Have the occupation’s Arab allies abandoned its protection, or has the Yemeni capability surpassed their systems?
The Israeli occupation has opened a broad investigation into the reasons for the failure to intercept the Yemeni missile that hit the heart of its capital earlier today, with the investigation not limited to the internal occupation system but expanding to the rest of the Arab countries and naval fleets. So, what are the dimensions of this step?
Exclusive – Al-Khabar Al-Yemeni:
Yemen is geographically distant from the Israeli occupation, with seas and mostly allied countries to it separating them—a distance of nearly two thousand kilometers that the recent Yemeni missile covered in a journey that did not exceed 11 minutes.
The operation was a shock to the occupation not only because it was launched from a distant location in Yemen but also because all defense systems, including those deployed by the US and Western nations across the region on land and sea, including the air, failed to intercept it.
So far, the occupation has not found a cover for its failure and that of its allies in intercepting the Yemeni missile, a loophole that could cost the occupation dearly. Even the talk of investigations is just an attempt to move forward to portray the existence of a mistake. However, the bitter truth that the occupation has not been able to swallow until now is that the Yemeni missile was larger than a “Supersonic” missile. The latter means that the missile’s speed only reaches about 6,000 kilometers per hour, while the last Yemeni missile traveled more than 10,000 kilometers per hour according to calculations of the speed and distance it traveled.
The missile was launched from Yemen, according to the occupation, an area about 2,000 kilometers away from the nearest land point of the occupation, and its flight took only about 11 minutes, according to Yemeni and Western confirmations. It not only passed over the Red Sea, where America and Western countries deploy missile destroyers at sea and advanced air defense systems on the edges of Saudi, Egyptian, and Jordanian land, but also in an area where the latest satellites, from the American “X” radar to the Israeli “Arrow,” are active. All of them failed to even detect the missile or capture its heat, thanks to its speed, which did not give the occupation a chance to intercept it with its systems in the settlement cities, reaching the center of Israel. Most importantly, it made those systems a laughingstock, with its missiles beginning to fly around “Tel Aviv,” causing fires and destruction that the missile itself would not have achieved so simply.
In fact, the occupation’s Arab allies did not abandon its protection and the formation of the first deterrent barrier despite the escalation of tension between them; however, the fact is that all these systems, primarily operated by American forces, failed to detect or intercept the missile.