Revealing American-British concerns about Yemen’s operations related to Haifa


Western diplomatic sources revealed on Tuesday the escalating American-British concerns about Yemen’s start of naval operations as part of its decision to ban navigation to the occupation’s ports in Haifa on the Mediterranean Sea.

Exclusive – Al-Khabar Al-Yemeni:

The sources reported that the US and Britain have decided to send battleships again to the Red Sea in anticipation of Yemeni attacks against ships that have not complied with Yemen’s decision to ban sailing to the occupation’s ports in Haifa, noting that British and American intelligence have obtained information indicating that the Yemeni forces may launch dozens of strikes against ships whose owning companies continue to operate maritime trips to the most important Israeli port on the Mediterranean.

Yemen had announced its decision a few days ago to include the port of Haifa among the targets while confirming the ban on maritime navigation to it.

The Western revelation came on the eve of the disclosure by American media outlets about the sailing of two destroyers accompanying the British aircraft carrier “HMS Prince of Wales” towards the Red Sea.

The American-British move comes weeks after an American-Yemeni agreement to stop the exchange of attacks.

Although the deployment of the British aircraft carrier indicates the unwillingness of the United States, which emerged from the Battle of the Red Sea defeated and was forced to withdraw its fleets several times, the latest of which was a few days ago, its timing also confirms the allies’ fear of Yemen starting to activate its operations against ships not complying with the ban decision.

Britain and America had launched a wide and intensive aggression on Yemen in January of last year in an attempt to break the naval blockade on the port of Eilat, the most important Israeli port in the Red Sea, but they failed to contain the Yemeni operations and escalated them, reaching the targeting of British and American ships before the two countries decided to review their accounts there.

It is worth noting that Yemen had imposed a ban on the occupation’s ports in the Mediterranean and succeeded in achieving this through joint operations on the Israeli ports at times and targeted non-compliant ships in the Red Sea, the Gulf of Aden, the Arabian Sea, and the Indian Ocean at other times, but it stopped with the start of the Gaza truce agreement.



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