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Chaos In Yemen: Chinese Troops Arrive As US-Armed Rebels Set Sights On Central Bank

Tyler Durden's picture




 

Iranian-backed Houthi rebels are now in control of the central Crater district in the key Yemeni port city of Aden despite a seventh consecutive day of bombing raids by the Saudi-led coalition which is keen on preventing the city from falling. Aden is the second largest city in the country with a population of some 800,000 and as noted by The Guardian, is “the last major holdout of fighters loyal to the Saudi-backed President Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi.” Residents have reported the presence of tanks, sniper fire, and patrolling Houthi fighters as the militia moves closer to exerting complete control over the city. 

Via The Guardian:

Residents of Aden’s central Crater district said Houthi fighters and their allies were in control of the neighbourhood by midday on Thursday, deploying tanks and foot patrols through its otherwise empty streets after heavy fighting in the morning.

 

It was the first time fighting on the ground had reached so deeply into central Aden. Crater is home to the local branch of Yemen’s central bank and many commercial businesses.

 

“People are afraid and terrified by the bombardment,” one resident, Farouq Abdu, told Reuters by telephone from Crater. “No one is on the streets - it’s like a curfew“.

 

Another resident said Houthi snipers had deployed on the mountain overlooking Crater and were firing on the streets below. Several houses were on fire after being struck by rockets, and messages relayed on loudspeakers urged residents to move out to safer parts of the city, he said.

As you can see from the map above, the local branch of Yemen's central bank is located in the area, which suggests the Houthis (and, as you'll see below, Al Qaeda) may be playing for a repeat of what occurred just 9 months ago when jihadis seized $400 million from the Mosul central bank in Iraq making ISIS the best funded islamic fundamentalist force in the world. Of course the tragically ridiculous part of the whole story is that the Houthi advance is very likely being aided by some of the $500 million worth of weapons the US "misplaced" in the country so in short, US-armed, Iranian-backed rebels have now overthrown a US puppet government, fought their way into the last important city still loosely under coalition control, and are now operating a few blocks from a branch of the Yemeni central bank.

The Crater district is also home to more than 75,000 Yemenis meaning the risk of civilian casualties from aerial bombardment is cause for concern and could make it more difficult for the Saudi raids to be effective especially given some ambiguity about who was ultimately responsible for the death of some 40 civilians at a refugee camp earlier this week. Here’s the Washington Post with more:

The rebels, who control Yemen’s capital, Sanaa, hope to find new defensive positions and open fresh supply channels by taking full control of Aden. The Saudi-led alliance, meanwhile, is trying to hang on to the city but is wary about carrying out airstrikes in populated areas for fear of civilian casualties…

 

It follows accounts by aid groups of increasing civilian deaths in the air campaign against the Houthis. Saudi Arabia and its partners want to reinstate President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, who fled Yemen last week in the face of a rebel advance on his compound in Aden.

 

The city appeared closer to falling into rebel hands after Wednesday’s gains. Houthi fighters — joined by soldiers loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh — faced barrages from a warship while on a coastal road but managed to reach areas near the center of Aden with tanks and vehicles mounted with heavy machine guns. At least some of the rebel forces entered the vacated Russian Consulate, said Anis Mansour, editor of the Huna Aden news Web site…

 

In Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Asseri said forces are “doing everything they can” to avoid civilian casualties. But he said the rebels have increasingly shifted into residential areas to hide from airstrikes.

 

“They are inside the villages and towns as part of their strategy,” the spokesman said.

The fighting in Aden is creating unbearable psychological and physical conditions for the local population...

...and the Houthis have taken control of the Presidential palace:

  • SHIITE REBELS SEIZE PRESIDENTIAL PALACE IN ADEN, YEMEN: AP

Meanwhile, there were reports on Thursday morning that foreign troops had arrived in the city creating speculation that a Saudi ground incursion had begun. Interestingly the unidentified foreign troops turned out to be Chinese soldiers. Here's more from RT:

Dozens of unidentified foreign troops reported disembarking in the port of Aden turned out to be Chinese soldiers maintaining security as an unknown party opened fire on a vessel evacuating foreign citizens, a Yemeni official told Sputnik.

 

He added that Chinese soldiers have already left the port, though reportedly they did not manage to take with them all the people intended to evacuate, not all of the Chinese nationals.

The deeper the Houthis entrench themselves in densely populated areas, the greater the likelihood that ground troops will be necessary to expel them. The fighting in Aden comes as the conflict claimed its first Saudi soldier when border troops came under attack overnight:

Via AP

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia said one of its guards along the border with Yemen was killed Wednesday night. It was the first known Saudi casualty since the airstrikes started.

 

A border post in the Asir region came under heavy fire from a mountainous area inside Yemen, followed by cross-border skirmishes, according to the official Saudi Press Agency. Along with the Saudi guard who was killed, 10 other border guards were wounded, SPA said.

Finally, Al Qaeda militants led an assault on Mukalla where, after a firefight, the group freed some 300 militants being held in a local prison. Here’s more from WSJ:

Al Qaeda militants in Yemen stormed the coastal city of al Mukalla early Thursday, seized government buildings and freed at least 270 inmates from a prison, including many of its own operatives, Yemeni officials said.

 

The 2 a.m. attack on the eastern city, an important seaport, was a new setback for Saudi-backed government forces already fighting an uprising by Iranian-linked Houthi rebels. Al Qaeda’s incursion into al Mukalla was the latest sign that the extremist group is exploiting Yemen’s sectarian strife.

 

Until Thursday, al Makalla had been one of the few large Yemeni cities still controlled by government and tribal forces supportive of exiled President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi.

 

Abdullah al Sharafi, a Yemeni defense ministry official, said about one-third of those freed in Thursday’s prison break were AQAP militants. Among them, he said, was Khaled Batarfi, who was AQAP’s leader in the southern province of Abyan until his arrest in 2011 and served in the organization’s Shariah council, which provides religious direction.

 

Extremist groups such as AQAP and Afghanistan’s Taliban have typically used prison breaks to free their own foot soldiers and force more secular inmates, detained for petty crimes, to join their ranks.

 

“Al Qaeda needs to recruit and [there’s] no better way to recruit from prison,” Mr. Sharafi said. “A few of the escapees were senior al Qaeda leaders, but among those who escaped were dozens of al Qaeda fighters and loyalists.”

 

In addition to the prison, AQAP overran key government offices, including the central bank, likely plundering its cash reserves, officials said.

Between the first Saudi casualty, the unfolding humanitarian crisis, the logistical difficulties inherent in carrying out bombing raids on heavily populated areas, the rebel advance on military installations near the Bab el-Mandeb, and finally, with militants set to raid the country's cash, it may become increasingly difficult for the Saudi-led coalition to support an assertion that air raids alone will be enough to debilitate the Houthis and bring the situation under control. 

 

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Thu, 04/02/2015 - 20:38 | 5954109 El_Puerco
El_Puerco's picture

...And the globalists will profit regardless

of outcome..

 

{“WW3 WILL BE THE Reptiles & Psychopath VS. Human”}

 

…And Civilization

will change face for Ever

Suerte, la vamos a necesitar; nosotros, los HUMANOS..
Thu, 04/02/2015 - 20:42 | 5954118 p00k1e
p00k1e's picture

Chinese are practicing to invade the CONUS.

Get ready folks.  It’s gonna be a blood bath. 

Thu, 04/02/2015 - 21:06 | 5954180 lakecity55
lakecity55's picture

Commander Wong: Take us to the Gold.

The Yanquis already have it, sir.

Rats!

Thu, 04/02/2015 - 21:12 | 5954192 bid the soldier...
bid the soldiers shoot's picture

Dear Yemenites

“No one is on the streets - it’s like a curfew“.

Welcome to the Arab Spring.  

I know we're a couple of  Springtimes late, but hey, we had our hands full in Syria.  Lots of digging and burying and weeding.  With any luck we should have Syria all plowed under by year's end.

And then we'll finally be able to give Yemen what Nobel Peace Laureate Obama thinks it deserves.

Further orders to follow.

Ambassatrix Nudelman

Thu, 04/02/2015 - 21:48 | 5954261 Equalizer
Equalizer's picture

So let me get this straight, the Houtis are the enemy of ISIS and are backed by Iran who is now an ally to the USA apparently, along with the Saudis when they arnt flying planes into buildings in New York, in which case obviously the US invadeds Iraq as payback, of course ISIS and Iraq are currently at war and Iran is backing Iraq, who used to be at war with each other for ten years, before the US became the enemy of both of them, so now we have Iran helping the Houtis and Saudis backing the former US puppet Yemeni government, and i bet the Russians are selling weapons to both sides as we speak, when the gold is stolen fron the central bank we can then drag the IMF into this mess with some large Greek type loans to make sure Yemen stays one of the poorest countries in the world forever!

 

Fri, 04/03/2015 - 03:33 | 5954908 dreadnaught
dreadnaught's picture

you can say that again...

Thu, 04/02/2015 - 21:49 | 5954262 Equalizer
Equalizer's picture

So let me get this straight, the Houtis are the enemy of ISIS and are backed by Iran who is now an ally to the USA apparently, along with the Saudis when they arnt flying planes into buildings in New York, in which case obviously the US invades Iraq as payback, of course ISIS and Iraq are currently at war and Iran is backing Iraq, who used to be at war with each other for ten years, before the US became the enemy of both of them, so now we have Iran helping the Houtis and Saudis backing the former US puppet Yemeni government, and i bet the Russians are selling weapons to both sides as we speak, when the gold is stolen fron the central bank we can then drag the IMF into this mess with some large Greek type loans to make sure Yemen stays one of the poorest countries in the world forever!

 

Thu, 04/02/2015 - 22:21 | 5954323 Porous Horace
Porous Horace's picture

You can say that again!

Fri, 04/03/2015 - 02:29 | 5954850 Keyboard Kommando
Keyboard Kommando's picture

It's what the Satanic overlords in Tel Aviv want!

Fri, 04/03/2015 - 02:49 | 5954871 Victor999
Victor999's picture

Why should either side want Russian weapons when they have all that American equipment lying around free to the taker?

Fri, 04/03/2015 - 08:47 | 5955307 Reader1
Reader1's picture

Because the Russian ones work.

Did you see when the Russians invaded/liberated/chastised/visited Georgia a few years ago, they wouldn't even take the M16s they captured?  They piled them up and laughed at them. 

Fri, 04/03/2015 - 03:05 | 5954884 TNTARG
TNTARG's picture

Yeah, but those selling weapons to everybody are the US and NATO allies.

Thu, 04/02/2015 - 22:43 | 5954376 Magnum
Magnum's picture

Yay lots of refugees from Yemen will now be resettled in Vermont, Colorado, Oslo, Frankfurt, and Missouri.  Great job.

Fri, 04/03/2015 - 00:38 | 5954674 ShakaZulu
ShakaZulu's picture

This is the warm up band.  Wait until you see the real show.

Fri, 04/03/2015 - 01:29 | 5954766 Ward no. 6
Ward no. 6's picture

yemen has a lot of poor ppl, really poor.

many are starving to death

Fri, 04/03/2015 - 03:06 | 5954886 petroglyph
petroglyph's picture

Maybe the Chinese military in Yemen is being paid for by the US taxpayer? I've said for quite a while if the PTB want a war someplace, why not outsource it? It would be a lot cheaper, the Chinese grunts will fight for 3 dollars per day and a bowl of rice. No need to let them go to the VA after the war, and China has a few to many males with nothing better to do. 

Think about it, it is a win, lose, lose, win situation, and no more American blood is spilled. Outsource war, pay the Chinese with MENA oil rights, etc. The more you think about it the more the idea will grow on you.

The next thing we should outsource is congress. 

Fri, 04/03/2015 - 03:55 | 5954916 newsoutlet
newsoutlet's picture
Origins of the crisis in Yemen

https://youtu.be/7VGo92WWeJ4

 

Remember to visit bog that reveals putin regime propaganda lies and it's regime crimes:

http://stopputinregime.wordpress.com

Fri, 04/03/2015 - 06:02 | 5955010 Jano
Fri, 04/03/2015 - 06:40 | 5955043 skippy9
skippy9's picture

This chaos is on Obama and Clinton, two of the most evil persons on the planet.

Fri, 04/03/2015 - 08:20 | 5955217 Reader1
Reader1's picture

Wait, I'm confused.  Looking at the pics, I see a typical middle eastern city.   Everything looks perfectly normal to me.  Is the fighting behind all the fires and ruined buildings, or what?

Fri, 04/03/2015 - 08:22 | 5955219 Reader1
Reader1's picture

Is there a more fitting name for a middle eastern city than, "Crater?"

Mon, 04/06/2015 - 01:18 | 5962511 onmail
onmail's picture

The most important question is :

Who will loot the Gold

 

Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!