An Israeli bankruptcy in Yemen
After weeks of Yemeni strikes, the Israeli occupation finally decided to respond, but the nature of the targets suggests that it is suffering from bankruptcy in its targets.
Exclusive – Al-Khabar Al-Yemeni:
A few days ago, Yemen decided to expand its target bank in the occupied territories by adding Haifa alongside Ben Gurion Airport and reinforced the missiles towards Jerusalem, revealing that it possesses an inexhaustible target bank in the occupied territories of Palestine, while the occupation has been trying to defend itself at times by promoting claims about intercepting the missiles, even though their direct impact in terms of settlers fleeing to shelters and disrupting life, or indirect impact related to the suspension of more flights to Tel Aviv, were clearly visible.
Today, after harsh Yemeni strikes on the occupation, it decides to mobilize its planes to respond, and it has mobilized ten of them, including an air refueling plane. The target was to strike a civilian plane that could have been detained in Jordan, where it had just returned from. The occupation achieved nothing from its latest aggression on Yemen, just an attempt to save face, but with heavy losses and a greater bill than before.
In fact, despite the long months of confrontation with Yemen, the occupation does not have any target bank, as all the airstrikes didn’t go beyond open civilian facilities to everyone and aren’t secret, whether Sana’a Airport, the port of Hudaydah, or even oil tanks for power stations and cement factories that were targeted as part of the map of its aggression on Yemen.
The occupation leaders, headed by the prime minister, may have tried to exploit the latest aggression to promote it as an achievement, but its results are not limited to just an attempt to regain the confidence of the Zionists in their government, as they have lost it amidst the continued fall of Yemeni missiles and the occupation’s failure to repel or even respond to them.
It is true that the occupation destroyed the remaining civilian planes in Yemen, but in return, it is unable to operate its air fleet at Ben Gurion Airport, and this is an equation that Yemen has succeeded in imposing even before the occupation launched its latest aggression.