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US, UAE, and Saudi Arabia Planning a war Against Houthis in Yemen

Gen. Tareq Mohammed Abdullah Salah

General Tareq, a member of the family of former President Ali Abdullah Saleh, is leading the attack

Dubai, (ANN)- A Yemeni military commander, the nephew of the late President Ali Abdullah Saleh and currently a member of Yemen’s presidential council, Brig, Gen. Tareq Mohammed Abdullah Salah, has threatened to influence the intense fighting against the Houthis who control most of Yemen.

His threatening speech against the Houthis came after the US and British attacks on Yemen in recent weeks. which did not change the Houthis’ power, and the attacks in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, and their missiles targeting Israel.

Brig, Gen. Tareq, one of the officials of the former Family Ali Abdulle, prepared to be leading out on the fighting against the Houthis.

This officer has close ties to the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, and has deployed thousands of military forces on the western coast of the Red Sea in southern Yemen.

Gen. Tareq has a national agenda aimed at freeing the West Coast and Yemen’s north from the Houthis.

The estimated at around 4,000 fighters, with an additional 5,000 believed to be trained in a UAE military base in the port of Assab, Eritrea.

Their main area of activity is Yemen’s West Coast. But the preparations for a war seem to be being pushed by the United States and the Gulf countries of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

Western international media outlets this week published a report revealing Brig, Gen. Tareq’s plan. The report discussed the planned war inside Yemen to take on the Houthis.

Reuters news agency quoting the Wall Street Journal on Monday reported, The United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia on Wednesday denied media reports they were involved in talks with the U.S. over a possible land offensive by military factions in Yemen against the Houthi group that controls much of the country.

A senior UAE official dismissed the reports, calling them unsubstantiated, while a Saudi official source said the reports were false.

The Wall Street Journal on Monday reported that Yemeni factions were planning a ground offensive along the Red Sea coast to take advantage of U.S. bombing of the Houthis and that the UAE had raised that plan with U.S. officials.

Bloomberg reported on Wednesday that Yemeni forces opposed to the Iran-aligned Houthis were in talks with the U.S. and Gulf allies about a possible land offensive.

Lana Nusseibeh, the UAE’s assistant minister for political affairs, told Reuters in reference to the media reports on the issue: “Among all the wild unsubstantiated stories going around, that one surely wins the misleading-news-of-the-week award, by a wide margin.”

The Pentagon did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The UAE was part of a Saudi-led coalition that launched a military campaign in Yemen from early 2015 to support the Gulf-backed government against the Houthis, who had seized the capital Sanaa in 2014.

The UAE ended much of its presence in Yemen in 2019 and major fighting in the civil war paused in 2022 with a truce and peace talks, leaving the Houthis in control of swathes of the country and much of the population.

 

The Houthis, who are closely aligned with Iran and opposed to Israel, began attacking Red Sea shipping in November 2023 in what they said was a show of solidarity with Palestinians in the Gaza war.

U.S. President Donald Trump escalated airstrikes against the Houthis in March, warning the group that if its attacks on shipping did not stop, “hell will rain down upon you like nothing you have ever seen before”.

The Houthis, who waged a series of civil wars against the Yemeni government from 2003 to 2009, withstood years of bombardment by the Saudi-led coalition from 2015 with little change to the main front lines in the conflict.

The Red Sea coast, where the Wall Street Journal reported that Yemeni factions were planning an offensive, was the site of a major, ultimately unsuccessful assault by coalition-backed forces on Hodeidah, the biggest port held by the Houthis.

The coalition had to navigate differences between pro-government, Sunni Muslim Islamist and southern separatist factions among its Yemeni allies. Saudi Arabia and the UAE supported different factions, analysts say.

Saudi Arabia wound down its campaign in Yemen with peace talks and a truce in 2022, shortly before agreeing to a diplomatic rapprochement with Iran.

Written by Arraale M. Jama, a freelance journalist and human rights activist.

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admin: Arraale Mohamoud Jama is a highly experienced freelance and investigative journalist, writer, and human rights activist with over two decades of work in journalism and advocacy. His focus areas include: - Human rights - Politics and security - Democracy and good governance He has contributed to Somaliland newspapers and collaborated with human rights organizations. In 2008, he founded Araweelo News Network, is a Associated Online Agenciesa platform covering regional and international news, which he continues to manage. Contact Information: -Email: Info@araweelonews.com | jaamac132@gmail.com - Phone/SMS/MMS/WhatsApp: +252 63 442 5380 Twitter fallow us @Araweelonews Falow us Facebook: [@Araweelonews )
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