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Saudi Arabia Blames Iran for Attempted Missile Attack on Riyadh

The Houthis unveil a new naval missile named "Al Mandab 1" during the opening of a maritime exhibition opened by Saleh Al-Samad.

View attachment 435406View attachment 435407View attachment 435408
C-704 ?
http://yemen.shafaqna.com/AR/YE/2746098
No these are Chinese C-801 which Yemeni army received alongside with Thailand.
C801-Missile.jpg
 
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1) Saudi Arabians and Yemenis are neighbors, fellow Arabs and brothers and sisters.

2) Wars involving KSA and Yemen can be counted on 3 fingers. 2 of those wars are aimed at a less than 25 year old terrorist cult called Houthis. Using your logic Iran is at war against Iraqis, Syrians and Lebanese.

3) There is nothing in this world called "Southern Persian Gulf region".:lol: Yemen does not even border the Gulf expect for the Gulf of Aden. Other than the Arabian Sea, the Red Sea and Bab el-Mandeb. Yemen is an Arab country located on the Arabian Peninsula. The southwest of it. In West Asia/Southwest Asia/Asia/MENA/Northern Hemisphere.

4) Qatar is boycotted by almost all Arab countries and almost all Arab governments are heavily against Qatari policies. The reason why Qatar was boycotted is explained in detail in this video below:


I suggest watching it. Only 5 minutes long. You and others will learn a lot.


As for Qatar, Saudi Arabians and Qataris are brotherly people as well. 90% of all Qataris originate from KSA and so does the ruling Al-Thani dynasty. Not only that the temporary political dispute has not claimed a single life. Anyway rest assured, Qatar will change their behavior. They have already.

5) Bahrain is an extension of Eastern Arabia. 90% of the historical territory of Eastern Arabia lies in Saudi Arabia's Eastern Province. It's the same story as in Qatar. KSA won't accept instability in a brotherly nation that relies heavily on KSA or give backward and failed Islamists with a foreign agenda (Wilyat al-Faqih supporters ) any room to breath. They will never rule anything. The demographics of Bahrain nowadays (the majority is Sunni today) will ensure this as will common sense and the desire to progress and not regress.

6) It was the Egyptian military that decided to remove an incompetent regime. KSA had nothing to do with it other than always standing beside the Egyptian people and the Egyptian people spoke clearly. Ask any Egyptian user on PDF. Not a SINGLE one supports Morsi or the MB. Foreigners (non-Arabs) have no clue about what went on in Egypt back then.

@Frogman @EgyptianAmerican @MICA @Hell NO @Gomig-21 @Amir_Pharaoh @Mahmoud_EGY @Ahmad Torky @Amun etc.

7) Do you have any proof that UAE was involved in the coup in Turkey? Moreover do you have a prove of it not being an inside job? Many observers, locals as well as foreigners believe that. @Khafee

8) Hadi has a transitional figure and his government was on the right cause until the incompetent Houthi terrorist cult started attacking Yemen and Yemenis and causing trouble. Aided by a removed president (Ali Abdullah Saleh).

9) Sure, Iran was "against" it in another universe maybe. In other news, Iran is home to more jungles than Congo.

10) There is no 24/7 bombardment. Do you think that 5000 civilians killed by the Arab coalition (UN data) would be this few after almost 3 years of war if there was bombing 24/7? Houthis have killed more civilians and are the root cause of the war.

KSA has every right to protect itself and prevent Yemen from turning into another Afghanistan as Yemen is a very strategic country just for the Bab el-Mandeb strait alone where 15% of the world's trade passes by.

11) There were no Houthis back in 1962. This just shows how little you know about Yemen. The Houthi
terrorist cult was founded in 1994.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Houthis

KSA supported Northern Yemen and the Zaydi monarchy when Egypt (Nasser) invaded Yemen during the North Yemen civil war back in the 1960's. This was due to the split between Arab countries that supported Arab nationalism and secularism and mostly monarchies.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Yemen_Civil_War



Absurd. You don't even know that UAE is the second most important participant in the Arab coalition after KSA. In fact they have done a tremendous job so far. Don't you think that you should refrain from commenting on topics that you have no clue about? I am saying this to you despite you being one of the more informed Iranian users. What should that tell you?

@Khafee



Well, some people love to shot themsleves in the foot. The Mullah Wilayat al-Faqih regime has been doing that continuously ever since 1979. You can't learn an old dog new tricks.

And I think you don't know the language of sarcasm, do you? moreover those who take a newspaper headline as a official policy of a country and even don't know the so-called headline of that paper is a direct quote of Houthis ,which they are fighting now, then what should I say!!!!!! seeing some folks were shocked of hearing the possibility of missile attack against the UAE by Houthis over here made me write that as if these people don't know the UAE also is engaged in war against Yemen people.

And as you know Houthis are Zaydi who were marginalized due to communist PDRY .. by collapse of the Soviet Union in 90s again Zaydi backed to the power.

The roots of Yemen’s current conflict date back more than a decade, to a little-covered series of six brutal wars fought by the government of Yemen’s former president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, in the aim of defeating an insurgent group—widely referred to as the Houthis—based in the country’s far north. The Houthis’ founder, firebrand cleric Hussein al-Houthi, hailed from a prominent Zaidi Shi’a family and was a leader of the revival of Zaidism, a heterodox Shi’a sect found nearly exclusively in Yemen’s mountainous north. Notably the group’s foundation was, itself, rooted in a reaction to foreign intervention: a key aspect of the Houthis ideology was shoring up Zaidism against the perceived threat of the influence of Saudi-influenced ideologies ( go read Muqbil bin Hadi role the founder of Madrasa in Dammaj which was known as a center for Salafist ideology and its multi-national student population. known as the father of the modern Salafi movement within Yemen. It was there that he began to spread the Salafi Da'wah in Yemen, with much initial opposition from the Shafi`is, Ismailis, and Zaidis there.) and a general condemnation of the Yemeni government’s alliance with the United States, which, along with complaints regarding . the government’s corruption and the marginalization of much of the Houthis’ home areas in Saada constituted the group’s key grievances.

......

The Houthis are homegrown. Their name comes from the Houthi family, who launched a religious revival in northern Yemen. In the 1990s, when Salafists began preaching the Saudi brand of Wahhabi Islam on what was essentially Houthi turf, the head of the family, Hussein al-Houthi, led a movement to reaffirm Zaidi Shiite traditions that had guided Yemeni culture for centuries.

Yemen’s central government saw Houthi's growing influence as a security threat. Under the leadership of then-President Ali Abdullah Saleh, Yemeni armed forces launched a series of wars to beat back the Houthis. In 2009, Saudi Arabia sent its own troops to join in the fight to subdue the Houthis.

By 2011, as populist fervor was coursing through the Arab world, the Houthis had joined with other anti-government groups in Yemen to hasten the downfall of President Saleh. They argued that his leadership had become corrupt, and they called for his ouster.

In 2012, Saleh was forced to transfer executive power to his vice president, Abdo Monsuer Hadi. The same year, the Houthis came to the negotiating table to help draft a power-sharing agreement with other Yemeni factions through a UN-sponsored National Dialogue Conference.

But the NDC came up with recommendations that would have provided the Houthis with less than complete control of their historic lands in the north.

The Houthis were having none of that, and in a political move that continues to confuse observers, they formed a political alliance with their longtime nemesis, the deposed Saleh, who was already seeking to regain power in 2013.

Reporter Iona Craig, who was then living in Sanaa, recalls that the Houthis, with Saleh’s formidable political and military connections, were able in 2014 to gain control of northern Yemeni cities including the capital, Sanaa. “Certainly at the beginning of this war it was Saleh who was really the driving force behind the Houthis and, yes, they were politically aligned to Iran but there was very little evidence, really, of the Iranians supporting the Houthis.”

There was no need for Iranian weapons in 2014. Saleh may have been out of office, but he still controlled much of the well-stocked, American-supplied Yemeni arsenal.

By March 2015, the Houthi/Saleh forces had conquered most of Yemen’s major cities and driven out the caretaker government of President Hadi, thoroughly alarming the Saudi government that supported him.

And On Iran opposing taking over of Saana, not in a another universe maybe but just listen to U.S. intelligence officials:

WASHINGTON -- Iranian representatives discouraged Houthi rebels from taking the Yemeni capital of Sanaa last year, according to American officials familiar with intelligence around the insurgent takeover.

The seizure of the capital in September came as a surprise to the international community, as Houthi rebels demonstrating outside Sanaa realized the city was abandoned and effectively unguarded. Despite Iran's advice, the Houthis walked into the city and claimed it.

The newly disclosed information casts further doubt on claims that the rebels are a proxy group fighting on behalf of Iran, suggesting that the link between Iran and the Yemeni Shiite group may not be as strong as congressional hawks and foreign powers urging U.S. intervention in Yemen have asserted.

U.S. lawmakers and Gulf state leaders who are skeptical of the nuclear negotiations with Iran have pointed to the Houthis' rise to power in Yemen as more evidence of Iran's unhelpful expansionary objectives in the region. But the news that Iran actually opposed the takeover paints a more complicated picture. As the regime in Tehran has signaled, the Iranians are not unhappy to see their Gulf rivals embroiled in conflict in their neighborhood, but their advice against seizing Sanaa suggests that controlling Yemen is at best a secondary priority for Iran, far behind relief from sanctions that could come with a successful nuclear pact.

On the other hand, the revelation that the Houthis directly disobeyed Iran gives credibility to the White House's argument that Iran is not directing the rebels, who follow a different branch of Shiite Islam than Iran's leaders and are believed to care more about corruption and the distribution of power in Yemen than the spread of Shiite influence across the Middle East.

"It remains our assessment that Iran does not exert command and control over the Houthis in Yemen," Bernadette Meehan, a spokeswoman for the National Security Council, told The Huffington Post.

U.S. intelligence officials have warned for months that Yemen’s chaos is a civil war, not a battleground for regional conflict between Iran and the Sunni-ruled Gulf states. They continue to challenge the narrative pushed by Sunni nations, led by Saudi Arabia, who have blasted the Houthi surge and accused the U.S. of abandoning Yemen to a greedy Iran.

"It is wrong to think of the Houthis as a proxy force for Iran,” a U.S. intelligence official told The Huffington Post.


And I didn't say "southern Persian Gulf region" I said "countries in southern Persian gulf" which is logical .. even we could say Arab states of the Persian Gulf or Arab states on the southern Persian gulf border or Persian gulf countries . .. as you wish ..

 
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And I think you don't know the language of sarcasm, do you? moreover those who take a newspaper headline as a official policy of a country and even don't know the so-called headline of that paper is a direct quote of Houthis ,which they are fighting now, then what should I say!!!!!! seeing some folks were shocked of hearing the possibility of missile attack against the UAE by Houthis over here made me write that as if these people don't know the UAE also is engaged in war against Yemen people.

And as you know Houthis are Zaydi who were marginalized due to communist PDRY .. by collapse of the Soviet Union in 90s again Zaydi backed to the power.

The roots of Yemen’s current conflict date back more than a decade, to a little-covered series of six brutal wars fought by the government of Yemen’s former president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, in the aim of defeating an insurgent group—widely referred to as the Houthis—based in the country’s far north. The Houthis’ founder, firebrand cleric Hussein al-Houthi, hailed from a prominent Zaidi Shi’a family and was a leader of the revival of Zaidism, a heterodox Shi’a sect found nearly exclusively in Yemen’s mountainous north. Notably the group’s foundation was, itself, rooted in a reaction to foreign intervention: a key aspect of the Houthis ideology was shoring up Zaidism against the perceived threat of the influence of Saudi-influenced ideologies ( go read Muqbil bin Hadi role the founder of Madrasa in Dammaj which was known as a center for Salafist ideology and its multi-national student population. known as the father of the modern Salafi movement within Yemen. It was there that he began to spread the Salafi Da'wah in Yemen, with much initial opposition from the Shafi`is, Ismailis, and Zaidis there.) and a general condemnation of the Yemeni government’s alliance with the United States, which, along with complaints regarding . the government’s corruption and the marginalization of much of the Houthis’ home areas in Saada constituted the group’s key grievances.

......

The Houthis are homegrown. Their name comes from the Houthi family, who launched a religious revival in northern Yemen. In the 1990s, when Salafists began preaching the Saudi brand of Wahhabi Islam on what was essentially Houthi turf, the head of the family, Hussein al-Houthi, led a movement to reaffirm Zaidi Shiite traditions that had guided Yemeni culture for centuries.

Yemen’s central government saw Houthi's growing influence as a security threat. Under the leadership of then-President Ali Abdullah Saleh, Yemeni armed forces launched a series of wars to beat back the Houthis. In 2009, Saudi Arabia sent its own troops to join in the fight to subdue the Houthis.

By 2011, as populist fervor was coursing through the Arab world, the Houthis had joined with other anti-government groups in Yemen to hasten the downfall of President Saleh. They argued that his leadership had become corrupt, and they called for his ouster.

In 2012, Saleh was forced to transfer executive power to his vice president, Abdo Monsuer Hadi. The same year, the Houthis came to the negotiating table to help draft a power-sharing agreement with other Yemeni factions through a UN-sponsored National Dialogue Conference.

But the NDC came up with recommendations that would have provided the Houthis with less than complete control of their historic lands in the north.

The Houthis were having none of that, and in a political move that continues to confuse observers, they formed a political alliance with their longtime nemesis, the deposed Saleh, who was already seeking to regain power in 2013.

Reporter Iona Craig, who was then living in Sanaa, recalls that the Houthis, with Saleh’s formidable political and military connections, were able in 2014 to gain control of northern Yemeni cities including the capital, Sanaa. “Certainly at the beginning of this war it was Saleh who was really the driving force behind the Houthis and, yes, they were politically aligned to Iran but there was very little evidence, really, of the Iranians supporting the Houthis.”

There was no need for Iranian weapons in 2014. Saleh may have been out of office, but he still controlled much of the well-stocked, American-supplied Yemeni arsenal.

By March 2015, the Houthi/Saleh forces had conquered most of Yemen’s major cities and driven out the caretaker government of President Hadi, thoroughly alarming the Saudi government that supported him.

And On Iran opposing taking over of Saana, not in a another universe maybe but just listen to U.S. intelligence officials:

WASHINGTON -- Iranian representatives discouraged Houthi rebels from taking the Yemeni capital of Sanaa last year, according to American officials familiar with intelligence around the insurgent takeover.

The seizure of the capital in September came as a surprise to the international community, as Houthi rebels demonstrating outside Sanaa realized the city was abandoned and effectively unguarded. Despite Iran's advice, the Houthis walked into the city and claimed it.

The newly disclosed information casts further doubt on claims that the rebels are a proxy group fighting on behalf of Iran, suggesting that the link between Iran and the Yemeni Shiite group may not be as strong as congressional hawks and foreign powers urging U.S. intervention in Yemen have asserted.

U.S. lawmakers and Gulf state leaders who are skeptical of the nuclear negotiations with Iran have pointed to the Houthis' rise to power in Yemen as more evidence of Iran's unhelpful expansionary objectives in the region. But the news that Iran actually opposed the takeover paints a more complicated picture. As the regime in Tehran has signaled, the Iranians are not unhappy to see their Gulf rivals embroiled in conflict in their neighborhood, but their advice against seizing Sanaa suggests that controlling Yemen is at best a secondary priority for Iran, far behind relief from sanctions that could come with a successful nuclear pact.

On the other hand, the revelation that the Houthis directly disobeyed Iran gives credibility to the White House's argument that Iran is not directing the rebels, who follow a different branch of Shiite Islam than Iran's leaders and are believed to care more about corruption and the distribution of power in Yemen than the spread of Shiite influence across the Middle East.

"It remains our assessment that Iran does not exert command and control over the Houthis in Yemen," Bernadette Meehan, a spokeswoman for the National Security Council, told The Huffington Post.

U.S. intelligence officials have warned for months that Yemen’s chaos is a civil war, not a battleground for regional conflict between Iran and the Sunni-ruled Gulf states. They continue to challenge the narrative pushed by Sunni nations, led by Saudi Arabia, who have blasted the Houthi surge and accused the U.S. of abandoning Yemen to a greedy Iran.

"It is wrong to think of the Houthis as a proxy force for Iran,” a U.S. intelligence official told The Huffington Post.


And I didn't say "southern Persian Gulf region" I said "countries in southern Persian gulf" which is logical .. even we could say Arab states of the Persian Gulf or Arab states on the southern Persian gulf border or Persian gulf countries . .. as you wish ..

You did not answer any of my points and still refuse to admit that you are uninformed about this conflict when I just proved exactly that in post 30 in this very thread.

Why are you telling me the history of the Houthi's? I am well aware of this terrorist cult's history of undermining the Yemeni state and causing misery in that country. Let alone their lack of credentials, ability to govern, incompetence, violence, worldwide condemnation and khat addiction.

Houthis don't speak for Zaydis. I doubt that there is a single Zaydi in KSA for instance that supports them. If Zaydis were supporting Houthis as some ignorants claim, they would have ruled Yemen long ago either by force or by being elected. Neither thing has ever happened outside of a few months of rule with their former enemy (Ali Abdullah Saleh) back in late 2014 and early 2015.

So now the US has become a trusted source? The same US that claimed that Iraq was developing nuclear weapons and weapons of mass destruction? The same US that is apparently (according to the Iranian regime) only looking to destabilize the region?

The US have their own interests.

Once again, there is nothing in this world called "Southern Persian Gulf region".:lol: Yemen does not even border the Gulf expect for the Gulf of Aden. Other than the Arabian Sea, the Red Sea and Bab el-Mandeb. Yemen is an Arab country located on the Arabian Peninsula. The southwest of it. In West Asia/Southwest Asia/Asia/MENA/Northern Hemisphere. Iraq for instance is a Gulf country similar to Iran as it borders the Gulf. But even that makes little sense as Iraq is much more than that similar to a huge country like KSA. I am from Hijaz a region 1000 km away. I have more in common/the region is closer located to Egypt, Jordan, Syria, Israel, Palestine, Lebanon, Yemen, Northern Sudan etc. than it is to Oman, Iran, UAE etc. Nor is any Gulf Arabic spoken.

BTW I don't need any US sources to use common sense. An unstable Yemen suits Iran as this impacts KSA negatively. Much more so than it does with Iran. Everywhere where the Iranian regime has a bit of influence or tries to have influence there is misery or incompetence.
 
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You did not answer any of my points and still refuse to admit that you are uninformed about this conflict when I just proved exactly that in post 30 in this very thread.

Why are you telling me the history of the Houthi's? I am well aware of this terrorist cult's history of undermining the Yemeni state and causing misery in that country. Let alone their lack of credentials, ability to govern, incompetence, violence, worldwide condemnation and khat addiction.

Houthis don't speak for Zaydis. I doubt that there is a single Zaydi in KSA for instance that supports them. If Zaydis were supporting Houthis as some ignorants claim, they would have ruled Yemen long ago either by force or by being elected. Neither thing has ever happened outside of a few months of rule with their former enemy (Ali Abdullah Saleh) back in late 2014 and early 2015.

So now the US has become a trusted source? The same US that claimed that Iraq was developing nuclear weapons and weapons of mass destruction? The same US that is apparently (according to the Iranian regime) only looking to destabilize the region?

The US have their own interests.

Once again, there is nothing in this world called "Southern Persian Gulf region".:lol: Yemen does not even border the Gulf expect for the Gulf of Aden. Other than the Arabian Sea, the Red Sea and Bab el-Mandeb. Yemen is an Arab country located on the Arabian Peninsula. The southwest of it. In West Asia/Southwest Asia/Asia/MENA/Northern Hemisphere. Iraq for instance is a Gulf country similar to Iran as it borders the Gulf. But even that makes little sense as Iraq is much more than that similar to a huge country like KSA. I am from Hijaz a region 1000 km away. I have more in common/the region is closer located to Egypt, Jordan, Syria, Israel, Palestine, Lebanon, Yemen, Northern Sudan etc. than it is to Oman, Iran, UAE etc. Nor is any Gulf Arabic spoken.

BTW I don't need any US sources to use common sense. An unstable Yemen suits Iran as this impacts KSA negatively. Much more so than it does with Iran. Everywhere where the Iranian regime has a bit of influence or tries to have influence there is misery or incompetence.

Have fun ..
 
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Yes, you are right. Yemenis and Saudis just love fighting each other for no reason whatsoever.



Pakistan have their own problems to deal with.
No you can consider it a war for being independent or a client state

There's a difference between Yemen and rag tag Houthis.
I bet, houthis are simply the show horse, while work horses are international tribe.
Yemen is equal to Yemen army . its not Houthis who fire those missiles its Yemen army.

1) KSA does not need to conquer Yemen. What is KSA going to achieve by conquering Yemen? Do we lack land? Oil? Gas? Natural resources? A coastline? 90% of Yemen is already in control of the Yemeni government and Arab coalition. The rest of the country will eventually remove the Houthi terrorist cult and Ali Abdullah Saleh.

2) No Zaydis have been targeted expect for the Houthi terrorist cult. As for civilians, Houthis have killed more civilians.

3) Zaydis are not the majority in Yemen so sect plays no role here.

4) There is a significant community of Zaydis within KSA.

5) Yemen will always be under the influence of KSA.

6) You ignored all the facts and truths that I wrote in the post that you quoted. I know why because you know that I am right. It is simple logic actually. When has a terrorist group/armed militia ever governed a country successfully? Can you name just 1 single example?


7) Not going to reply to more troll posts from your part in this thread.
Well I believe KSA want to prevent a working government in peninsula which is not a monarchy .
 
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Yemen is equal to Yemen army . its not Houthis who fire those missiles its Yemen army.


Well I believe KSA want to prevent a working government in peninsula which is not a monarchy .

What are you talking about? The Yemeni army (recognized worldwide) is in support of the Yemeni government, KSA and the Arab coalition. The only element of the Yemeni army that is not are elements loyal to the former ousted dictator Ali Abdullah Saleh.

Sure, that is why Iraq and Yemen are not monarchies and KSA has a really bad relationship with Al-Abadi and Hadi. We could mention Egypt next door as well which is also a "monarchy" as we all know since Pharaoh Al-Sisi is in power.

Anyway discussions of this type are useless. The Houthi terrorist cult/Saleh control 10% of Yemen nowadays. Eastern Sana'a has been reached by the Yemeni army. Nobody is going to recognize or allow Yemen to be ruled by an incompetent, violent, backyard, khat-addicted terrorist cult with no allies other than the Iranian Mullah's and no visions or perspective. Nobody will accept regress instead of progress.
 
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Obviously the Houtis do not have industrial base to even manufacture a nail, let alone a missle and they do now have know how to even fire one with accurate targeting.

therefore, it is obvious conclusion that not only the missile was supplied by Iran but also it was launched by IRGC personal under cover in Yeman.
 
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What are you talking about? The Yemeni army (recognized worldwide) is in support of the Yemeni government, KSA and the Arab coalition. The only element of the Yemeni army that is not are elements loyal to the former ousted dictator Ali Abdullah Saleh.

Sure, that is why Iraq and Yemen are not monarchies and KSA has a really bad relationship with Al-Abadi and Hadi. We could mention Egypt next door as well which is also a "monarchy" as we all know since Pharaoh Al-Sisi is in power.

Anyway discussions of this type are useless. The Houthi terrorist cult/Saleh control 10% of Yemen nowadays. Eastern Sana'a has been reached by the Yemeni army. Nobody is going to recognize or allow Yemen to be ruled by an incompetent, violent, backyard, khat-addicted terrorist cult with no allies other than the Iranian Mullah's and no visions or perspective. Nobody will accept regress instead of progress.
Iraq and Egypt are outside peninsula .and you still fail to show a single Iranian system in the hand of answer Allah .
And I wonder if tribal people in KSA are so khat free.
And both you and me knew well where Yemen army loyalty lies. So let not discuss it.

Obviously the Houtis do not have industrial base to even manufacture a nail, let alone a missle and they do now have know how to even fire one with accurate targeting.

therefore, it is obvious conclusion that not only the missile was supplied by Iran but also it was launched by IRGC personal under cover in Yeman.
useless conclusion . the missile is fired by Yemen army whugh operated missiles even before irgc founding .
 
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Whatever it is , Saudis and Iranian are responsible to killing to thousand of muslims . They both are responsible for the divide in Muslims. They are acting like stooges of west, furthering their interests.

Instead of being one as muslims Saudis and iranians are finding Muslims countries to fight their proxy wars.
They both have gained nothing but Muslim countries are being destroyed one by one , killing innocent civilians for sake of ego nothing much.
 
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Iraq and Egypt are outside peninsula .and you still fail to show a single Iranian system in the hand of answer Allah .
And I wonder if tribal people in KSA are so khat free.
And both you and me knew well where Yemen army loyalty lies. So let not discuss it.


useless conclusion . the missile is fired by Yemen army whugh operated missiles even before irgc founding .

Half of Iraq is not. Nor does it matter. Iraq and Egypt are neighboring states and fellow Arab countries. So your claim is rendered useless.

There is no tradition of chewing khat in KSA.

You know nothing. You are an Iranian that has not clue about Yemen, the Arab world nor do you speak Arabic or follow events in Yemen on a daily basis as I do. All your information derives from Iranian Wilayat al-Faqih regime propaganda. I have already exposed your likes 1000's of times on PDF. Post 30 alone in this thread speaks for itself.

In other news:

Apparently on the Iranian section, propaganda is posted by using a clip from Kuwait which is 3.5 years old, claiming that it is from KSA (Riyadh) after the supposed non-existing missile hit the King Khaled Airport.


:rofl:

Repeat after me. Incompetent terrorist groups such as Hezbollah and Houthis have no place in any civilized country or any Arab country. Or any terrorist group for that matter/armed group that undermines the states and the aspirations of the people. They offer no progress. Only regress, violence and instability. Locals and the world will not accept their presence forever.

Iranian users here are writing lies, factual inaccuracies and trying to distort the truth. They are also supporting a terrorist cult in the Houthis.

WARNING (extremely graphic) - Houthi crimes on the people of Yemen exposed:

https://twitter.com/ERYANIM

Just posting the twitter user.

Houthis will and should be exterminated for their untold and systematic crimes and destruction (2.5 decade old) of Yemen and the Yemeni people. I personally will not rest until that terrorist cult is rendered useless.
 
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Whatever it is , Saudis and Iranian are responsible to killing to thousand of muslims . They both are responsible for the divide in Muslims. They are acting like stooges of west, furthering their interests.

Instead of being one as muslims Saudis and iranians are finding Muslims countries to fight their proxy wars.
They both have gained nothing but Muslim countries are being destroyed one by one , killing innocent civilians for sake of ego nothing much.
Not true ... esp in Yemen it's Saudis that are bombing people and invading the country by the help of Americans and their weapons. you should not be an expert to understand who is working with west against Muslims and who is working against west.
 
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Not true ... esp in Yemen it's Saudis that are bombing people and invading the country by the help of Americans and their weapons. you should not be an expert to understand who is working with west against Muslims and who is working against west.

The blessed Arab coalition headed by KSA and the Yemeni government and army is fighting a holy war against a terrorist cult called Houthis and a former ousted dictator (Ali Abdullah Saleh) and his corrupt traitors. The Houthi terrorist cult has waged a war against the Yemeni state and Yemenis ever since this terrorist cult was founded in 1994. They are getting spanked though (Alhamdulillah) and are left with 10% control of Yemen for the time being.

They are a backward, khat-addicted, violent, dumb, without perspectives and offering no solutions, terrorist cult that has no future in Yemen and no acceptance by the Arab world and international community.





People will not rest until the terrorist cult is rendered useless.
 
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Not true ... esp in Yemen it's Saudis that are bombing people and invading the country by the help of Americans and their weapons. you should not be an expert to understand who is working with west against Muslims and who is working against west.

But Iran is funding the rebels in Yemen. Are they not ? Saudia on other hand is bombing the hell out of Yemen.

On other hand Saudis funded rebels in Syria and Iranians funded the other side and what happened . They destroyed whole of the country .

I am sure you know all this serves which country's interest.

For west or against west, that the perspective , West need to opponents, Iran and Saudia Arabia are those opponent in a nutshell which are destroying whole of middle east.
 
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While KSA is hosting 2 million Yemeni expats that help support 10 million Yemenis in Yemen and sends tons of daily aid to Yemen, Iran offers nothing but weapons smuggling and misery for Yemen and the Yemeni people.

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This happens every day.

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Law and order rules supreme in liberated beautiful and ancient historical city of Marib after the Houthi terrorist cult has been removed from there.

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