An Israeli-American difficult mission to search for black smoke among the rubble of war in Yemen
For the second day in a row, the Israeli occupation continues its aggression on Yemen, in parallel with the approach of its American ally to its third month but looking at the map of targets that both parties are focusing on, it does not go beyond the idea of searching for black smoke among the rubble of more than a decade of war.
Exclusive – Al-Khabar Al-Yemeni:
From Hudaydah on the western coast to Sana’a in the north and reaching Amran in the far north, the Israeli attacks evaporate like the black smoke emanating from fuel tanks and civilian facilities, the most prominent of which are power stations and concrete plants.
There are no new targets in the Israeli occupation’s bank. The port of Hudaydah has already been targeted by it more than once last year, and before that hundreds of American, Saudi, and Emirati raids, as well as the case of Sana’a Airport and even the Dahaban and Heziz power stations in the Yemeni capital.
Nothing new in the dictionary of targets except the remnants of civilian facilities that have been the scene of airstrikes since 2015, most of which are no longer in service, and some were operating at a quarter of their capacity.
The new in the American-Israeli aggression is the propaganda campaign that the occupation and the official regional media behind it are trying to draw and amplify the raids, and the goal doesn’t go beyond the idea of restoring the confidence of the settlers and Western airlines in the occupation’s ability to respond or try to stop the attacks that have already scattered whatever remains of a sense of security for both the Zionists and the West itself.
The occupation and America may have launched the most powerful attacks in history, with a large number of bombs exceeding 50 on the first day, according to what the occupation is talking about, and may be even greater on the second day, but given their results, they do not go beyond the idea of restoring Netanyahu’s face after it was tarnished by the recent Yemeni attack on Ben Gurion Airport.