Saudi Arabia launches air attacks in Yemen
The Saudi ambassador to the U.S. says
Saudi Arabia and allies have launched air strikes against Houthi
fighters who have tightened their grip on the southern city of
Aden where the country's president had taken refuge. (Reuters)
SANAA, Yemen — Saudi Arabia
launched airstrikes early Thursday in neighboring Yemen, heading a
coalition of Arab nations in an effort to dislodge Houthi rebels
sweeping through that country.
The strikes were a startling turn of events that came as the
Houthis, in control of Yemen’s capital for months, barreled south
toward the coastal city of Aden, seizing an air base along the way
that was evacuated by U.S. Special Operations forces last week.
President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, who had taken refuge in Aden
after fleeing Sanaa, the capital, was said to have escaped. His
whereabouts were unknown.
The military operation was announced Wednesday evening in
Washington by Saudi Ambassador Adel al-Jubeir, who said it would
last until Yemen’s “legitimate government” was restored.
Jubeir said the airstrikes began at 7 p.m. Washington time and
were conducted by Saudi Arabia along with “partner nations in the
Persian Gulf” and others, although he declined to specify any other
participants. He said that some countries had already transferred
military assets to Saudi Arabia and that others were on their way.
The United States was not involved in the operation, he said. But
the White House announced late Wednesday that President Obama had
authorized U.S. forces to provide logistical and intelligence
support to the operation. American forces were establishing a “Joint
Planning Cell” with Saudi Arabia to coordinate military and
intelligence assistance, the statement said.
Jubeir said the airstrikes had targeted sites around the country,
including Sanaa. “The operations are limited to defending the
government and preventing its collapse,” he said.
The gulf countries acted as Aden was close to being seized by the
rebels, a victory that would give them control of the country’s main
sea gateway.
Hadi has been a key ally of Saudi Arabia and the United States,
which has depended on his government to support its efforts against
Yemen-based al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. AQAP holds patches of
the country and views the Houthis as foes in the competition for
influence and Yemen’s modest oil wealth. U.S. efforts included
training of Yemeni special operations forces and drone strikes
launched from the al-Anad air base, about 35 miles from Aden.
On a broader level, Yemen represents a potential proxy battlefield
for Shiite power Iran and the Sunni Gulf Arab states allied with
Washington.
Houthi forces seized the al-Anad base this week and reportedly were
already flying attack planes from there.
Saudi Arabia last
launched military action in Yemen in 2009, conducting airstrikes
against the Houthis near the Saudi border after it said its border
guards had been fired upon.
Although the Saudis were also said to have massed ground forces
along the border this week, any ground intervention would require a long
and difficult trip through the heart of Houthi-held territory to reach
Aden.
Hadi’s government had appealed for
military intervention from the Gulf Cooperation Council, which is
anchored by the Saudis and includes Kuwait, Oman, the United Arab
Emirates, Bahrain and Qatar. In an emergency meeting last weekend, Yemen
also called on the United Nations to authorize foreign armed forces to
enter its territory.
Jubeir said that Saudi Arabia and its partners had made every effort
to prevent violence but that those attempts had been thwarted by the
Houthis. They are now “in control of ballistic missiles and heavy
weapons,” in addition to Yemeni aircraft, he said.
Amid the widening chaos, Hadi’s whereabouts remained unclear. Senior
Yemeni security officials told The Washington Post that Hadi had left
his stronghold in Aden, where his government sought a foothold after
being driven from Sanaa by the Houthis.
Looters swarmed the presidential buildings in Aden, and fighting
flared on several fronts on the edge of the city, said Anis Mansour,
editor of the port city’s Huna Aden newspaper.
“What is happening in Aden is an invasion,” Mansour said.
Yemen’s foreign minister, Riyadh Yaseen, told Al Jazeera from Egypt
that Hadi was in a “secure” place in Aden. But later officials told the
Associated Press that Hadi and top aides had escaped on two boats.
A senior member of the Houthi political committee, Dhaif Allah
Alshami, denied that Hadi had slipped away by sea and said the rebels
were seeking him in the city.
Alshami claimed the insurgents had taken over the compound where Hadi
maintained his government after being driven from Sanaa. The deputy
editor of the Almasdar news agency, Ali Alfaqeeh, said that the site has
come under shelling and that there were no sign of Hadi’s forces
mounting a counteroffensive.
In Washington, White House press secretary Josh Earnest strongly
condemned the Houthi offensive and accused former president Ali Abdullah
Saleh of working with the rebels “to foment a lot of instability in the
country.”
“And so, we would call on them to stop that instability and that
violence,” he said.
Saleh was driven from power by Arab Spring-inspired uprisings in 2012
but has remained an important power broker in Yemen. Earnest said that
the Obama administration still recognized Hadi as president.
He added that “there are elements of the Yemeni government that we
continue to be in touch with” on counterterrorism operations aimed at
the country’s al-Qaeda affiliate, but he did not provide details. He
said he could not confirm Hadi’s location. But the White House statement
issued Wednesday evening said that the U.S. government had been “in
close contact with President Hadi and our regional partners.”
In Aden, shopkeeper Abduljabar Mohammed said
the streets emptied as the rebel attacks intensified.
“I have been hiding in my shop,” he said by
telephone. “The people are afraid and worried for their safety. We don’t
know what to expect.”
Houthi-controlled state television said a nearly $100,000 bounty was
being offered for the president’s capture.
Some members of Hadi’s inner circle, meanwhile, appeared to have run
out of room. Rebels said they had captured the country’s defense
minister and a top aide near Aden.
[
Yemen’s collapse also sinks U.S. counterterrorism strategy]
Security officials told The Post that Hadi fled his compound just
hours after the rebels announced that they had taken the al-Anad air
base.
Later, the rebels reported taking control of
Aden’s civilian airport.
The unraveling of Hadi’s power over the past months has dealt a
significant blow to U.S.-led efforts to wage drone attacks and other
pinpoint strikes against suspected strongholds of the Yemen-based branch
of al-Qaeda, which is considered among the terrorist group’s most active
networks. Meanwhile, the Houthi rebels have claimed increasing
territory.
Last week,
suicide bombers killed at least 137 people at two Shiite mosques in
Sanaa in an attack linked to adherents of the Islamic State.
DeYoung reported from Washington. Brian Murphy in Washington
contributed to this report.
washingtonpost.com
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