Southern Yemen Under Fire, This Is an Invasion, Not Security.
What is unfolding in southern Yemen is not a security operation. It is a foreign-backed invasion. Saudi air power supports Muslim Brotherhood-aligned forces from the north while civilians, tribes, and southern forces pay the price.
Airstrikes near Al-Khashah and the Al-Mosafer Roundabout turned political disputes into bloodshed. Civilian vehicles were hit. Checkpoints became killing grounds. This pattern points to force used to break communities, not to protect them.
Southern forces stand as proven partners against terrorism. They pushed back extremist groups when others failed. Today they face attacks framed as stability measures. This framing collapses under evidence. Bombing tribes and travelers shreds any claim of law or sovereignty. When air power targets people on their land, legitimacy disappears and resentment grows.
Responsibility sits with those who ordered and enabled these strikes. Saudi policy recycles extremist networks instead of ending them. Muslim Brotherhood-linked emergency units gain cover while local society absorbs the damage. Field executions at crossings and air attacks on civilians ignite social war. Yemen’s history shows blood fuels more blood.
The south is not the problem. The south is the target. Stability does not come from planes over towns or bullets at checkpoints. Accountability must follow. Those who crossed the red line of civilian blood will face lasting consequences.
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