Gulf News

UAE-backed Yemeni forces take key areas

AL HOUTHIS SUFFER A STRING OF LOSSES IN ONE WEEK

- AL MUKALLA BY SAEED AL BATATI Correspond­ent

Yemeni National Forces have liberated the entire Al Waziyah front, expunging the Iranbacked Al Houthi militia from their stronghold­s in the area in Taiz province. The liberation came as part of a largescale campaign supported by the UAE Armed Forces.

In a week, Al Houthis have lost control of two districts, a military base and large swathes of land in Taiz province, in addition to a strategic seaport in Al Tuhayata district in the province of Hodeida.

Yemeni military units took control of a military camp in Taiz province close to the strategic Bab Al Mandab Strait, as other loyalists consolidat­ed their control over liberated mountain areas in Taiz and Hodeida.

Backed by massive air support from the Saudi-led coalition, the pro-government Giant Brigades stormed Al Ameri military camp west of the city of Taiz on Friday, shortly after seizing control of a chain of mountains with the same name, Abu Zara Al Muharami, the commander of the Giant Brigades, told Gulf News by telephone. He added that his forces killed and wounded dozens of Al Houthi militants and their next target was the Red Sea city of Hodeida.

Al Houthi defences began to crumble last week when thousands of troops — including those from the Tehami resistance, the Giant Brigades and the National Resistance forces led by General Tareq Mohammad Abdullah Saleh — launched a massive offensive on key towns and mountains west of Taiz such as Kahboub, Al Waziyah, Mouza, Al Ameri and Al Bareh.

In addition to easing pressure on government forces in Taiz, the aim of the current offensive on the west of Taiz is to prevent Al Houthis present in the rugged mountains from attacking government forces advancing towards Hodeida.

In about a week, the Iranbacked Al Houthis have lost control of two districts, a military base and large swathes of lands in the Taiz province, in addition to a strategic seaport in Al Tuhayata district in the province of Hodeida.

Military experts attributed the rapid military gains made by the UAE-backed Yemeni forces west of Taiz and along the country’s western coastline in Hodeida to better battlefiel­d tactics, cooperatio­n between different military factions, and the death of senior Al Houthi political and military commanders.

More than a week ago, hundreds of troops from the National Resistance led by General Tarek Mohammad Abdullah Saleh, the Giant Brigades and Tehami Resistance launched a joint military offensive on Al Houthi-held areas west of Taiz city.

Despite the rough topography of the area and thousands of landmines planted by Al Houthis, the troops advanced quickly into the battlefiel­d, seizing control of Mawza and Al Wazyia districts, and stormed the Al Ameri military camp.

After the current victories, government forces encircled Al Houthis, who had laid siege to Taiz, Yemen’s third-largest city.

“Al Houthis are facing serious forces that seek to achieve victory and restore the state [authority],” Brigadier Jamal Al Ma’mari, a military analyst, told Sky News Arabia, referring to thousands of elite forces that defected from Al Houthis after the killing of Ali Abdullah Saleh, Yemen’s ousted president, in December.

In addition to easing pressure on government forces in Taiz, the aim of the current offensive on the west of Taiz is to prevent Al Houthis in the rugged mountains from attacking government forces advancing towards the city of Hodeida.

General Tarek’s men are from the elite Republican Guards and Special Forces that shored up Al Houthis during their military expansion in late 2014 and early 2015, and helped Al Houthis fight off aggressive military assaults by government troops and the Saudi-led coalition.

Al Ma’mari said the decision to expel Al Houthis from Taiz before marching towards Hodeida was a smart one that led to the cutting off of military supplies to Al Houthis and hence led to the collapse of their forces on the Red Sea battlefiel­d.

“Marching along the [Red Sea] coastline left forces vulnerable to Al Houthi attacks. This mistake was fixed,” Al Ma’mari said.

Other military analysts link Al Houthis’ major battlefiel­d setbacks to the death of their military and political leaders in Saudi-led air strikes.

Ali Al Khilaki, a Yemeni military analyst based in the southern city of Aden, said the death of Saleh Al Sammad, the president of Al Houthi Supreme Political Council, who was killed in an air strike last month, was a big blow to Al Houthis.

“The death of Al Sammad was a devastatin­g blow that caused chaos in their ranks,” Al Khilaki said, adding that Al Houthis would respond to defeats by increasing their ballistic missile attacks on Saudi Arabia to shore up the morale of their militiamen and to pretend they have the upper hand on the battlefiel­d.

“They would also put pressure on tribes to send their children to the battlefiel­d,” Al Khilaki said.

Pressure in Saada

Since the beginning of 2018, Yemen’s army and the Saudiled coalition have opened new fronts inside Saada, Al Houthis’ main bastion that hosts their major arsenal of ballistic missiles and key leaders. The pressure in Sa’ada has prevented Al Houthis from sending reinforcem­ents to other fronts, including the Red Sea, which helped government forces to advance there, analysts said.

“All battlefiel­ds, including those in Nehim, Bouqa and Qanea, must flare up now. This will significan­tly lead to the fall of the enemy,” Al Ma’mari said.

Meanwhile, the Emirates Red Crescent, ERC, has offered emergency relief assistance to displaced and forcibly displaced people in Al Qadah, Daba’ and Assafi’yah districts southwest of Taiz.

The move, which is part of ERC’s initiative­s in the ‘Year of Zayed’, included distributi­on of 1,000 food baskets, and tents, and wheelchair­s for the people with disabiliti­es and the elderly.

The death of Al Sammad was a devastatin­g blow that caused chaos in Al Houthi ranks. They would also put pressure on tribes to send their children to the battlefiel­d.”

Ali Al Khilaki | Military analyst

 ??  ?? WAM The Emirates Red Crescent yesterday offered emergency relief assistance to displaced residents in Al Qadah, Daba’ and Assafi’yah districts, southwest of Taiz.
WAM The Emirates Red Crescent yesterday offered emergency relief assistance to displaced residents in Al Qadah, Daba’ and Assafi’yah districts, southwest of Taiz.
 ?? AP ?? Forces loyal to Yemen’s President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi take positions in Taiz.
AP Forces loyal to Yemen’s President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi take positions in Taiz.

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