US-UK aggression coalition targets Hodeidah int'l airport
This marks the latest aggression after the coalition fired on the Ras Isa area on Tuesday.
Al Mayadeen's correspondent on Thursday reported that the US-UK coalition renewed an aggression on Yemen, this time targeting Hodeidah International Airport with five airstrikes.
عدّة غارات على مطار الحُديْدة الدولي، واليمنيون يحذرون من تصعيد المواجهة.#اليمن pic.twitter.com/CEMaSwNRyc
— ASNA (@AkhbarSite) May 2, 2024
This marks the latest aggression after the coalition fired on the Ras Isa area on Tuesday.
On Wednesday, Ansarallah Political Bureau member Ali Al-Qahoum warned that any military base or territory used as a launching point for US, UK, and Israeli aggression against Yemen be deemed a "primary" target for Yemen, and will thus expand "theater of operations and the target bank to include strategic and vital targets in depth and in economically significant areas."
"In this regard, the consequences and hostile tendencies must be taken into account, considering the aggression that has been ongoing for the past nine years. The equations have changed, and the balance of power has altered," he added.
صناعة السلام بجسارة والمضي قدما في تحقيق وتنفيذ استحقاقاته فيه مصلحة لليمن والسعودية والإمارات والمنطقة برمتها ويحقق الأمن والاستقرار وبه سينتهي التوتر ويحد من توسيع دائرة الصراع وامام ذلك لابد من تغليب المصالح المشتركة ورعايتها والتحول من مربع العداء إلى مربع الصداقة وهذا فيه…
— علي القحوم (@alialqhoom) May 1, 2024
During a meeting chaired by Mehdi al-Mashat on Tuesday, the Supreme Council warned against any hostile provocations that might pose a threat to national security and affirmed that any efforts to undermine Yemen's role in supporting Palestine, whether through military escalation or other means, would ultimately fail.
The Council added that the consequences of such actions would extend beyond Yemen's borders and would not diminish Yemen's steadfastness or the resilience of its people and armed forces.
Read more: Any escalation would not be limited to Yemen borders: Supreme Council