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

Sooner or later the low price of oil will bring Zoroastrian-stan to its knees.

You think Iranians are like big belly useless people in GCC ?

No , majority of Iranians have proven themselves in hard situations .

Marking the start of Operation Restoring Hope - Saudis have launched a drive to legalize the status of illegal Yemni migrants affected by war as well as refugees without any official identification documents. This also provides them opportunity to work and take up regular employment in Saudi Arabia. Only victors can opt to offer facilities of rebuilding in a war defeated nation.

Taking off goggles of religion one has to be realistic in war. And call spade a spade.
Iran expressed all evidence of involvement by being a party in a conflict strictly between two neighbors.
As Yemen shares border with no one else than Saudi Arabia and Oman.

Rather than arming and bolstering Houtis for Armed revolt - Iran has better chances in Yemen by pushing for education, reforms, jobs and investment.

A common habbit among the Persian clergy and communist is to instigate a conflict and run away at the helm of it. Leaving people to suffer while doing an absurd propaganda media service.


Firstly there is not a single reliable evidence to show Iran's part in Yemen .

After 2 whole months pro Saudi members have not shown 1 single reliable picture or video of Iranians and Iranian weapons in Yemen .

Yemen's fate must be in the hands of people of Yemen and the same is honest for Iraq and Syria . Neither Iran nor Saudi Arabia have right to interfere in mentioned countries .

But I'm 100% sure that majority of Yemenis are against Hadi , A man who didn't have balls to stand in the country and fled to a country that has bombed Yemen for 2 whole months illegally .

If any election takes place in Yemen , Saudi elements will have the least chance and that's why Saudis have rejected to let Yemenis decide for their country .

Iraq , Iraq might be a divided country but we know the fact that in a democratic election Shias will take Power like before and this is why Saudis and Americans are making trouble there .

Syria , Syria might be in a bloody war and Assad might have done war crimes directly or indirectly but I'm sure the man or any other secular character will win any election there compared to bunch of heart-biter terrorists as all the minorities plus a huge number of Sunnis ( Secular Sunnis who are the majority in all of the major cities ) prefer him to a failed terrorist Morsi / Erdogan like Muslim Brotherhood or a puppet guy like Jordanian / Saudi / Bahraini king because only a secular state will be able to bring a good life for them .
 
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Iran's Yemen-bound aid ship docks in Djibouti, WFP to deliver aid cargo| Reuters
May 22, 2015 4:29pm EDT

An Iranian aid ship docked on Friday in Djibouti, where its cargo will be inspected by the United Nations before being moved to conflict-torn Yemen, Iran's semi-official Fars news agency reported.

"The ship docked a few minutes ago in Djibouti," Fars said. "The ship entered Djibouti waters yesterday and after inspection by the international organization will head toward Yemen."

Tehran agreed this week to allow an international inspection of the vessel, the Iran Shahed, averting a potential showdown with Saudi-led forces who are enforcing searches of ships entering Yemeni ports to stop arms reaching Houthi rebels.

Shi'ite power Iran backs the dominant Houthi militia in Yemen's civil war while regional arch-rival Saudi Arabia and its Sunni Muslim allies have carried out almost two months of air raids against them and want Yemen's president reinstated.

Tehran has rejected Saudi accusations it is arming Houthi fighters.

The ship had originally been bound for the Yemen's Red Sea port of Hodaida, which is controlled by the Houthis, but its aid cargo will now be delivered by the World Food Program, the U.N agency said on Friday.

"The cargo of the ship will be handed over to WFP in Djibouti and will be transferred to WFP-chartered vessels for shipment to the Yemeni ports of Hodaida and/or (the southern port city of) Aden," WFP spokeswoman Abeer Etefa said.

"It will be delivered to humanitarian partners on the ground for distribution."

Etefa said the WFP had been told the 2,500 ton cargo included supplies of rice, flour, canned fish, medicine, water, tents and blankets.

(Additional reporting by Parisa Hafezi in Ankara; Editing by Catherine Evans)
 
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CAMP LEMONNIER, Djibouti (May 19, 2015) Rear Ad. John Scorby, commander of Navy Region Europe, Africa, Southwest Asia, speaks with Cmdr. Jeffrey Marty, mission commander of Coast Riverine Squadron (CRS) 1, during a brief of port operations. CRS-1 conducts anti-terrorism, force protection and personnel recovery missions in the Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti area of operation. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Julia A. Casper/Released)
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CAMP LEMONNIER, Djibouti (May 19, 2015) Rear Ad. John Scorby, commander of Navy Region Europe, Africa, Southwest Asia, speaks with Cmdr. Jeffrey Marty, mission commander of Coast Riverine Squadron (CRS) 1, during a brief of port operations. CRS-1 conducts anti-terrorism, force protection and personnel recovery missions in the Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti area of operation. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Julia A. Casper/Released)
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ARABIAN SEA (May 21, 2015) Electrician's Mate 1st Class Charles Perez monitors electrical loads during watch aboard the guided-missile destroyer USS Winston S. Churchill (DDG 81). Winston S. Churchill is deployed to the U.S. 5th Fleet area of operations in Iraq and Syria as directed, maritime security operations and theater security cooperation efforts in the region. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Michael Drew/Released)
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Can someone post this for me on the main forum. I'm not able to start topics yet for some reason. It will get quite a few people in a tizzy.

Report: Israel offered Saudi Arabia use of its Iron Dome technology

Arabic-language newspaper Rai al-Youm reported on Saturday that Israel has offered Saudi Arabia to use its Iron Dome anti-rocket technology

The offer was made to the Kingdom to defend its border with Yemen that has come under numerous rocket attacks.

According to the report, the offer was made last week during meetings in Amman between the Saudis and the US ambassador to Jordan. A spokesman for the Jordanian government said that he was not aware of a meeting between the Saudis and the Israelis in Amman, the news outlet reported.

Saudi Arabia reportedly rejected the offer, according to the London based newspaper.

On Thursday and Friday cross border rocket attacks launched from inside Yemen killed two people in southern Saudi Arabia, Saudi Arabia's state news agency SPA reported on Friday.

SPA quoted a Civil Defense official in the southwestern province of Jizan as saying that a child was killed and three other children were wounded on Friday in the al-Tawal region.

A rocket attack on Thursday killed one citizen and wounded two others in al Hosn village, the agency reported earlier.

On Friday, Saudi-led coalition warplanes pounded Houthi-held military outposts on the hills overlooking the Yemeni capital Sanaa, as the eight-week military offensive aimed at ousting the rebels intensified over the weekend.

The airstrikes came as two Shi'ite mosques, one in the eastern province of Saudi Arabia and the other in Sanaa, were targeted by explosive devices and suicide bombers during Friday prayers.

Coalition fighter jets also targeted the presidential compound in the capital on Friday, where the Shi'ite rebels seized control in September.

The Saudi-led coalition of Sunni Arab nations intervened in Yemen's civil war on March 26 with an all out air assault to force the Iran-allied Houthis to retreat from territories they have seized since last year, and restore the power of exiled Yemeni President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi.

Friday's violence followed overnight airstrikes that targeted Houthi controlled military outposts of the notorious Republican Guard troops in the capital.

At least four missiles hit one of the Guard's training camps in Sanaa late Thursday (May 21) night.

The latest spike in violence comes ahead of UN sponsored Yemen peace talks to be held in Geneva on May 28.
 
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Why Saudi Arabia's Yemen war is not producing victory - Al-Monitor: the Pulse of the Middle East

The Salmans also immediately sought experienced combat-tested ground forces from Pakistan to take the war into Yemen. The Pakistanis came away from meetings in Riyadh convinced the king and his son had "panicked" and jumped into the war without a viable strategy for achieving victory; the Pakistanis refused to join the war effort and leaked their worries to the press. The young prince was portrayed as "untested" and unprepared for the job. All this from a Pakistani leader, Nawaz Sharif, who spent years in exile in the kingdom and knows the royals better than any other outsider.

There are similar mutterings around the Gulf states now that the Saudi leadership is impulsive and rash. The Saudis have traditionally been very conservative and risk-averse. From Faisal to Abdullah, Saudi kings were cautious and careful. Now there is hushed talk of a team out of its depth with no plan for an endgame. No one wants to say openly that Riyadh is in a quagmire, but Oman's decision to opt out of the war is increasingly seen as a smart decision.



Bismillah. May their reserves deplete, may their low credibility become even lower, may the whole world hate them even more, and lastly may the Yemenis forever want to drink their blood. The day will come when Yemen is sent in.. Along with 'minorities'. Then the cutting and hanging of the billionaire class will begin..
 
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conservative and risk-averse. From Faisal

So much for the validity of this mullah article, since Faisal and "risk-averse" don't belong in the same sentence.
The mullah who wrote the piece should go back and maybe read a page or two about Saudi Arabia before talking about it.
 
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So much for the validity of this mullah article, since Faisal and "risk-averse" don't belong in the same sentence.
The mullah who wrote the piece should go back and maybe read a page or two about Saudi Arabia before talking about it.

Al-Monitor FRIEND. That's AY-RAB. Not Iranian. Jewish mullah? Riedel? Faisal risk-averse in comparison to the current looney bin running the show. A 29 year old virgin starting a war? Come on huh. Not even a single day of military education or experience. You would think it was a satirical movie, but it's reality sadly. And the Yemeni people suffer from it. Already the poorest nation of the Arab world, now bombed back into the stone age. But hey, what goes around comes around, you damn well know that. In a few years: damn, the Houthis have modern ATGM's, wtf is Saudia gonna do then? Yes, we know what will happen.
 
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Bismillah. May their reserves deplete, may their low credibility become even lower, may the whole world hate them even more, and lastly may the Yemenis forever want to drink their blood. The day will come when Yemen is sent in.. Along with 'minorities'. Then the cutting and hanging of the billionaire class will begin..

:lol: Hopeless.

The bigger the pain, the louder the scream.
 
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:lol: Hopeless.

The bigger the pain, the louder the scream.

Hey, how is pounding Yemen into oblivion hurting Iran? Look it up, Iran is secretly laughing about this, I find it horrible. I'm not gleeful about people hurting. But ever analyst agrees, the Saudi's don't know WTF they're doing, and it's going to hurt them.
 
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Arab air strikes hit military bases in Yemen| Reuters
Sat May 23, 2015 12:04pm EDT
Saudi-led air strikes hit three military bases in the Yemeni capital Sanaa on Saturday and the Yemeni government in exile expressed reservations about United Nations-led talks aimed at ending the eight-week war.

Residents said the air raids hit a munitions store in one of the bases, setting off a large explosion which sent rockets flying into the air and crashing down on civilian areas.

There was no immediate word on casualties.

An Arab alliance has been bombing Yemen's dominant group, the Iran-allied Houthi militia, and have backed Yemeni fighters opposing the group in battlefields throughout Yemen's south.

Yemen's exiled government in Saudi Arabia headed by President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi expressed reluctance to attend U.N.-sponsored peace talks set for May 28 in Geneva.

A spokesman said on Saturday the Houthis and their powerful ally, ex-president Ali Abdullah Saleh, should first commit to a U.N. Security Council resolution demanding they withdraw from Yemen's main cities.

"The discussion to hold the Geneva conference perhaps needs more time and arrangements. The other side, the Houthi militias and Saleh, have not recognized President Hadi's legitimacy ... until now they have given no explicit, clear reaction to resolution 2216," Rajeh Badi told Saudi-owned Al Arabiya TV.

A delegation of Houthi officials has arrived in neighboring Oman to discuss the conflict with the government, which has previously relayed messages between the Shi'ite Muslim group and Saudi Arabia.

"I hope there is consensus to stop the aggression on Yemen, especially ahead of the Geneva conference, and then a serious Yemeni-Yemeni dialogue which allows Yemenis to build their state and gain security and stability," Houthi spokesman Mohammed Abdul-Salam told Arab TV station Al Mayadeen.

The group has demanded a ceasefire before they attend the peace talks and have dismissed demands to withdraw from Yemeni cities and the capital, which they seized in September.

(Reporting By Mohammed Ghobari; Writing by Noah Browning; Editing by Janet Lawrence)
 
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Stakes getting dangerously high for Saudi Arabia and its young prince

As the war in Yemen resumes after a short humanitarian truce, the stakes are getting higher for Saudi Arabia's princes.

The Royal Saudi Air Force and its allies resumed their bombing campaign this week after a five-day cease-fire to allow humanitarian supplies into Yemen. Saudi Arabia's 29-year-old Defense Minister Prince Mohammed bin Salman has staked his future and his country's on achieving some kind of victory in the kingdom's war in Yemen. A truce that leaves Sanaa under the control of what the Saudis claim is an Iranian protégé regime is clearly not a decisive victory for the royals.

Instead — after weeks of air attacks on the Zaydi Shiite Houthi rebels and their allies — the prince's war looks like a stalemate. The immense damage done to Yemen's weak infrastructure has created considerable bad blood between Yemenis and their rich Gulf neighbors that will poison relations for years. Yemenis always resented their rich brothers, and now many will want revenge. Iran is scoring a victory on its Gulf rival without any cost to Tehran and with only limited Iranian assistance to the Zaydis.

King Salman appointed his son defense minister on January 23, 2015, after serving as chief of his royal court for two years. Mohammed bin Salman had no previous military experience or military education. Less than two months later, the Saudis began Operation Decisive Storm to coerce the Houthis to restore the government of President Hadi back to power. The Saudis gave Washington three hours’ notice of the first air strikes. Prince Salman immediately became the face of the war appearing endlessly in the Saudi media directing operations and trying to find allies to join the campaign.

The Salmans also immediately sought experienced combat tested ground forces from Pakistan to take the war into Yemen. The Pakistanis came away from meetings in Riyadh convinced the king and his son had "panicked" and jumped into the war without a viable strategy for achieving victory; the Pakistanis refused to join the war effort and leaked their worries to the press. The young prince was portrayed as "untested" and unprepared for the job. This from a Pakistani leader, Nawaz Sharif, who spent years in exile in the kingdom and knows the royals better than any other outsider.

There are mutterings around the Gulf states now that the Saudi leadership is impulsive and rash. The Saudis have traditionally been very conservative and risk averse. From Faysal to Abdullah, Saudi Kings were cautious and careful. Now there is hushed talk of a team out of its depth with no plan for an endgame.

For their part, the Houthis seem determined to bait the Saudis. They have launched artillery and mortar attacks across the border at Saudi towns and cities like Jizan and Najran, and have mounted small ground incursions. The Houthis are pressing their offensive to take Aden in the south. They are determined to stay in power and stymie the Saudis.

The Iranian press is scathing in its depiction of the royals and especially the young prince. Iranian leaders have labeled the Saudis as "ignorant" and "inexperienced." They have predicted the fall of the House of Saud will follow a lost war in Yemen, a case of wishful thinking, no doubt. The Saudis have been compared to both Saddam's Iraq and Netanyahu's Israel as arrogant and barbarous. The Iranians seem almost gleeful.

Saudi rhetoric is also getting more extreme. While Crown Prince Mohammed bin Nayef and Mohammed bin Salman were at Camp David filling in for the king, the king was meeting with ultra-conservative members of the Wahhabi clerical establishment who have proclaimed the war a holy mission. After snubbing the president, the king spent his time with clerics who back slavery, object to modern astronomy, and regard Shia as unbelievers. They too are pressing for victory.

For now the Saudis are learning the limits of their power. Despite spending five times more on defense than Iran and acquiring scores of modern aircraft from the United States and the United Kingdom over many decades, Riyadh looks unable to get its way in Yemen.
 
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Thanks Iranians, as I have told you before, WE will take it from here and it will be delivered to Houthi victims. ;)
I don't know why they put themselves in such very awkward situations in the first place.

Sooner or later the low price of oil will bring Zoroastrian-stan to its knees.
It's on it's knees already. That's why it has been offering concessions to left sanctions.
 
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