US aircraft’s arduous journeys to bomb Yemen and a significant decline in their number


In the latest statement regarding developments in Yemen, specifically in the Red Sea, the Central Command of the American forces revealed a new airstrike on the country with which it has been engaged in conflicts since last January. What are the implications of this new airstrike, and how has the American setback in the region transformed?

Exclusive – Al-Khabar Al-Yemeni:

Over the past months of the British-American aggression on Yemen, which officially began in January with their announcement of a new operation in an attempt to contain Yemeni operations against Israeli occupation, the American administration continued to label its aggression, which was represented by raids and dozens of extensive missiles strikes, as defensive, this indicates that these operations are in response to attacks by Yemeni forces.

In fact, during the first moments of the confrontations in the Red Sea, the American forces responded to any attacks that they failed to intercept with intensive raids that sometimes-including Hudaydah, Sana’a, Sa’ada, and even Taiz.

According to experts, these airstrikes were considered a response to a new Yemeni attack and often coincided with the intense presence of American, British, and Western battleships in the Red Sea, not limited to aerial bombings but also involving missiles launched from battleships.

Until recently, this was prevalent. Today, after weeks of Yemen expelling American and Western battleships from the Red Sea, including the “Eisenhower,” and America failing to deploy an alternative despite announcing the sending of the aircraft carriers “Lincoln” and “Roosevelt” to the region, American forces barely carry out a single airstrike, at least two days after the latest Yemeni attack in the Red Sea.

These are new indicators of the challenges facing American forces in Yemen, revealing in terms of timing that American aircraft can’t keep pace with any attack in the Red Sea and need days to reach Yemen given that they take off from battleships stationed in distant areas in the Gulf. More importantly, the US response has declined from dozens of raids to one raid in 24 hours, according to the latest statement.

Certainly, this is another indication that the American arsenal of influence and protection fleets has vanished in the region, at least in the Red Sea. The state that had been scouring the seas and oceans with its various ships and fleets is now struggling to remain relevant with only symbolic raids so as not to lose more allies who had hoped for a significant change in the region and were even unable to protect their ships.



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