapped with weapons at all times,” the 26 year-old said.

Alkhansali, who has been in Yemen for a year, runs a project for farmers with some collaboration with U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), the federal agency responsible for administering civilian foreign aid.

Alkhanshali has been training local farmers to grow sustainable coffee crops in a bid to strengthen Yemen's coffee sector and local economy. He said he first learned of the Saudi campaign when he awoke to loud explosions and anti-aircraft fire.

"You have Houthi bases located in the middle of heavily populated neighborhoods,” he said. “My hometown of San Francisco has a population of 750,000. Imagine bombing a city with twice that population. They're placing all of us at risk."

He added: "I know dozens of families in Sanaa trying to get out."

To protect himself from potential crossfire, Alkhanshali said he keeps the lights turned off in his Sanaa home and stays clear of windows.

At night, he retires to the basement with his family members. "People keep family photos near their bed,” he said. “I've come to sleep next to several firearms."

People keep family photos near their bed, I've come to sleep next to several firearms.
Mokhtar Alkhanshali

In Aden — the southern port city Hadi escaped to and declared as the temporary capital — Bronx native Summer Nasser said she and her 16 year-old sister Mona take shifts at night staying awake to protect their home from looters.

"I keep a gun in my purse and take shifts with my sister at night. It's emotionally draining," she said. "Our youngest sister runs to the corner to hide whenever she hears tank fire."

Nasser, who traveled to Yemen last month to wed her fiancé, is stranded in Aden with her mother and 5 siblings.

Like Sanaa, Aden has been paralyzed by violence. The coastal city is the site of fierce street battles between pro-Hadi military units and militiamen loyal to former president and strongman Ali Abdullah Saleh, who has allied himself with the Houthis.

Additionally, there are fears that the battle will only intensify, as locals await the arrival of pro-Saleh fighters, currently moving through southern Abyan province toward Aden with the aim of reinforcing fighters already in the city, according to Yemeni security officials.

Nasser has postponed her wedding, originally scheduled for next week. "My priority right now is to get my family the hell out of Yemen," said the 20 year-old.

Both Nasser and Alkhanshali, along with relatives in the U.S., have reached out to the State Department to request their evacuation, to no avail. "We have contacted them several times but they say they can't help," Nasser said.

Alkhanshali, who said he never received a response from the department, called their indifference a "slap in the face," particularly given the U.S. role in coordinating the Saudi air campaign.

"The U.S. coordinated with Saudi on logistics, so they must have been aware of what was coming,” said an exasperated Alkhanshali. “And yet we received no warning. If India and Somalia can find a way to evacuate their nationals, why can't the U.S.?"

He was referring to
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and
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announcements on Friday to evacuate their citizens.

I keep a gun in my purse and take shifts with my sister at night. It's emotionally draining.
Summer Nasser

Al Jazeera contacted the State Department for comment and was referred to a travel advisory issued February
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in Yemen to leave the country. The advisory also noted that U.S. government-facilitated evacuations occur only when no safe commercial alternatives exist.

But with no access to the airport or main roads, Nasser said there is no safe means of escape.

Left to fend for themselves, she along with other Yemeni-Americans in Aden have created a support network to keep tabs on one another. “We keep in touch through WhatsApp and send each other videos of nearby clashes to try and determine which direction it’s coming from,” said Nasser.

With Saudi and Egyptian warships deployed to Yemen in anticipation of a ground mission, she worries that their window of opportunity to flee is quickly closing.

Nasser and several other Yemeni-Americans are now considering driving east toward neighboring Oman — a perilous 17-hour journey through dangerous back roads occupied by rebels and tribal fighters.

"The roads are not safe, but we have no choice as we're running out of time," Nasser said.

Alkhanshali said he is scheduled to speak at a cupping event for Yemeni coffee in Seattle next week, at a conference hosted by the Specialty Coffee Association of America. He hopes to raise awareness for Yemen's coffee farmers. It’s a conference he is determined to make.

If the airports don't reopen soon, Alkhanshali said he is considering taking a boat to Djibouti or Somalia. If that doesn't work, he says he may head through the empty quarter desert to Oman.

But until then, Alkhanshali said that he will lie awake listening to the explosions. "You don't see the aircrafts so you never know where they're coming from – that's the scary part. You just hear them," he said.

He added: "Hopefully, we live to see the morning."

With The Associated Press
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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Sun Mar 29, 2015 3:41pm EDT
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Fighting and air strikes across Yemen; dialogue remains distant
ADEN | BY MOHAMMED MUKHASHAF AND SAMI ABOUDI

(Reuters) - Yemeni fighters loyal to the Saudi-backed President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi clashed with Iranian-allied Houthi fighters on Sunday in Aden, the absent leader's last major foothold in the country.

Hadi loyalists in the southern port city reported a gunbattle in the central Crater district in which three people were killed, and said they recaptured the airport, which has changed hands several times in recent days.

The Health Ministry, loyal to the Houthi fighters who control the capital, said Saudi-led air strikes had killed 35 people and wounded 88 overnight. The figures could not be independently confirmed.

The Houthi fighters, representing a Shi'ite minority that makes up around a third of Yemen's population, emerged as the most powerful force in the Arabian Peninsula's poorest country last year when they captured the capital Sanaa.

Saudi Arabia has rallied Sunni Muslim Arab countries in an air campaign to support Hadi, who moved to Aden in February and is now in Riyadh after leaving Yemen in the past week.

The fighting has brought civil war to a country that was already sliding into chaos and which had been a battlefield for the secret U.S. drone war against al Qaeda.

While the Houthi fighters and their army allies continued to make gains after the air strikes were first launched early on Thursday, they appeared to suffer reversals on Sunday on three fronts -- in Aden's northern suburbs, in Dhalea province north of the city and in the eastern province of Shabwa.

A Saudi military spokesman said the coalition it leads would step up pressure on the Houthis and their allies in the next few days. "There will be no safe place for the Houthi militia groups," Brigadier General Ahmed Asseri told reporters.


Coalition warplanes struck military targets at airports in the capital Sanaa and in Hodeida, the main Red Sea port. However, Asseri said operations over Hodeida were halted for two hours to allow the evacuation of 500 Pakistani nationals.

In the northern city of Saada, a Houthi stronghold near the Saudi border, strikes hit bases belonging to the militia and their ally, former President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who still controls most army units.

Asseri said strikes on Saturday night had targeted former Yemeni air force planes which the Houthis had moved from Sanaa to another air base. Very few jets remained in Houthi hands and they too would be destroyed, he said.

Saleh stood down after a 2011 uprising but still wields wide influence in Yemen. He appealed on Saturday to Arab leaders meeting in Egypt to halt their four-day offensive and resume talks on political transition in Yemen, promising that neither he nor his relatives would seek the presidency.

Hadi's Foreign Minister Riyadh Yaseen dismissed his comments as "the talk of losers".

Saudi Arabia's military intervention is the latest front in its widening contest with Iran for power in the region, a proxy struggle also playing out in Syria, Iraq and Lebanon.

Iran denies accusations from Sunni Gulf rulers that it has armed the Houthis, who follow the Zaidi branch of Shi'ite Islam.

Zaidi Shi'ites led a thousand-year kingdom in Yemen until 1962. Former leader Saleh himself is a member of the sect, although he tried to crush the Houthis while in office, only allying with them after his downfall.



SAUDIS SAY CAMPAIGN TO GO ON

Across the country, there were heavy clashes in seven southern and eastern provinces between the Houthis and pro-Saleh army units on the one hand, and Sunni tribesmen, pro-Hadi loyalists and armed southern separatists on the other.

Forces loyal to Hadi said on Sunday they had recaptured Aden airport. Heavy fighting in the area during the last week meant that foreign diplomats had to be evacuated from the city by boat, ferried by Saudi naval vessels to Jeddah on Saturday.

An Aden port official said a Chinese warship docked on Sunday to evacuate Chinese diplomats and expatriate workers.

Saudi King Salman told the Arab summit that military operations would continue until their objectives were met.

But a diplomat in the Gulf said it was unclear exactly what those military objectives were. "There is no political vision for the process. They don’t know the shape of the end game," he said. "They did not even determine how they can claim victory".

In Egypt, the Arab leaders announced the formation of a unified military force to counter growing threats including Yemen's conflict. Working out the mechanism and logistics of the unified force, an idea floated by Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, could take months.

In a rare move, Saudi-owned television channel Al-Arabiya broadcast a detailed account of what it said was a proposal last week to the Saudi leadership by Saleh's son Ahmed to head off military intervention by breaking with the Houthis.

Al-Arabiya said Prince Mohammad rejected the proposal. "There must be a return to legitimacy in the form of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi to lead Yemen from the capital Sanaa," it quoted him as saying.



(Additional reporting by Angus McDowall in Riyadh, Noah Browning in Dubai, Mohammed Ghobari and Ahmed Tolba in Cairo and Yara Bayoumy in Sharm el-Sheikh; Writing by
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; Editing by
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)
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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
IT wasn't Shot down, If experienced Technical failures.
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PUBLISHED: 13:13 MARCH 28, 2015
AGENCIES

Cairo: A Saudi fighter plane was hit by a technical problem and its two pilots ejected over the Red Sea on Friday, state media said, adding that the pair had been returned to the country with American help.
“A plane of the F-15S type was stricken by a technical fault yesterday evening over the Red Sea and the two pilots were forced to use their rescue seats,” state news agency SPA quoted a defence ministry official as saying.
“Praise be to God, the pilots were rescued in coordination with the American side, and the two pilots are in good health and high spirits,” the official said. The agency said the US offered aid to rescue the airmen.
A US Defense Department official told The Associated Press that an American helicopter flew Thursday from neighbouring Djibouti to the Gulf of Aden and rescued the airmen. The official says the destroyer USS Sterett coordinated assets from the US naval base in Djibouti and the amphibious transport dock USS New York.
The US official spoke on condition of anonymity as he wasn't authorised to brief journalists by name.
Saudi Arabia and fellow Sunni-led allies in the Gulf and the Middle East are bombing the Houthi rebels.
They view the Houthi takeover of Yemen as an attempt by Iran to establish a proxy on the kingdom's southern border. Iran and the Houthis deny that Tehran arms the rebel movement, though it says it provides diplomatic and humanitarian support.

Washington says the US is providing refueling tankers and surveillance flights for the Saudi operations, and there are several US troops working in the operations center, but the US is not taking direct military action in the Gulf campaign.
At least 24 civilians were killed in Friday's strikes, bringing the toll from two days to 45 civilians, the Houthi-run Interior Ministry said. The Houthis' TV station showed footage from a market in Saada it said was struck by missiles, with images of charred bodies and wrecked vehicles.
Yemeni security officials said around 80 Houthi and allied fighters have been killed in the strikes.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to talk to the press. By Friday afternoon, more than 40 percent of Yemen's air defenses were destroyed, according to Yemeni Brig. Gen. Saleh al-Subaihi, who supports embattled Yemen President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, who was forced to flee the country.
The figures of civilian and combatant casualties could not be independently confirmed.
Also Friday, Saudi and Egyptian warships deployed to Bab al-Mandab, the strategic strait off Yemen at the entrance of the Red Sea, Egyptian military officials said. The strait gives the only access to Egypt's Suez Canal from the Arabian Sea and is a vital passage for shipping between Europe and Asia.

On Saturday, the Saudi Press Agency also reported that its navy had evacuated 86 diplomats and others from Aden on Wednesday.
It did not identify the nationalities of all those it evacuated in the operation, though it said diplomats from the
United Arab Emirates and Qatar were on hand Saturday when those evacuated arrived at a Jeddah naval base. Pakistan also announced Saturday it had two planes standing by to evacuate its citizens.
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plawolf

Lieutenant General
IT wasn't Shot down, If experienced Technical failures.

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Thanks for the source, but whenever a fighter goes down in a conflict zone, its as inevitable that the owner will claim 'technical problems' was to blame as the other side is to claim they shot it down.

The big problem I have with the Saudi version of events is why the F15 was flying over the Red Sea to being with.

Saudi Arabia, and whatever base the F15 was operating from, is directly north of Yemen. Flying over the Red Sea would mean an Eastward flight path that would mean the Eagle would have to spend more time to get back to base.

The fact that it was US helicopters from Djibouti that rescued the crew places the crash to the South of Yemen, which is an odd place for a Saudi Eagle to be if it was following standard flight plans.

Even if they were deliberately using the Red Sea to transit to and from strikes to minimise time in hostile airspace, it seems like a long detour, and a very convenient place for them to have a breakdown.
 
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