YemenEXtra
YemenExtra

The US fights , supports al-Qaeda in Yemen!

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YemenExtra

Y.A

By:Yousra Abdulmalik

Investigations and evidnces found that the Saudi-led coalition, backed by the US, waging a war on Yemen secured secret deals and uses al-Qaeda terrorists in the violence-wracked country, recruiting hundreds of its Takfiri militants in the ground operations against the Houthi Ansarullah movement and allied forces.

Military sources revealed that al-Qaeda elements are approaching the occupied oil province of Shabwa after controlling a number of valleys and reefs in al-Mahadi district, including Wadi al-khialah area, which is close to the asphalt road that links the district with Abyan and Shabwa provinces.

Diplomatic sources have revealed a strong British warning to the exiled Hadi’s defense minister about his administration attracting and protecting a number of al-Qaeda members who had fled to Marib.

The sources confirmed that Colonel Matt Starr, British military attaché to the exiled Hadi’s government in Aden, has asked Saudi Arabia to summon General Mohammed Ali al-Maqdashi, who is defense minister in the Saudi-backed regime, in order to interrogate him about recruiting, financing and protecting of al-Qaeda operatives in Marib city.

The British dissatisfaction with al-Maqdashi’s actions come after suspicions were raised that the Saudi-backed general had given shelter, aid and financial support to al-Qaeda terrorists who had fled Shabwah and come to Ma’rib. Shabwah province has seen a large insurgency of anti-occupation revolutionaries taking up arms against the Saudi-led invaders as well as the Hadi regime and their Wahhabi terrorist allies.

Diplomatic sources added that Britain had already warned the exiled Hadi’s government earlier, asking him to stop supporting terrorists and opening training camps for them in Ma’rib under the pretext of recruiting them for the army.

The UK has confirmed that it has real information and files confirming the support of military leaders in the Saudi-backed government for the al-Qaeda terrorist organization in the Arabian Peninsula and the opening of training camps in Ma’rib, Bayda and Hadhramaut provinces, as well as providing them with weapons.

Commander of the so-called “Shabwani elite forces” loyal to the UAE forces accused other parties in Saudi-led coalition of supplying al-Qaeda militants with weapons and bringing terrorist elements to Shabwa province in southeastern Yemen.

Mohammed Salem al-Bohari, leader of the elite paid fighters, said in a television interview that “the 30th Infantry Brigade camp loyal to the so-called “al-Sharaia” has worked to pass weapons illegally to the terrorist elements.”

Al-Bohari pointing out that the “elite” paid fighters managed at one of the checkpoints to thwart smuggling of a silencer weapons shipment coming from the province of Marib.

Prisoners lists submitted by Hadi’s Saudi-backed delegation to Yemeni consultations in Sweden included names of detainees had been arrested for involvement in terrorist acts during the period of Hadi’s rule.

A few days after the United Nations-sponsored consultations began between the Yemeni national delegation and Hadi’s delegation in Swedish capital Stockholm, the two delegations announced that they had exchanged lists of some 15,000 prisoners in preparation for the implementation of a prisoner swap agreement between the two sides.

The national delegation’s prisoner lists contained 7,000 names, while the Saudi-backed delegation’s lists contained 8,500 names, including names of prisoners and detainees form al-Qaeda and Daesh groups, according to sources close to the consultations.

A political source said that the prisoner exchange agreement would be implemented within 45 days. He explained that the two delegations have two weeks to study the files and verify names of the concerned persons, a third week to submit observations, and a fourth week to respond to remarks of the other party.

The official spokesman of Ansarullah, Mohamed Abdul Salam, for its part, commented on the relationships and ties between the United Arab of Emirates (UAE) forces and the terrorist organization al-Qaida in Yemen.

The coalition is in desperate need of mercenaries, and this need led the UAE to build a relationship with al-Qaeda and it deepened its relation which is sponsored by Washington, Mohamed Abdul Salam confirmed in his Twitter account.

He added that the associated press report confirms that that Mohammed bin Zayed is an updated version of al-Qaeda’s leaders and Abu Dhabi is one the stronghold of that terrorist group.

Islah party ‘s activists , loyal to the coalition, called for organizing protest vigils to release an al-Qaeda leader in Aden province.

They are leading media campaigns to carry out protest vigils calling for the release of one of the most dangerous terrorist elements, Hilmi Abdo Mohammed Abdullah al-Zangi, the al-Qaeda leader in the Mansoura district.

Politicians considered Muslim Brotherhood as the basis of terrorism in Yemen with the Saudi financial and military support.

The Islah party called on its activists, paid fighters leaders and branch in Aden to go out with their families and relatives to carry out rallies in order to demanding for the release of dangerous al-Qaeda terrorist leaders held in a prison in the city of Aden.

Halmi was involved in many planning and execution of terrorist attacks and senior Qaeda leaders in the southern provinces. In 2015 he managed to escape to Abyan province and was arrested in Muhafad district at the end of March 2016.

Yemeni security agencies have obtained conclusive evidence that prove the involvement of the United States of America and all the countries of the war alliance against Yemen in the use of Al-Qaeda militants in fighting against the Yemeni army, a senior Yemeni security official told YemenExtra.

Yemeni security media have published confessions of Al-Qaeda members about their engagement in intensive trainings in camps of what so-called Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) and they were later sent to fight in the ranks of the Saudi-led coalition against the Yemeni army, before being assigned to the latest operation to cut Rada road in Yemen’s eastern province of Bayda.

The security official considered that the US drone strikes come in the context of an attempt to legitimize its violation of Yemeni sovereignty under the pretext of fighting terrorism, while building all its plans by relying on terrorist groups as tools for timely implementation and justifications for intervention subsequently.

A probe conducted by The Associated Press called into question the coalition’s claims about victories against al-Qaeda militants, suggesting that the notorious terror group is effectively on the same side as the US, Saudi Arabia and its allies in Yemen.

In March 2015, the US -backed –Saudi-led coalition started  a war against Yemen with the declared aim of crushing the Houthi Ansarullah movement, who had taken over from the staunch Riyadh ally and fugitive former president Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi, while also seeking to secure the Saudi border with its southern neighbor. Three years and over 600,000 dead and injured Yemeni people and  prevented the patients from travelling abroad for treatment and blocked the entry of medicine into the war-torn country, the war has yielded little to that effect.

Despite the coalition claims that it is bombing the positions of the Ansarullah fighters, Saudi bombers are flattening residential areas and civilian infrastructures.

More than 2,200 others have died of cholera, and the crisis has triggered what the United Nations has described as the world’s worst humanitarian disaster.

However, Saudi Arabia relies heavily on the US in its brutal war on Yemen. Washington has deployed a commando force on the Arab kingdom’s border with Yemen to help destroy arms belonging to Yemen’s popular Houthi Ansarullah movement. Washington has also provided logistical support and aerial refueling.

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