Yemeni Forces Kill More Blackwater Mercenaries
Yemeni
Forces Kill More Blackwater Mercenaries in Ta’iz
TEHRAN
(FNA)- The Yemeni army and popular forces killed several other
Saudi-hired Blackwater militias in an attack on a military base in
the province of Ta’iz.
A sum of 4 Blackwater mercenaries, including two British, an American and a South African paramilitary troops, were killed in an attack on their military base in Zobab region in Ta’iz province, the Arabic-language media outlets reported.
“The Yemeni attack killed former British navy commander George William Castle, former British special forces officer Mark Judd Hart, American national Eshaq Bikark and South African national Alfred Banoushka,” the Arabic-language Al-Masira news channel quoted an unnamed military source as saying on Wednesday.
The
town of Zobab is located 40 kilometers to the North of Bab al-Mandeb
and is of strategic importance.
Many
more Blackwater mercenaries have been killed in the Yemeni attacks in
recent weeks.
On
December 9, 14 Blackwater mercenaries, including a British, a French,
an Australian and six Colombians were killed in an attack on Al-Amri
military base in Zobab region in Ta’iz province near the Bab
al-Mandeb Strait.
After
pulling out its troops from Yemen, the UAE recruited and sent
Colombian forces to Yemen to replace its regular troops.
Yemeni
Army Spokesman Sharaf Luqman has said that the Blackwater forces
dispatched to Yemen comprise Al-Nusra, the ISIL and Al-Qaeda
terrorists.
The
UAE had previously sent mercenaries from Latin America, specially
Colombia, to Yemen without prior coordination with Saudi Arabia.
The
United Arab Emirates has quietly built an army of Latin American
mercenaries to fight for Yemen’s deposed government in a proxy war.
In
a program launched by Blackwater founder Erik Prince and now run by
the Emirati military, the force of 450 Latin American troops –
mostly made up of Colombian fighters, but also including Chileans,
Panamanians and Salvadorans – adds a new and surprising element to
the already chaotic mix of forces from foreign governments, armed
tribes, terrorist networks and Yemeni militias that are currently
embroiled in the Middle Eastern nation, Fox News reported.
It seems there are also going to be hundreds of other foreign mercenaries — Sudanese and Eritrean soldiers — brought into Yemen.
ABOUT 200 SAUDI COALITION TROOPS KILLED IN BALLISTIC MISSILE ATTACK IN YEMEN
The
Houthi allieance is continuing to use balistic missiles to infict
damage to the Saudi-led coalition forces in Yemen. On Dec.22,
two Qaher-I ballistic missiles hit the coalition’s military
bases in the province of Ma’rib and the border region of
Tawwal killing about 200 troops.
Qaher-I
ballistic missiles
“A Qaher-I ballistic missile of Yemen struck al-Safer military base in Ma’rib province, killing over 137 Saudi-led aggressors, including a large number of Saudi and Sudanese troops, five UAE officers, head of the operations room (in Safer military base) and foreign military experts who seemed to be American and British,” Iranian Fars News Agency cited “Yemeni” source on Tuesday.
The
source added that another missile targeted the Tawwal military base
in the Jizan province. At least 70 coalition troops were killed and
over 100 injured there. The news agency and its source weren’t able
to provide photo or video proofs of this report.
However,
the Saudi-led coalition could suffer such loses if it continues to
ignore the ballistic missiles that have recently come into service in
the Houthi alliance.
We
remember Saudi-led coalition already suffered a heavy death toll
because the Saudi military leadership concentrates troops in a big
camps which make them an easy target for ballistic missiles of the
Houthi alliance.
THE COMING SAUDI COLLAPSE
President
Obama, like generations of Western leaders, has coddled the oil-rich
Saudi monarchy by tolerating its reactionary politics, its financing
of radical Islam and its military support for Sunni jihadist
terrorism. But the spoiled Saudi leaders may finally be going too
far, as Daniel Lazare describes.
Is
the Saudi monarchy coming apart at the seams? Scholars and
journalists have long predicted the kingdom’s demise, but this time
the forecasts may finally prove correct.
The
reason is an unprecedented avalanche of problems pouring down on
Saudi Arabia since 79-year-old Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud assumed
the throne last January. A hardliner in contrast to his vaguely
reformist predecessor Abdullah, Salman lost no time in
letting the world know that a new sheriff was in town. He
upped the number of public executions, which, at 151,
are now running at nearly double last year’s rate.
After
meeting with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, he promised to
intensify efforts to topple Syrian President Bashar al-Assad by
increasing aid to Al Nusra, Al Qaeda’s official Syrian affiliate. A
few weeks later, he assembled a coalition of nine Sunni Arab
states to launch nightly bombing raids on Yemen, quickly reducing one
of the poorest countries in the Middle East to ruin.
People
certainly took notice. But if Salman thought such actions would
win him respect, he was wrong. Instead, the result has been a steady
drum beat of negative publicity as the world awakes to the fact that,
with its public beheadings and barbaric treatment of women, the
Islamic state headed by the House of Saud is little different from
the Islamic State headed by Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in northern Syria
and Iraq.
Topping
the kingdom’s list of woes is the economy. With its stubbornly
high unemployment rate and growing wealth gap between the rich and
poor, Saudi Arabia has long been the sick man of the Persian
Gulf. Even though planners have been talking about economic
diversification since the 1970s, the kingdom was actually more
dependent on
oil as of 2013 than 40 years earlier.
“Saudization”
of the workforce is another mantra, yet the labor market remains
polarized between a private sector dominated by foreign guest
workers, mainly from South Asia, and a public sector filled with
Saudi “sofa
men”
who spend their days lounging about in government office.
Riyadh
wishes that young people would take jobs in hotels, oil refineries
and the like, but most prefer to wait for a high-paid government
sinecure to open up – which is one reason why the
jobless rate among young people is
as high as 29 percent.
Oil
Price Crash
Given
this combination of oil dependence and joblessness, a two-thirds drop
in the price of crude since mid-2014 couldn’t be more painful. But
what makes it even more frightening is the growing realization that,
with softening demand due to the global slowdown and growing
over-supply due to the fracking revolution, low prices will be a fact
of life for years to come.
This
prospect does not bode well for a country dependent on oil for 91
percent of its foreign revenue, one that is currently burning
through its foreign reserves at the
rate of $10 billion a month
The
news on the political front is almost as dire. Every week
seems to bring a fresh new scandal. First, liberal blogger Raif
Badawi was sentenced to a thousand lashes for the crime of speaking
his mind. Then Karl Andree, a 74-year-old British grandfather,
was sentenced to 350 for the crime of having a bottle of wine in his
car.
Three
Saudi Shi‘ite youths – Ali al-Nimr, Abdallah al-Zaher and Dawood
al-Marhoon – have been sentenced to death for participating in Arab
Spring protests while still in their teens. Akangaroo
court has
imposed a death sentence in the case of Ali’s uncle, a Shi‘ite
religious leader named Nimr al-Nimr, convicted of inciting sectarian
strife (i.e. opposing flagrant Wahhabist discrimination and
oppression).
Yet
another religious court has sentenced a 35-year-old artist and poet
named Ashraf Fayadh to death for the crime of atheism
and apostasy.
All
of which is generating widening waves of anger and disgust. But
perhaps the final straw was Salman’s offer to build and staff 200
Wahhabi mosques for Syrian refugees fleeing chaos that his policies
have helped create. The offer brought an unusual counter-blast
from German Vice-Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel.
“We
have to make clear to the Saudis that the time of looking away is
over,” Gabriel told the
newspaper Bild
am Sonntag. “Wahhabi
mosques all over the world are financed by Saudi Arabia. Many
Islamists who are a threat to public safety come from these
communities in Germany.”
The
last thing Germany needs, in other words, is hundreds
of Saudi-financed mullahs preaching sectarianism and jihad.
Then there
is the military front – or fronts – in Yemen, Iraq and
Syria, where the situation grows worse by the day. Like all wars
of aggression, the Saudi-led air assault on Shi‘ite Houthi rebels
in Yemen was supposed to be short and sweet.
Indeed,
four weeks after the campaign began last March, Riyadh issued a
“Mission Accomplished”message declaring
that it had “successfully eliminated the threat to the security of
Saudi Arabia and neighboring countries” by destroying Shi‘ite
Houthi rebels’ heavy weaponry and ballistic missiles. But some
of those missiles must still have remained in place since the
coalition resumed bombing just a few days later.
Destroying
Yemen
The
result has been a growing humanitarian disaster that Western
governments are doing their best to ignore. “Yemen after five
months looks like Syria after five years,” Peter Maurer, head of
the International Red Cross, said after
visiting the country in August. Since then,deaths have
reached 5,700, nearly half of them civilian, food and water systems
have broken down, while 2.3 million people have been displaced and
another 120,000 have been forced to flee abroad.
Yet
with the war turning into a classic quagmire, no end is in sight.
Poorly trained Saudi troops have “proven
to be no match for the battle-hardened Houthis.” While
they’ve succeeded in clearing Houthi fighters out of the southern
port city of Aden, the rebels still control the northern part of the
country, including the capital of Sana’a, and are besieging Taiz,
located roughly midway in between.
The
Saudi-led coalition is meanwhile breaking apart. David Ottoway,
the Washington
Post’s
longtime Middle East correspondent, notes that
the Saudis have quarreled with their United Arab Emirate allies over
whether to support the local branch of the Muslim Brotherhood. As
a consequence, the UAE has halved its troop strength to 2,000 and has
sent in hundreds of Colombian mercenaries in their place.
The
Saudi-backed government of ousted President Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi is
also falling asunder as Vice President Khaled Bahah, seen as more
amenable to compromise with the Houthis, moves to establish his own
power base.
Much
of this is the fault of Muhammad bin Salman, the king’s favorite
son by his third wife, whom he named chief of court and minister of
defense immediately after taking office. Officially 35,
Muhammad may
actually be as young as 29,
which, if true, would make him the youngest defense minister in the
world. A graduate of King Saud University in Riyadh, he is
entirely a product of a closed and narrow educational system that
emphasizes the Qur’an and Hadiths over science and analysis and
imbues students with hostility toward Christians, Jews, Shi‘ites
and foreigners in general.
All
of which is all too evident in Bin Salman’s handling of the
war. Since Vietnam, one military conflict after another has
demonstrated that air power rarely works without ground forces doing
the hard work of rooting out the enemy. But not only is Saudi
Arabia short of “grunts” willing to sacrifice their lives in
behalf of a greedy and over-sized royal family, it was understandably
reluctant to send troops into a rugged terrain that highly motivated
Houthi fighters know like the back of their hand.
Hence
Saudi Arabia resisted putting “boots on the ground” for months,
thereby allowing the Houthis to dig in all the more
securely. Although the’ ostensible goal was to prevent the
Houthis from taking power, the Saudis’ real aim was to
humiliate Iran, which they see as the mastermind behind the uprising,
and show the U.S. that the kingdom was capable of stepping out on its
own.
But
instead the Saudies have done neither. Not only does Iran remain
unscathed, but the longer the Houthis hold out, the clearer it
becomes that the Saudis are unable to prevail in their own backyard.
It’s as if the U.S. had gotten hopelessly bogged down after
invading Mexico.
Backing
Jihadists in Syria
The
proxy war in northern Syria and Iraq is at the same time not going
much better. The Saudis thought they had Assad on the run
after channeling U.S.-made TOW missiles to the rebels last
spring, but Russian intervention is altering the equation. Thanks
to Russian bombardment of ISIS, Al Qaeda and other rebel groups,
Assad was able to announce in late November that his troops were
advancing on “nearly
every front,”
while, in mid-December, government forces racked up a significant
victory by capturing an air base nine or ten miles east of Damascus
that had been in anti-government hands since 2012.
Saudi
options are limited in response. The kingdom could funnel still more
aid to the anti-Assad forces. But if it does, it knows that much
of the weaponry will wind up in the hands of ISIS (also known as
ISIL, Islamic State and Daesh), with whom relations, for the moment,
could not be more hostile.
With
Saudi mullahs calling
on Muslims to
support “the holy warriors of Syria … because if they are
defeated, God forbid, it will be the turn of one Sunni country after
another,” it could encourage rebels, many of whom are Chechen, to
launch a retaliatory assault on Russia, as Saudi Prince Bandar bin
Sultan reportedly threatened to
do in 2013.
But
this would mean risking a Russian counter-attack that could prove
devastating. Instead of demonstrating their military and strategic
independence, the Saudis have wound up more reliant on an
all-forgiving U.S. than ever.
Given
such incompetence, it was startling to see Muhammad bin Salman
behaving yet again like a bull in a china shop last week when he
announced that the Saudis had assembled a 34-nation coalition to
fight terrorism. After two supposed members – Pakistan and
Malaysia – announced that this was the first they had heard of it,
questions began raining down.
Since
Shi‘ite-majority Iran and Iraq were conspicuously absent from the
list, was the real purpose to fight terrorism or to push a Sunni
sectarian agenda?
Considering the draconian “anti-terrorism” law that Salman pushed through last March banning everything from atheism to “sowing discord in society,” was the real goal to fight groups like ISIS and Al Qaeda or to ban dissent against the monarch in general?
Considering the draconian “anti-terrorism” law that Salman pushed through last March banning everything from atheism to “sowing discord in society,” was the real goal to fight groups like ISIS and Al Qaeda or to ban dissent against the monarch in general?
It’s
not hard to see why the Saudi defense chief is now known as “Muhammad
the reckless” and why rumblings of a
palace coup are
beginning to be heard. All too aware of the role that the 1980s
oil collapse played in tipping the Soviet Union over the edge, the
Saudis, according to one foreign analyst, are determined to avoid
anything smacking of perestroika and glasnost:
“The
Saudis are obsessed with it, that if they liberalize a little, the
whole thing will come apart,” the analystsaid. Rather
than loosening, they are determined to tighten up all the more even
if it means pushing the contradictions to the breaking point.
The
West is afraid to push too hard for the same reason. All too
aware that the Saudi opposition to the monarchy is dominated by
hard-line Islamists rather than nice house-broken liberals, the
West’s greatest nightmare is of a failed oil giant sitting on top
of 20 percent of the world’s proven reserves as Al Qaeda and ISIS
run riot in the streets.
“Get
rid of the House of Saud,” observed a
senior UK diplomat, “and you will be screaming for them to come
back within six months.” After years of feeding the Saudi
monster, Western leaders are afraid to stop for fear of making things
even worse.
Daniel
Lazare is the author of several books including The
Frozen Republic: How the Constitution Is Paralyzing
Democracy (Harcourt
Brace).
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