Houthis, al-Qaeda targeting legitimacy leaders in Yemen
Arab Coalition forces work
hard to support legitimacy in Yemen and curtail the terrorism of al-Qaeda in
the Arabian Peninsula, the Houthi coup militia and Islah Party, the arm of the
Muslim Brotherhood in Yemen.
These extremist groups
have, meanwhile, been following a new approach, namely the assassination of the
leaders of legitimacy forces, especially the southern leadership, which
succeeded in the past period in inflicting heavy damage on them.
Security Belt
commander's assassination
Abdulatif al-Sayed, the
commander-in-chief of the Security Belt Forces of the Southern Transitional
Council, was killed, along with four soldiers, following a bombing of his convoy
in the Wadi Awimran area in Abyan province in southern Yemen on August 10.
Although no one has yet
claimed responsibility for the operation, accusing fingers were pointed at al-Qaeda.
Some people based their
conclusion on who might have staged the attack on its modus operandi which
belongs to al-Qaeda.
The convoy was targeted
with explosive devices.
The same people drew
the same conclusion because al-Qaeda is also active in Abyan province. It suffered
significant losses during the past period at the hands of the Security Belt Forces.
Operation
Martyr Hoss Swords
The operation targeting
the leaders of the Security Belt comes four days after the announcement by the
southern armed forces on August 6 of the launch of Operation Martyr Hoss Swords
with the aim of hunting the elements of al-Qaeda in Abyan.
The southern forces
succeeded in arresting al-Qaeda field commander, Saeed Ali Saeed, codenamed 'Abu
al-Qaqa', according to Spokesman of the southern armed forces, Mohamed al-Naqib.
He said the operation
is an extension of Operation Eastern Arrows which was launched by the southern
forces in August 2022 with the aim of establishing security and stability in
the southern governorate.
Two sides of
the same coin
Yemeni political
analyst, Mahmud al-Taher, said the aforementioned developments reflect the presence
of consensus between the Houthis and al-Qaeda on the need for targeting the
Arab Coalition and the Yemeni government.
The two groups, he said,
carry out operations and assassinations against Yemeni military leaders with
the aim of destabilizing liberated areas.
"These terrorist
operations will only stop by restoring Yemen to its Arab incubator, working to
restore the state, and then carrying out a military operation to cleanse the
country of radical terrorism," al-Taher told The Reference.
He described the
Houthis and al-Qaeda as 'two sides of the same coin'.
"We expect many
terrorist operations to happen during the coming period against the Yemeni
government and ordinary people, especially in liberated areas," al-Taher
said.