Yemen Crisis/Conflict & the "Decisive Storm" Coalition

remember Oct 2, 2016
... nobody seems to care so just
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here
?

now I noticed
Birleşik Arap Emirlikleri'ne (BAE) ait bir gemiye Yemen'deki Husiler tarafından füzeyle saldırı düzenlendi.
"A ship belonging to the United Arab Emirates (BAE) was attacked by the Hussers in Yemen."
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Suudi Arabistan'ın resmi haber ajansı SPA'da yer alan Suudi Arabistan öncülüğündeki Koalisyon Güçleri Komutanlığı'nın açıklamasında, Yemen'in batısında yer alan Hudeyde kentindeki Muha Limanı'ndan denize açılan BAE'ye ait bir gemiye Husiler tarafından füzeyle saldırı düzenlendiği ifade edildi.

Saldırıda geminin zarar görmediği ancak içindeki kişilerden birinin yaralandığı duyuruldu.

Yemen'de Husiler dün ülkenin batısındaki El-Muha kenti açıklarında Suudi Arabistan öncülüğündeki koalisyon güçlerine ait bir savaş gemisine füze saldırısı düzenlediklerini ileri sürmüştü. Bu açıklama Suudi Arabistan yönetimi tarafından doğrulanmamıştı.

Suudi Arabistan öncülüğündeki koalisyon güçleri ise El-Muha'nın kuzeyindeki Husi mevzilerine hava saldırılarında bulunmuştu.
"Saudi Arabia, the official news agency of Saudi Arabia, said that the Coalition Forces Command under the leadership of Saudi Arabia was attacked by the Husians on a ship belonging to the BAE, which opened to the sea from the Muha Port in Hudey, west of Yemen.

It was announced that the attack was not harmful but one of the people was injured.

In Yemen, Husi alleged yesterday that they organized a missile attack on a war ship belonging to coalition forces under the leadership of Saudi Arabia in the western Al-Muha cities. This statement was not confirmed by the Saudi Arabian government.

The coalition forces under the leadership of Saudi Arabia had air attacks on the Husi positions in the north of Al-Muha."



plus the vid which purports to show that attack:

EDIT now used google, found
One wounded in missile attack on UAE ship off Yemen, SPA reports Thu Jun 15, 2017 | 1:59pm EDT
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Last edited:
Jesus Christ!
now I've heard cholera epidemics broke out in Yemen; both articles I saw contained pictures of children so called me soft but I won't go back to post the texts (the sources were credible)
 
now noticed
US puts boots on the ground in Yemen to attack AQAP

13 hours ago
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U.S. warplanes and a small number of ground troops are assisting in a “major operation” in central Yemen against the al-Qaida faction there, the Pentagon confirmed Friday.


The joint United Arab Emirates-U.S. operation is led by the government of Yemen, according to a statement released by UAE’s embassy in Washington, D.C.

The forces are targeting al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula militants in the Shabwah Governorate in central Yemen, and “is being closely supported by a combined UAE and U.S. enabling force,” the embassy said.

Pentagon spokesman Capt. Jeff Davis said the U.S. role in the operation includes surveillance, aerial refueling, close air support and a “small number of forces on the ground,” he said, without providing specifics.

The mission aims to “go in there and really rid the Shabwah Governate of remaining holdout areas” of al-Qaida, Davis said.

Since February the U.S. has conducted more than 80 airstrikes in Yemen against al-Qaida forces and conducted at least two ground raids, including a January 29 raid that resulted in the death of a Navy SEAL, Chief Special Warfare Operator William "Ryan" Owens.

The Navy’s Bataan Amphibious Ready Group is also nearby to support the operation but Davis did not say what kind of role those ships or the roughly
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aboard might have in the operation.

Defense Secretary Jim Mattis was visiting Norfolk, Va., Friday to meet with Navy special operations forces based there. FOX News reported Thursday that Mattis would be getting updates on the operation while in Norfolk.
 
the Pentagon confirmed (this weekend I saw presumably related pictures in Russian Internet):
US MQ-9 Reaper Drone Shot Down in Yemen: CentCom
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A U.S. Air Force
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drone was shot down Sunday over Yemen, U.S. Central Command officials confirmed to Military.com on Monday.

“We assess that an MQ-9 Unmanned Aerial Vehicle was shot down in western Yemen on Oct. 1, 2017,” Maj. Earl Brown, a spokesman for the command, said in an email.

Brown didn’t provide further details, saying the incident “is under investigation.” He later clarified it was a U.S. platform.

“The details on the specifics of the mission are not releasable for [operational security reasons] and we don’t want to get ahead of any investigation,” Brown said, when asked about the altitude, speed and direction of the UAV’s mission.

Yemen’s Houthi forces claimed they shot down the drone in the capital Sanaa. Local footage showed the crippled, fiery aircraft falling through the sky.

The medium-altitude drone made by General Atomics is a long-endurance remotely piloted aircraft predominantly used by the U.S.
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for intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance flights along with strike missions.

Other operators include the United Kingdom and Italy.

Civil unrest has paralyzed the country amid ongoing airstrikes from the Saudi-led coalition.

The war began in spring 2015, when Houthi rebels — anti-government fighters aligned with ousted former president Ali Abdullah Saleh — were dislodged from their position near the port city of Aden by the coalition, which includes the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Qatar and Kuwait.
 
Oct 3, 2017
the Pentagon confirmed (this weekend I saw presumably related pictures in Russian Internet):
US MQ-9 Reaper Drone Shot Down in Yemen: CentCom
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now
U.S. airstrike kills dozens of ISIS fighters in Yemen
3 hours ago
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U.S. forces launched a strike against two ISIS training camps in Al Bayda Governorate, Yemen, killing dozens of ISIS fighters on Monday, according to the Defense Department.

The aircraft conducting the strike was unmanned, according to a Pentagon official.

“ISIS used the camps to train militants to conduct terror attacks using AK-47s, machine guns, rocket-propelled grenade launchers and endurance training,” according to a Defense Department news release.

The U.S. has launched more than 100 airstrikes in the war-torn country this year, according to Adrian Rankine-Galloway, a Pentagon spokesman.

However, the strikes targeting ISIS militants come as a bit of a surprise. In Yemen, U.S. forces have primarily targeted al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula.

It is not known at this time if the presence of the ISIS training camps in Yemen suggests the group is seeking a larger foothold in region as it continues to rapidly lose territory in Iraq and Syria.

“ISIS has used the ungoverned spaces of Yemen to plot, direct, instigate, resource and recruit for attacks against America and its allies around the world,” states the news release. “For years, Yemen has been a hub for terrorist recruiting, training and transit.”

Yemen’s instability is a result of a failed power handover in 2014 between Ali Abdullah Saleh and President Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi that led to a civil war in the country.

The war has pitted Iranian backed Houthi rebels against predominantly Sunni supporters of Hadi.

Fearing an Iranian foothold in the region, a Saudi-led coalition has supported restoring Hadi to power. That military campaign has come under much criticism over civilian deaths from Saudi airstrikes.

The U.S. military has been supporting Saudi efforts with intelligence and logistic support. However, some members in Congress are seeking to end that support.

Congressman Ro Khanna, D-Calif., is leading a bipartisan effort with Thomas Massie R-Ky., Mark Pocan, D-Wis., and Walter Jones, R-N.C., to end the U.S. military’s involvement and support of the Saudi-led war.

The group submitted a
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in late September invoking the War Powers Resolution to give Congress a vote on ending U.S. support of Saudi Arabia’s war in Yemen, according to a press release from Khanna.

In early October, a U.S. MQ-9 drone was shot down in Yemen by Houthi rebels.
 
Oct 9, 2017
now noticed (dated October 5, 2017)
U.N. blacklists Saudi-led coalition for killing children in Yemen
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call me soft, but I didn't read that article

"Decisive Storm"
what a name!
no wonder US lawmakers seek vote to abandon Saudi-led war in Yemen
9 hours ago
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A bipartisan quartet of House lawmakers is wrangling with the chamber’s leadership for a floor vote to withdraw U.S. military support for Saudi involvement in Yemen’s civil war.

California Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna, who is pressing for the vote, said Tuesday that he is in negotiations with Democratic and Republican leadership about whether the resolution is privileged under the War Powers Act and would therefore get an automatic, fast-tracked floor vote.

Such a vote, Khanna said, is likely to unite progressive Democrats and non-interventionist Republicans — though the outcome is unclear. “You may get many Democrats and Freedom Caucus members,” Khanna said, referring to the conservative wing of the House GOP caucus.

The push comes amid a wave of efforts in Congress for the legislative branch to reassert its war powers since President Donald Trump was elected — even as the White House has rejected calls for an updated Authorization for Use of Military Force, or AUMF. Those calls have grown louder since the
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.

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee will host Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson Monday for a hearing on the AUMFs used to cover current conflicts, which passed Congress in 2001 and 2002.

On Yemen, Khanna and Reps. Mark Pocan, D-Wis.; Thomas Massie, R-Ky., and Walter Jones, R-N.C., introduced a resolution to require U.S. forces halt aerial refueling and targeting intelligence against Houthi rebels, purportedly backed by Iran. It would take effect within 30 days of its passage.

Ongoing negotiations are for a more broadly written resolution, Khanna said.

Jones, a longtime non-interventionist, pointed to Saudi involvement in the 9/11 attacks to explain his support. He lamented Trump’s supportive visit to Riyadh this summer, the mega arms deal signed there and what he sees as outsized Saudi influence in Washington.

“They killed 3,000 Americans. Why in the world are we always cutting deals with people who don’t seem to care about Americans?” Jones said. “For me, personally, I see the Saudis in the same boat with the Iranians.”

For his part, Khanna argues U.S. involvement is “overreach” and risks complicity in a mushrooming humanitarian crisis. According to Human Rights Watch, the Saudi Arabia-led coalition has bombed civilian targets in Yemen; and the war has left several hundred thousand suffering from cholera and 7 million at risk of famine.

“I don’t want to be complicit with Saudi, which lacks regard for human life. When America has the highest standard for these things, we should never be cooperating with Saudi Arabia,” Khanna said. “It compromises America’s moral standards, and we’re being blamed for their atrocious actions.”

The arguments against the resolution are that U.S. assistance to Riyadh is necessary to help check Tehran and that that assistance is not substantial enough to meet the War Powers Act. That would mean the resolution isn’t privileged, which would make it vulnerable for scuttling.

“The statute does not just apply to ground troops overseas,” Khanna said. “It says any U.S. government coordination or participation with a foreign government in an overseas conflict triggers the need to go to Congress.”

Khanna and Jones both acknowledged the headwinds they face from Saudi-funded lobbyists. The Washington Post reported that some of Washington’s premier law and lobby firms — including Podesta Group, BGR Government Affairs, DLA Piper and Pillsbury Winthrop — have been retained by the Saudi government.

At least one senior Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Rep. Brad Sherman, was not convinced the War Powers Act would be triggered by U.S. intelligence sharing or refueling — or that it was wise to withdraw support for the Saudi campaign.

“I see problems with what the Saudis are doing, but I see huge problems with the Houthi as well,” said Sherman, of California. “I’m not ready to say it’s wrong to help Saudi Arabia, as long as the country makes that decision in a constitutional manner.”

House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Ed Royce, R-Calif., said Tuesday he had yet to take a look at the resolution.
 
according to AirForceMag (dated 11/14/2017) House Urges Solutions in Yemen
The House on Monday declared the two
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allowing military operations in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria, do not authorize US help to the Saudi war against Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen.

The House overwhelmingly
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expressing an “urgent need” for political solutions to the conflict, which began in 2015. The resolution notes Houthis have attacked the US coalition and its partners “multiple times,” including
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it also notes Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has transferred weapons to the Houthis, who have then shot long-range missiles into Saudi Arabia from northern Yemen.

One such missile was launched last week from Yemen toward the airport in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia’s capital,
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.

Saudi officials
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the shot an act of war, and
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in response, cutting off humanitarian aid to the country. However, the
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it would re-open some of the ports, according to various news sources.

The Pentagon has not issued a statement on the missile launch or
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, but Defense Secretary James Mattis on Monday told reporters he's “had discussions with Saudi leaders” but couldn’t say much more than that.

“We have military relations and support for certain things going on, … antiterrorism, counterterrorism, you know about that. But it’s diplomatic right now, … a diplomatic effort,” Mattis said.

In addition to the details of the AUMF and history of Houthi attacks, the resolution also notes the US “has participated in intelligence cooperation since 2015” with the Saudi-led coalition, and has provided mid-air refueling to coalition planes flying bombings in Yemen.

AFCENT spokesman Lt. Col. Damien Pickart recently said US Central Command “has authorities to conduct a variety of missions in Yemen, all ultimately focused on bringing stability to the region and halting the spread of terrorism" in a statement provided to Air Force Magazine.

The US has a small train, advise, and assist presence in Saudi Arabia, which supports the Saudis’ “military resources and capabilities to defend their nation, fight terrorists, and maintain their border with Yemen,” he said.

US forces also “routinely” fly aerial refueling missions “in support of US and partner operations targeting terrorists in the region that the Royal Saudi Air Force can use for training and for operational missions,” he added.

However, Pickart explained, the US “does not provide targeting guidance or targeting intelligence to the Saudis in their fight with Yemeni rebels, and we don't participate in Saudi missions that are outside the scope of specified authorities.”

Pickart also noted that in a separate mission, the US monitors and tracks terrorist networks and activities, in coordination with the government of Yemen, “to ensure the US and its partners have the most reliable intelligence to mitigate and target threats.”

The Pentagon announced one of those strikes just last month, saying that US aircraft
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in Yemen.

So far, the US has conducted more than 110 strikes in Yemen against al Qaeda and ISIS, Pickart said.
source:
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Dizasta1

Senior Member
The Saudi regime is not liked by millions of Muslims around the world, from various Muslim countries. In fact, the Saudis (not Arabs of Arabia) are the fore most proponents of Wahhabi-Salafi ideology. The same Wahhabi-Salafi ideology which forms the foundation of terrorist organizations such as Al-Qaeda (Global), ISIS (Global), Al-Shabab (Somalia), Hayat Tahreer Al-Sham (Syria) and Boko Haram (West Africa). The irony of it all is, since it's unholy inception, Saudi family has been intimately involved with Wahhabis. Where the Wahhabi Ikhwaan (bedouin warrior tribes of Eastern Arabia) were introduced to the Saud by the British. It is with this alliance between Saud and the Ikhwaan (Wahhabi), that Saud managed to defeat the Ottoman army, along with the customary British military assistance. The fall of the last Khilafah, Usmania (in english, Ottoman Caliphate), almost 100 years ago. Had angered the Muslims, across the board and to this day, they have not forgotten what happened in the past. The popular belief (non-conclusive in my opinion) is that because all Muslims must perform the Holy Pilgrimage (Hajj), is the reason why Saudis are tolerated by the Muslim masses.

The Saudi war on Yemen is both illegal and illegitimate. Instead of approaching the "Persian Issue" by establishing peaceful understanding and open diplomatic channels between Saudis and Iranian Mullah regime. They (Saudis) behave hysterically, with irrational and divisive policies toward Iran. Both Saudis and Iranian Mullahs are to be blamed for the despicable mess they have made in the Middle East. And for this reason the so-called Arab States have spent hundreds of billions of dollars and pounds on military hardware. With all their Eagles, Eurofighters, Abrams, Patriots and other weapons systems. The Saudis have achieved nothing against the Houthie tribesmen except rain bombs and missiles from the sky. Killing thousands of innocent Yemenis in a war which has more to do with the age old Human dark trait, "Hubris!" And I'm sorry to say, but you have to be blind as a bat not to see that the War on Yemen is not a military war, rather it's a slaughter of innocent Yemenis.

One has to be an empty head not to see how Abdullah Bin Salman and his 15 year old trapped in a 30 year old's body, are doing. A systematic purge of their own family members whom they deem a threat to their hold on power. From the Oil Ministry, to National Guard, to the Ministry of Interior and the Foreign Ministry. All have been usurped by Muhammad Bin Salman, widely known as MBS. Policies such as the "Oil Glut" which saw the Saudi budget in $90 billion deficit, the highest recorded deficit in the country's 85 year history. Then there is the drama over Qatar, boycotting the country on charges of supporting terrorism. And to top it all off, the War on Yemen, also the brain child of the "man-child", Muhammad Bin Salman.

Speaking of Qatar, isn't it hypocrisy on part of America & Britain, when it's foremost ally in the Middle East (Saudi Arabia) has led the charge on boycotting Qatar, accusing it of supporting terrorism. Yet, Qatar managed to buy tens of billions of dollars worth of high tech military hardware from both countries. One of two things is evident here. Makes the Saudis look like complete morons! And shows how hypocritical the West really is at its core. Rational approach seems to be absent when it comes to these people.

So for me, it is quite clear, the world and the countries in it. Are run by a bunch of buffoons. Having said that, we the people living in these countries, are the real buffoons for not making any effort what so ever to check our governments and their absurdly moronic foreign policies. Three cheers for us, the zombie buffoons who seem to live in a comatosed state. Wondering aimlessly, ever engrossed in our iPhones, Lexus, Crystal life styles. As humans, we ought to be ashamed of ourselves.
 
the conflict has escalated recently; I read some news in Russian Internet, but don't have time to try to confirm, so here just what Al Jazeera had to say:
Saleh forces deny Houthi claims over control of Sanaa
8 hours ago
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Forces loyal to Yemen's former President
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have denied claims by Houthi rebels who say they have gained control of most of the country's capital, Sanaa, according to an official in Saleh's Republican Guard.

Iranian-backed Houthi fighters say they had regained control of three military bases, the diplomatic district and other neighbourhoods around the area. They also said they had taken over the city of Dhamar, south of Sanaa, as well as its surrounding regions.

Sanaa has been shaken by escalating violence between Saleh's supporters and Houthi rebels. At least 40 people have reportedly been killed since Wednesday amid ongoing fighting between the two sides, with residents now fearing a new front in an already devastating war.

Though clashes subsided on Saturday night, residents in Sanaa told local media outlets that fighting resumed on Sunday.

According to reports, clashes erupted in some neighbourhoods in the heart of the Yemeni capital.

Residents reported hearing sounds of explosions in Hasba, while others said coalition airstrikes struck Houthi targets south of the city.

On Saturday, Saleh said that he was open to
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with a Saudi-led coalition fighting Houthi rebels, in what the fighters called "a coup" against their fragile alliance with the former president.

He also called for a joint ceasefire between his supporters and Houthi rebels, and the Saudi-led coalition, which has been bombing the impoverished country since March 2015 to get rid of the Iranian-backed rebels.

The Saudi-led coalition praised Saleh for "taking the lead" in the conflict. In a statement on Saturday, the coalition said that it would "redeem Yemen from the evils of Iranian terrorist and sectarian militias, return it to the Pan-Arab pure and natural fold".

Ibrahim Qatabi, Doha-based political analyst, told Al Jazeera: "It seems to me that there might be some collaboration between regional powers, Saleh and maybe the legitimate government to somehow overthrow the Houthis first and then have a serious political talk."

"This is what it looks like, where the whole thing is headed," he said.

Saudi Arabia along with other Sunni Muslim countries intervened to reinstate the government of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, who was overthrown by the Houthis in 2014.

In May 2015, following Saudi-led coalition air raids on his home in Sanaa, Saleh officially announced for the first time the establishment of his alliance with the Houthis. A year later, the Saleh's General People's Congress (GPC) party and Ansar Allah, the political arm of the Houthis, signed an agreement to form a political council to run the country.

The Saudi-led coalition imposed a total blockade in October on the country, where nearly 80 percent of the people need humanitarian aid to survive.

Last week, amid mounting international pressure over the suffering of millions of Yemenis, some humanitarian aid was allowed to
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the country.

The war in Yemen is one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world, killing at least 10,000 people and leading to widespread hunger and disease.
 
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