West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

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Shanu
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Shanu »

A Civil War, Two Cyclones and now a locust swarm. Looks Biblical, isn't it?

https://news.vice.com/article/battered- ... of-locusts
As Yemen's bloody conflict continues into its eighth month and residents recover from two unprecedented cyclones in the span of weeks, the United Nations is now warning the country faces another ticking time bomb — hordes of locusts.
A combination of historic rains brought by cyclones Chapala and Megh this month and an unceasing security vacuum mean both the potential for infestations and the lack of government response are particularly acute.
"They don't need much rain in order to survive," said Keith Cressman, the FAO's senior locust forecasting officer. "If they get 25mm or 1 inch in a month it's enough for them to breed."
Female desert locusts can lay eggs on three occasions within their lifetime, each time dropping roughly 100 eggs into the soil. The vast majority of offspring die either before hatching or in their wingless "hopper" stage. But the rate of reproduction still can lead to a 20-fold increase for each subsequent generation, said Cressman, meaning Yemen could be beset by locust swarms of biblical proportions by Spring 2016.
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Singha »

The common urban Saudi clamoring to form militias and reclaim prestige in Yemen? Not even a order by the makkah council will make it happen...hence the reliance on mercs.

Rome was like that too during its decline...

After ravaging Yemen the locusts have nowhere to go but raid Saudi and their wheat crop.
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Satya_anveshi »

Earlier a Saudi prince was caught with 2 tons of drugs and now we have news of alcohol selling as soft drinks in saudi barbaria
Image
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by vijaykarthik »

^^guffaw. I am reminded of the multiple myriad ways we used to fool the police / railways authorities by taking whisky / vodka / whatever in soft drink bottles.

But this above is a thoroughly new trick!
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by deejay »

^^^ West Asia is Best Asia (naah make that the whole World) on how to live on the better side of ethics. Arabs see alcohol in Soda, djinn in technology. djannat in death, hourri in raisins and I don't know what they see in a Donkey!
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Singha »

houthis have made gains.
http://s3.img7.ir/e8LSL.jpg
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by member_29247 »

deejay wrote:^^^ West Asia is Best Asia (naah make that the whole World) on how to live on the better side of ethics. Arabs see alcohol in Soda, djinn in technology. djannat in death, hourri in raisins and I don't know what they see in a Donkey!
Probably Democratic opening?
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Shanu »

Singha wrote:The common urban Saudi clamoring to form militias and reclaim prestige in Yemen? Not even a order by the makkah council will make it happen...hence the reliance on mercs.

Rome was like that too during its decline...
I was thinking more in the line of Saudis rising against their incompetent King. :twisted:

After all, there is always Islamic history which tells us Sultans got removed when they lost wars abroad.

And we have videos on this forum showing Saudis losing battles to Houthis inside their own country. If that is not humiliation, then what is?
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Philip »

"Houthis vs the Soothis",as Shiv would have it! It's going to be interesting to see how long the Soothis can keep going toe-to-toe with the Houthis.The natives always have greater staying power than the external forces. Even the so-called "sole superpower" bit the dust in Afghanistan and Iraq,and is returning its vomit in Iraq trying to tickle ISIS up its nose.The longer the war continues and oil prices stay low,the Soothis war in the Yemen will have a sell-by date that is inevitable.
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by vijaykarthik »

I think KSA is trying to move out. They are quite remarkably unclear about their motives though. There was the plan to lay seige on Sanaa and further up in Sadaa province also go further north and make thr Houthis "pay". That never materialized.

Later, they planned to also liberate all of Yemen. That is a non starter. Now the way its going, they want to hurry the hell out and allow the mercenaries to take care of the security around Aden etc.

Did the rest note the renewed push of KSA with Egypt? It happened in the last 2-3 days. Mainly about mil support and Egypt accepting to be the new Arab army. Egypt seems to have its problems upto the brim with Sharm el sheikh and what not.

All it needs now is some movement in OPEC - some fissure and the king croaking. There were reports a few weeks back that he has dementia (that has been doing the rounds for a long time) and was also hospitalized. Once one of these events happen / both happen, all bets are off. I will not be surprised if there will be a palace coup. Don't think they will allow the 29 yr old idiot to rule. He will positively put even our beloved Rahul Gandhi to shame.
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Singha »

His palace enemies might scapegoat him for starting the war and move toward a negotiated peace agreement..end the suffering on both sides and move out.
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Singha »

Houthi have no option but to fight like cornered foxes. It's their land and lives and women at stake..they have nowhere else to go.
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Lalmohan »

CT No 431: US and Ru have collaborated to draw KSA into a Kursk Kessel and will now encircle it with houthis, kurds, 'free-alawi-fauj', and compliant sunni-munnas, whilst eye-ran is rebuilt as shia-central and the non-compliant turks get a reminder of who's the daddy. the KSA/Opec stranglehold gets broken, lots of border redrawing and then when the sand has settled, the oil flows merrily along, just without any KSA choke-hold
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by UlanBatori »

U mean RUSsYan conspiracy.
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by habal »

vijaykarthik wrote:I think KSA is trying to move out. They are quite remarkably unclear about their motives though.
they can only lose one war at a time.
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by JE Menon »

rsingh wrote:
Singha wrote:so KSA is now looking for experienced TSPA advisors to lead th mercerneries onsite in south yemen.

http://www.pakistantoday.com.pk/2015/11 ... di-arabia/

The diplomatic source said that while Pakistan had already committed to defend the territorial integrity of the Kingdom, the KSA government wanted ground troops to take part in the Yemen offensive.

“Saudi Arabia has the best and most modern military equipment but they badly need battle hardened military officers to augment their operations in Yemen. Even after six months of the Yemen campaign, the GCC forces are failing to make significant gains in the region. Instead, the rebels have rattled the Saudi army’s plans and brought the war to a stalemate,” the source said.

The source said that frustrated with its failure in Yemen, KSA government had hired mercenaries ‎from Columbia who were being paid hefty amounts by the coalition for their services in Yemen.

Image
“Now the KSA government needs more troops on the ground while Pakistan has repeatedly resisted the move. In this backdrop, Army Chief Raheel Sharf’s visit is very critical,” the source said.
Wow paper towel and bins strategically placed.Body language of Arap Gernail shows that he is trying to project too much force without having one.
I think those are spittoons. Jarnails and Shaikhs are spitting left and right, hence the startegic placement.
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Falijee »

Satya_anveshi wrote:Earlier a Saudi prince was caught with 2 tons of drugs and now we have news of alcohol selling as soft drinks in saudi barbaria
Image
Satya-ji - please see the below : :mrgreen:
http://en.dailypakistan.com.pk/viral/video-saudi-arabia-seizes-48000-cans-of-beer-disguised-as-pepsi/
JEDDAH (Web Desk) – A man was caught attempting to smuggle 48,000 cans of Heineken beer disguised as Pepsi into Saudi Arabia.
Alcohol is strictly prohibited in the country, and the penalty includes a prison sentence and flogging if caught.
But the rules for alcohol or fornication, if caught, are entirely different if you are a prince-ling or a member of the Royal Family :mrgreen:
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Singha »

member_29247
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by member_29247 »

The picture of two jernails from the looks of it and if looks could kill
They are dressed to skill!

The strategic holding of the baton by TSP General Marad-e-Noor reminds me of
The Peter seller movie Hard Beds Soft Battlles, in which the adjutant to a Nazi generals baton moves upward upon entering and greeted in Occupied Paris brothel.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soft_Be ... (1974).jpg
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by deejay »

Oh good. Happy Diwali to the Houthis from the Soothis.
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Philip »

The war against ISIS is now entering a new phase post Paris,with the French bombing Raqqa and sending the CDG N-powered CV into the Gulf with more attacks inevitable. France will be "merciless" said Hollande,it appears that he is keeping up his word.
French warplanes bombard Isis strongholds in Raqqa, two days after Paris attacks which killed 132
20 bombs were dropped on an Isis command outpost and training camp in France's biggest ever bombing raid against Isis

Doug Bolton
A French Dassault Rafale fighter jet flies during a 2014 air show

12 French warplanes have bombarded Raqqa, the de facto 'capital' of Isis in Syria, two days after bombing and gun attacks in Paris killed 132 people.

The airstrike late on Sunday was the first since the Paris attacks, and saw 12 French air force planes drop 20 bombs on Isis positions.

The French nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, the Charles De Gaulle, also began making final preparations to set sail for the Persian Gulf on Wednesday, signifying more heavy strikes are yet to come.
Read more
US officials believe Mohammed Emwazi killed in drone strike

Sunday's bombing was the biggest French air raid that has taken place in Syria so far, and was described as a "massive" attack by a French defence ministry spokesman.

According to a statement released by the ministry, the first target that the planes destroyed was a command post, which housed a recruitment centre and arms and munitions depot.
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Lalmohan »

sadly the problem is more complex, all the strikes in france are being done by maghrebis with only moral and diplomatic connections to syria and much more emotional involvement in the colonial era
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Singha »

https://www.rt.com/usa/322379-us-weapon ... mpaign=RSS

huge saudi arms deals. windfall for american cos.
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Yagnasri »

Singha wrote:https://www.rt.com/usa/322379-us-weapon ... mpaign=RSS

huge saudi arms deals. windfall for american cos.
Khan is smart to sell smart weapons to Soothis. Even if they do not work as advertised, soothis can be blamed and everyone will believe that. :D
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Mukesh.Kumar »

Singha wrote:https://www.rt.com/usa/322379-us-weapon ... mpaign=RSS

huge saudi arms deals. windfall for american cos.
Let's see for how long. Storyfrom the Independent from about a month back on Which Middle Eastern countries could run out of money in less than five years

Image
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by habal »

the bahraini army is mainly 'pakistani' right ..

Hundreds of foreign mercenaries from the Bahraini regime's army have arrived in Yemen to aid the Saudi Coalition:

http://www.almasdarnews.com/article/bah ... ern-yemen/
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Philip »

O'Bomber's weapon of choice. Drones. He is a sly individual,very different in mentality from Putin,who "speaks from the mouth and shoots from the hip".O'Bomber prefers to "quietly fart and leave a stink in the room and depart"!

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/n ... yemen-isis
Drones may predate Obama, but his resolute use of them is unmatched
Civilians have been killed and officials warn it will ‘weaken the rule of law’, yet the president’s actions indicate drone warfare won’t be going away anytime soon

Alice Ross
Wednesday 18 November 2015

The first drone strike took place within weeks of the September 11 attacks, but the unmanned aerial weapons system came of age under Barack Obama.

It was Obama who stepped up the most controversial use of drones, using them beyond internationally recognised war zones to conduct hundreds of strikes in the lawless regions of Yemen, Pakistan and Somalia.

Unlike conventional aircraft, drones can linger for hours above their targets, watching and hoovering up data such as cellphone signals. This makes them uniquely well-suited for pursuing suspected senior terrorists – “high-value targets”, in military jargon – or providing surveillance on suspect sites or groups.

Obama and his team seized on these capabilities: in 2009, his first year in the White House, Obama carried out more such strikes in Pakistan than Bush had during his entire presidency. The following year, strikes hit Pakistan’s tribal regions at a rate of more than two a week.

Concrete details on all aspects of these secretive campaigns, waged by the CIA and Joint Special Operaitons Command (JSOC), are elusive – Obama himself did not even mention drone strikes publicly until 2012. But independent monitoring groups such as the Bureau of Investigative Journalism and the New America Foundation estimate that the US has conducted almost 400 such strikes since Obama entered the White House.

This is not an arm’s-length project for the president. Senior officials have described on condition of anonymity how Obama, who holds the 2009 Nobel peace prize, personally signs off on the “kill list” and is often briefed on individual strikes.

These strikes have claimed high-profile scalps; figures such as Nassir al-Wuhayshi, leader of al-Qaida’s Yemeni affiliate, who died in a drone strike in June. Meanwhile, letters from Osama bin Laden reveal the considerable disruption caused by the persistent presence of drones to al-Qaida’s senior leadership in Pakistan.

But the strikes have provoked sustained criticism from international lawyers and civil rights groups, who question the administration’s claim that after 9/11 the US is legally justified in targeting al-Qaida and its “affiliates”, wherever they may be. Christof Heyns, the UN’s special rapporteur on extrajudicial killing, said in 2012 that the practice threatened to “weaken the rule of law”.

The strikes have also been dogged by claims of civilian casualties. The administration has sought to play these down: John Brennan, at the time Obama’s counter-terrorism adviser and now the head of the CIA, portrayed drones as an “exceptionally precise and surgical” weapon causing next to no collateral damage.

The New America Foundation estimates that at least 342 civilians have died, while the Bureau of Investigative Journalism puts the figure at 488 or more. Well-documented disasters such as the 2013 bombing of a wedding convoy in Yemen have led Human Rights Watch and others to call for the US to launch official investigations into particular strikes. No such investigations have been published.

Worryingly, the drone pilots who spoke with the Guardian say they often had little idea who was being killed – a view echoed by CIA documents leaked to McClatchy, which found hundreds of the dead recorded simply as “other”.

The controversy of the “secret” drone wars has distracted attention from the situation where the vast majority of drone strikes are conducted alongside traditional forces in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Here too unmanned aircraft have helped to shape the conflict, supporting troops on the ground and pinpointing targets for other aircraft to attack as well as conducting strikes of their own.

As the US struggles to extricate itself from its long and unpopular ground war in Afghanistan, Obama is increasingly relying on aerial warfare. The Pentagon announced this summer that it is increasing its drone fleet by 50% to help meet the “steady demand signal” from across the globe. Meanwhile in Iraq and Syria, the US is conducting its fight against Isis almost exclusively from above, using drones and conventional aircraft to launch more than 8,000 airstrikes in the past year.

Speaking at the G20 meeting on Syria in Geneva on Monday, the president angrily rejected renewed calls for boots on the ground. “It is not just my view, but the view of my closest military and civilian advisers, that that would be a mistake.”

Instead, he vowed an “intensification” of the current activity. Aerial warfare is set to remain the cornerstone of Obama’s military strategy.

Alice Ross formerly led the drones team at the Bureau of Investigative Journalism
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Singha »

IS has attacked the pro-hadi KSA backed forces.

RT
14:05 GMT
ISIS claims attack on army in eastern Yemen
Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) claimed responsibility for an attack on Yemen’s army in the eastern region of Hadramawt on Friday. The attack left at least 19 Yemeni soldiers and 35 militants killed, Reuters said, citing a security source. Another security source said earlier on Friday that Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) was responsible for the attack.
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Lalmohan »

A Mongol khakhan faced with two irreconcilable warring tribes would put both tribes to the sword...
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Singha »

I wonder who the next Caliph will be after al-baghdadi is buried ? someone from the Maghreb-Sahel region perhaps...lots of wide open loosely policed spaces in and around the sahara. there, in the desert heat and purity of thought shall rise the next iteration.
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Lalmohan »

in the movie el-cid, a mahdi arises from the maghreb and threatens spain/al-andaluz
in the movie gordon of khartoum, a mahdi arises from the sudanese sahel and marches north to egypt
if memory serves me correctly, then another arose in pashtunistan in the movie lives of the bengal lancers...

i suppose the question is, who will the saudi's fund and back to be the next mahdi?
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Singha »

Libyan freedom fighter Omar mukhtar also. Maghreb and Sahel are way way bigger than Arabia.
1000s of km vordere are eines in map only there
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Singha »

Issam zahredine nicht have modeled himself in el cid.
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Lalmohan »

the main card the a-rabs hold is that the hoko sort of puts them in the driving seat
so somehow the chosen people always end up on top (so as to speak)
i recall a conversation with a pakistani taxi driver in an unnamed gulf country - i made the mistake of asking him how he liked it 'here' - after he'd stopped swearing for 10 minutes he mumbled something along the lines of "unke ek hi aCHCHe cheez hai, ki woh arbi zabaan bolte hain..."
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Karan M »

Well IMs i speak to who were in the gelf or KSA are usually full of praise about how smart the soothis are and how brilliant they are and how things were A-ok there. on asking why they left, most change the topic.
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Lalmohan »

i spoke to 2 IM's whilst i was in al-saudi; both were highly critical of their hosts - 'but what to do saar, rozi-roti...'
i can imagine that the tale has to be sweetened for other purposes
i also remember a night under the stars in the rub-al-khali shivering by the campfire when 2 mallu IM birathers offered me their old monk and charminars... ;-)
all iz vell...
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by UlanBatori »

IS is killing Saudis? What's going on here?
Dozens of troops and militants have been killed in clashes in eastern Yemen, Yemeni security sources say.

Yemeni officials said soldiers were ambushed by al-Qaeda insurgents, while so-called Islamic State's (IS) Yemen branch said it carried out the attack.

At least 12 soldiers and 15 militants were killed in a gun-battle and suicide bombing near Shibam in Hadramawt province, reports say.

Yemen has for months been mired in a war compounded by militant attacks.

Large parts of Hadramawt, Yemen's biggest province, are under the control of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP).
'Hours of fighting'

Yemeni security officials said masked men opened fire on pro-government troops and detonated a suicide car bomb at a checkpoint on Friday morning.

Fighting is reported to have gone on for hours afterwards.

Yemeni officials said AQAP had carried out the attack. However, IS' wing in Yemen - a rival of al-Qaeda - said it was behind the assault, which it said had killed 50 troops.

IS has carried out a string of bombings and attacks since the group emerged in Yemen in late 2014.

A Saudi-led coalition has been fighting Houthi rebels and its allies in Yemen since the government was forced into exile in March by a Houthi rebellion.

Since then, the fighting has left at least 5,700 people dead, about half of them civilians, the UN says.
From a related report:
Islamic State's Yemen branch has attacked both main sides in the country's civil war in recent months, targeting the Shi'ite Houthi militia in mosques in the capital Sanaa as well as Saudi-led forces and a local grouping of anti-Houthi fighters, with suicide blasts in Aden in September that killed dozens.

Islamic State said in a statement it had killed nearly 50 soldiers in the attack, many more than the number cited by local officials, and just one of its fighters was killed carrying out a suicide bombing using a car in the assault.

Fighting was still going on in the area after the initial attack by militants between the towns of Shibam and al-Qatn, the security source said. Islamic State said it had targeted three separate army posts.

Unverified footage on social media purporting to show the attack included a large blast followed by a big plume of smoke, and the sound of shooting as well as distant voices shouting.
Read more at Reutershttp:
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Singha »

the goal might be the breakaway caliphate of East Yemen, right next to 'restive eastern provinces of' KSA and Oman. that would be poetic justice indeed. or deep-state KSA faction backing such free radicals vs the official line of backing Hadi and his mercenary army.
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Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by Singha »

http://warisboring.com/articles/gulf-mo ... rcenaries/

Gulf Monarchies Love Mercenaries
MIDDLE EAST November 23, 2015 Thomas Baron 4
Bahrain1 mercenaries1 United Arab Emirates1 Yemen4

In an attempt to bolster its ground operations in Yemen, the Saudi-led coalition has contracted 800 former Colombian soldiers as part of the fight for Aden against militant factions linked to Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and the Islamic State.

It is unclear which state contracted the fighters, but reports suggest they are fighting under UAE command while wearing Saudi uniforms on the ground.

The first 100 soldiers arrived in Yemen in early October, drawn to the desert war by the promise of better salaries — each fighter will be paid $1,000 a week more than at home. The promise of instant citizenship to the UAE if they survive their three-month contract is an obvious draw.

“We are called mercenaries, traitors, cowards and opportunists,” one retired officer told Colombian newspaper El Tiempo. “We are nothing like that. We are men who made a decision in response to a lack of [financial] guarantees [at home].”

The Gulf states’ ruling families have a long history of relying on experienced foreign fighters to bolster their security forces — often at the expense of their own populations — and to help ensure stability.

Even after the former British dependencies in the Gulf region became independent, they continued to rely on British security officers and ex-soldiers to run operations. These men included Timothy Creasey, the commander and then deputy commander-in-chief of Oman’s armed forces in the 1970s and ’80s, and Ian Henderson — known as the Butcher of Bahrain — who headed that country’s General Directorate for State Security Investigations from 1966 to 1998.

The recruitment of trained, experienced British personnel allowed the Gulf states to quickly build professional security forces, while having foregone the experience of fighting modern wars. During the pre-independence era, the United Kingdom guaranteed the security of these states from outside aggressors, while actual conflicts were characterized by local raiding parties and nomadic expeditions.

In moments of crisis, the use of mercenaries have allowed Gulf armies to bolster their forces when necessary, a cheaper option than maintaining large national armies. As a result, the Gulf states have some of the smallest standing armies in the world, with only Saudi Arabia’s military being of substance.

During the crisis in Oman in the 1960s and ’70s, for example, the Sultan hired mercenaries from Australia with experience fighting in Vietnam to help tackle the Marxist Dhofar Rebellion on the ground.

In recent years, Western mercenaries have given way to a cheaper mix of South American — mostly Colombian — fighters with experience battling insurgents, and Muslims from the surrounding Arab countries, Pakistan, Malaysia, Indonesia and Somalia.

In 2010, Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayad Al Nahyah of Abu Dhabi secretly contracted Erik Prince — founder of the controversial private security firm Blackwater — to build a special operations unit tasked with anti-terrorism operations, defending pipelines and skyscrapers and suppressing international revolts.


A White House spokesperson claimed the sheikh’s reasoning derived from the UAE military’s lack of experience and “to show that they are not to be messed with.” These recruits came mainly from Colombia but also South Africa, sparing the sheikh the need to recruit locals.

Hiring mercenaries also lets the Gulf states conduct sensitive security operations without embroiling the military in the socio-political and sectarian conflicts of the state. This is important for a region with a historical legacy of military coups that overthrow unpopular monarchies. These same regimes also cannot guarantee that their populations would remain loyal in the event of a crisis.

The monarchical states of the Gulf are not immune to these problems. U.S. Pres. Barack Obama warned as recently as April that these regimes were at risk from “populations that, in some cases, are alienated, youth that are underemployed, an ideology that is destructive and nihilistic, and in some cases, just a belief that there are no legitimate political outlets for grievances.”

By keeping small armies mostly staffed by outsiders, the monarchies can more greatly assure their own survival in the long term, the soldiers themselves having no loyalty except to their paychecks. They have few qualms about suppressing political uprisings or opponents of the ruling power, sometimes in violation of international norms of human rights.

In March 2011, a month after the Bahraini uprising began, advertisements appeared in Pakistani media calling for “manpower for Bahrain National Guard” with “previous experience” in the army or police. Bahrain reportedly recruited as many as 2,500 Pakistani servicemen to help suppress the rebellion, although official numbers are hard to come by.

Other mercenaries recruited from Malaysia and Sudan often had little to no knowledge of Arabic or local customs.

State officials refute these reports, claiming that Bahraini citizens comprise the security forces. This is technically true, but misleading, as it’s common practice for Bahrain to grant these recruits citizenship. Critics claim that this is an attempt by Bahrain’s rulers to reduce the majority Shia population — a criticism further confirmed by the de-nationalisation of Shia dissidents in recent years — and shape the voter base in favor of the ruling Sunni monarchy.

The Islamic Human Rights Commission have called these tactics part of an “ongoing project of demographic sectarian change to marginalize the Shia Muslim citizens in Bahrain.”


The recruitment of mercenaries by the Gulf monarchies is only possible due to the immense oil wealth these countries enjoy. The money they can promise these fighters acts as a clear draw, and their indifference to the political reality on the ground makes them less resistant to suppressing opponents of the ruling families.
habal
BRF Oldie
Posts: 6919
Joined: 24 Dec 2009 18:46

Re: West Asia News and Discussions (YEMEN, gulf)

Post by habal »

Doesn't this bother Mr. Obama, who is pre-occupied with 'freedoms' of syrian, iraqi, libyan peoples

US Ally Saudi Arabia Just Sentenced a Man to Death for Writing Poetry

Here’s something that won’t be reported widely in the American mainstream media. Interesting isn’t it?

http://www.thedailysheeple.com/us-ally- ... try_112015
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