Kompromat
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The chips are down for Saudi Arabia. On one side it has anti SA, ISIS and an anti SA Iraqi govt, its proxies are bogged down in Syria and not making significant headway against ISIS, Assad and Iranian proxies backed by Iranian revolutionary guard, while on the other hand Iranian proxies, the so called Huthis have taken over major parts of Yemen and now pose a serious asymmetric threat to SA.
It is likely that SA would end up fighting a two front war against ISIS and against Huthis in Yemen which will thin and stretch its armed forces which will damage its ability to project power. In the meanwhile if Iran lays a territorial claim on Shia parts of Iraq, the Saudis would be facing a conventional threat from Iranian military.
SA is now rallying its GCC allies to counter this rather critical situation. Since there are no RSLF boots deployed in Syria or Iraq against Assad or ISIS, one would think that Yemen makes an ideal target for power projection.
In order to gain credible foothold the Saudis would have to mobilise their enormous air power to first pound Huthis in Yemen followed by a swift invasion along with Yemeni opposition to drive the Huthis away from power. This must be followed by a formal annexation of Yemen to S.A like Crimea. If Saudis install a naval blockade, Iranian supply line to the rebels will choke and Iran also won't be able to supply them when RSAF and other GCC air forces enforce a no fly zone.
It will not only consolidate SA's borders but also would send a strong message to other proxies controlled by Tehran. It will also mean SA would be able to project full power against Assad and ISIS.
If SA doesn't annexe Yemen at this stage, it will soon face a huge asymmetric threat from a number of insurgent organisations at the same time which will have far reaching destabilising impacts on the whole region.
Your thoughts?
@al-Hasani @Mosamania
It is likely that SA would end up fighting a two front war against ISIS and against Huthis in Yemen which will thin and stretch its armed forces which will damage its ability to project power. In the meanwhile if Iran lays a territorial claim on Shia parts of Iraq, the Saudis would be facing a conventional threat from Iranian military.
SA is now rallying its GCC allies to counter this rather critical situation. Since there are no RSLF boots deployed in Syria or Iraq against Assad or ISIS, one would think that Yemen makes an ideal target for power projection.
In order to gain credible foothold the Saudis would have to mobilise their enormous air power to first pound Huthis in Yemen followed by a swift invasion along with Yemeni opposition to drive the Huthis away from power. This must be followed by a formal annexation of Yemen to S.A like Crimea. If Saudis install a naval blockade, Iranian supply line to the rebels will choke and Iran also won't be able to supply them when RSAF and other GCC air forces enforce a no fly zone.
It will not only consolidate SA's borders but also would send a strong message to other proxies controlled by Tehran. It will also mean SA would be able to project full power against Assad and ISIS.
If SA doesn't annexe Yemen at this stage, it will soon face a huge asymmetric threat from a number of insurgent organisations at the same time which will have far reaching destabilising impacts on the whole region.
Your thoughts?
@al-Hasani @Mosamania