12.04.2021
Yemen’s Ansar Allah give the impression that it has an endless supply of drones.
The Houthis (as Ansar Allah is also known) appear to be adept at using them, if their own claims are to be entirely trusted.
On April 11th, two Qasef-2K drones were used to separately target the Jizan Airport and the King Khalid Airbase.
The Jizan Airport is a new target that has recently come up in reports of Houthi attacks.
The location includes hangars containing Saudi warplanes.
The King Khalid Airbase in ‘Asir suffers from the Houthi drone attacks more frequently, and has been subject of attacks at least 4 times in separate incidents since April 1st.
On April 9th, the Jizan Airport was targeted for the first time, and so was the Abha International Airport.
The Houthis are using their drones to disturb the aerial operations of the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen.
Riyadh generally either denies these reports of attacks or says they were ineffective, while Ansar Allah claims they successfully fulfilled their mission.
Clashes on the ground continue in Yemen, with the Saudi-led coalition and the Houthis fighting in the Madghal district, and in the southern Kadhah district.
Saudi Arabia attempts to dig out every reason why its war in Yemen is failing, and on April 10th announced the execution of three of its soldiers for “high treason”.
They were allegedly collabarating with an enemy against Riyadh’s military interests.
They could have been in contact with the Houthis or with Iran.
This is practically the same, as Tehran supports Ansar Allah.
This means that Riyadh can’t fully trust its own armed forces, and it could require some help, in the form of mercenaries.
The militants in Syria that Turkey deploys and uses in small-scale conflicts such as Libya and Nagorno-Karabakh could be potential candidates for this.
Turkey, under Egyptian pressure, is expected to withdraw the mercenaries from Libya.
According to reports, it will do so within the next 5 months.
Separately, a video showing Turkish-backed Syrian mercenaries complaining for not getting paid after fighting for Azerbaijan went viral.
Immediately after it gained popularity, these same militants released a video saying that the news was fabricated, and that they never fought in Nagorno-Karabakh to begin with.
According to unnamed Yemeni intelligence sources, terrorists from Syria were expected to join the Saudi-led coalition in early April.
Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula was reportedly waiting for new militants to arrive in Yemen’s southern province of Abyan to latter send them to Marib.
Today, many Turkish-backed mercenaries are sitting idly, unemployed.
This could mean either bad news for Syria, which will have to deal with them, or Ankara might decide to send them to Riyadh, if it “asks” for assistance.
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