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World News See other World News Articles Title: "Civilians Trapped": Major Assault On Yemen Port Begins; Saudi Ship Attacked The biggest and potentially most catastrophic battle in terms of civilian casualties has begun in the three-year war between the Saudi coalition and Iranian-aligned Houthi rebels. The assault began early Wednesday after days of the United Nations warning against the operation which also involves the UAE and United States as leading the campaign on the Houthi held port city of Al Hudaydah. Prior Reuters photo of smoke rising from a warehouse of the World Food Program as fire engulfed it in Hudaydah, Yemen, March 31, 2018. Reuters reports the following breaking updates: "concentrated and intense" bombing near the port itself. 30 air strikes hit the city within half an hour. Houthis say they hit a coalition barge Port is main route to feed 8.4 million on verge of famine "Some civilians are entrapped, others forced from their homes." Arab warplanes and warships pounded Houthi fortifications to support ground operations by foreign and Yemeni troops massed south of the port of Hodeidah in operation "Golden Victory". Ground battles raged near Hodeidah airport and al-Durayhmi, a rural area 10 km (6 miles) south of the city Though Saudi and coalition authorities have long imposed a media blackout on Yemen which has resulted in little on the ground footage of the war, some early footage of the ground assault has emerged on pro-Saudi social media: Early footage of Saudi-UAE coalition troops mustering outside of the contested port city: Ali Özkök @Ozkok_ These are the troops that #UAE makes storm today #Houthi-held #Hodeida coast city in west #Yemen. Via @StrategicNews1 pic.twitter.com/zZEzz57KId Gulf-aligned media coverage from lead-up to the assault claiming the coalition is thwarting "Iranian weapons" and militants in Hudaydah: Iranian media reports civilians killed and wounded from the start of coalition aerial bombardment: Press TV @PressTV At least four civilians killed in Saudi air strikes on Yemeni port city of Hudaydah #SaudiWarOnYemen As we reported earlier this week, the UN and Red Cross evacuated all personnel days before the assault on the major Yemeni port through which 80% of all humanitarian aid to the war-torn country flows. The city of half a million people is one of the sole lifelines of support from the outside world, thus analysts are predicting this to be a catastrophe for the country's civilian population in a war which The New York Times notes is already "classified as the worlds worst humanitarian disaster" with "more than 75 percent of the population... dependent on food aid". Doctors Without Borders (MSF) has also suspended operations in parts of the country after a Saudi coalition air raid on a cholera treatment center it supports. Cholera has made a comeback and ravaged the population in the midst of the grinding war and is expected to explode further now that Al Hudaydah port is inaccessible to aid and medical groups. UN Geneva @UNGeneva As many as 250,000 people "may lose everything" in case of a military attack on #Yemen's key port city Hodeidah, as the country's humanitarian crisis remains the worst in the world. Watch @UNOCHA's @JensLaerke brief press in Geneva today. The UN has attempted negotiations with both sides to cede temporary humanitarian control over the vital port. MSF Yemen @msf_yemen 1/4 @MSF #Cholera Treatment Center is a #medical_facility and not a military target. Health facilities have been regularly bombed in #Yemen since 2015, including MSF #Abs hospital, bombed on 15 August 2016, killing 19 people. #notAtarget The Saudi-US military coalition currently besieging the country through airstrikes and sea blockade claims Al Hudaydah is a key arms smuggling point through which Iran supplies the Shia Houthis, including sophisticated ballistic missiles which have hit locations inside Saudi Arabia within the past year. The US has tried to present itself as trying to stave off humanitarian catastrophe in Al Hudaydah, yet as NPR's Steve Inskeep confirmed while reporting from Yemen earlier this year the US military "has provided targeting information, equipment and aircraft refueling to the Saudi air campaign, which has been widely criticized for being indiscriminate and killing civilians in places like hospitals, funerals and homes." Secretary of State Mike Pompeo earlier this week framed the US role as desiring "to address their security concerns [Saudis, UAE, and pro-Saudi Yemeni government in exile] while preserving the free flow of humanitarian aid and lifesaving commercial imports, according to a statement. Yet the Wall Street Journal has characterized the US role in the new operation as actually "deepening" as US intelligence will provide "information to fine- tune the list of targets". So Pompeo's mention of "security concerns" obviously constitute a green light While this "deepening" role is supposedly to keep the UAE and Saudis on good behavior, its really a propaganda move to give the American role a fig leaf of "humanitarian" motives. As Moon of Alabama blog noted in the lead-up to Wednesday's assault on Hudaydah port: The genocide in Yemen is going to start tomorrow. Eight million are already on the brink of starvation. Eighteen out of twenty-six million Yemenis live in the mountainous heartlands (green) which are under control of the Houthi and their allies. They are surrounded by Saudi and U.A.E. forces and their mercenaries. There is little agriculture. The only supply line from the outside world will soon be cut off. The people will starve. UAE forces are especially reported to be taking a lead role in operations. As we detailed last year, the Saudi coalition has largely relied for its ground operations on UAE officers commanding a largely mercenary forces, with most of the ground troops coming from Sudan. Indeed many of the file photos currently featured by the NYT, AP, and others appear to confirm the heavy use of mercenary ground forces from north Africa: NYT Opinion @nytopinion Yemen, devastated by a war that has killed 10,000 people, needs an internationally-backed peace process not a major new attack by U.S.-backed Arab allies on the port of Hudaydah, a vital entry point for humanitarian aid https://nyti.ms/2sSUzs9 Sudanese forces fighting alongside the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen pressed toward Al Hudaydah on Tuesday. Opinion | On the Brink of Disaster in Yemen A Saudi attack on the port of Al Hudaydah could be a lifeline for humanitarian aid the country depends on. nytimes.com Meanwhile, the Saudi ambassador to the US, Prince Khalid bin Salman, claims the Houthis have attacked multiple commercial and military ships, according to pro- Saudi Al-Arabiya: The Houthi militia in Yemen have attacked commercial and military ships, including ships belonging to Saudi Arabia, the UAE, the US, using advanced anti- shipping systems smuggled into Yemen. For their part, the Houthis appear to have confirmed their ground forces launched a missile attack on a Saudi naval vessel, according to Middle East based Al Masdar news. The ambassador further blamed Iran for militarily backing the insurgents: The liberation of Hodeidah is critical in light of the growing threat that the Iranian backed Houthi militia poses to the maritime security of the red sea, a vital waterway through which about 15% of international commerce passes, he said. Because of the complete media and humanitarian blockade on the contested port city, confirmation of the rapidly unfolding events have been hard to come by. This is a developing story. Poster Comment: Lots of photos at the source. Another war crime. Not a peep in the Corrupt-Fake News. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Horse, Saudi Israel propaganda (#0)
As part of the plan, the two coalition states aim to establish a shipping lane to Hodeidah from the UAE capital, Abu Dhabi, and Jizan, a city in southern Saudi Arabia, officials told a news conference in Riyadh. They will also distribute food, provide medical supplies, equipment and staff to hospitals, sustain electrical stations and provide economic support. "We have several ships stationed, and we have storage capacity very close to Hodeidah fully stocked up," said Reem al-Hashimy, the UAE minister of state for international cooperation. "We have as well planes that are out of the UAE that are ready to be flown in once the situation allows for that," she said. The plan will be carried out by Saudi Arabia's King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center and the UAE Red Crescent, with Hashimy later telling reporters the UAE would use its military base in Eritrea for transporting aid. The assault marks the first time the Arab states have tried to capture a heavily defended major city since joining the war three years ago against the Iran-aligned Houthis, who control Yemen's most populated areas, including the capital, Sanaa. The operation, which began after a three-day deadline set by the UAE for the Houthis to quit the port, comes at the risk of worsening the world's biggest humanitarian crisis. Coalition states say they will try to keep the port running and can ease the crisis once they seize it by lifting import restrictions they have imposed. But they accused the Houthis of planting mines that could prolong that effort, they added. "If the Houthis don't damage the port by mining it, you have all the assurances that the coalition forces will not damage the port," the UAE's ambassador to the UK, Sulaiman al-Mazroui, told Abu Dhabi-linked newspaper The National. Lies. Why attack a town that would not need your help if you had not attacked them and set up a blockade to stop them from getting food?
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