Report:
Saudi warplanes attacked Yemen for US
A
Saudi Arabia fighter jet (file photo)
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new report reveals that Saudi Arabia has used its fighter jets to
carry out a number of attacks against Yemen on behalf of the United
States.
The report, published by The Times on Friday, cited a US intelligence source as saying that "some of the so-called drone missions are actually Saudi Air Force missions,” AFP reported on Thursday.
Saudi Arabia, which shares its southern border with Yemen, is playing a key role in helping the United States fight, what Washington claims to be, militants linked to al-Qaeda in Yemen.
In the latest attack on December 30, 2012, a US drone strike killed three people in Yemen’s al-Bayda province.
Statistics gathered by the American news website The Long War Journal prior to the attack showed that the United States "is known to have carried out 41 airstrikes" in Yemen in 2012, around three to four strikes per month on average.
The website also said that since December 2009, the CIA and the US military's Joint Special Operations Command have conducted more than 54 air and missile strikes in Yemen.
On December 27, 2012, the New America Foundation, an American non-profit, nonpartisan public policy institute and think tank, showed that the number of the US drone airstrikes in Yemen almost tripled in 2012 compared with the previous year.
Washington claims the targets of the drone attacks are al-Qaeda militants, but local officials and witnesses maintain that civilians have been the main victims of the attacks over the past few years.
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