Yemen's Houthis unger Saudi regime, relaase attack video

Yemen's Houthi rebels on Sunday broadcast footage they said was of a major attack into Saudi Arabia that killed or wounded 500 soldiers with thousands of others surrendering.
Yahya
Saree, a Houthi military spokesman, described an ambush on the Saudi forces
that then developed into an "all-out" cross-border offensive that
trapped the troops inside Saudi Arabia.
"More
than 200 were killed in dozens of [missile and drone] strikes while trying to
escape or surrender," Saree said.
The fighting took
place in the southern region of Najran with video images aired showing armoured
vehicles hit by blasts and surrendering soldiers.
Saudi Arabia has
not yet responded to the Houthi claim. Al Jazeera was not independently able to
verify the footage or claims broadcast on Houthi-run Almasirah TV.
Saree said the
offensive 72 hours earlier had defeated three "enemy military
brigades", leading to the capture of "thousands" of troops,
including Saudi army officers and soldiers, and hundreds of armoured vehicles.
He said the
prisoners "will be treated according to the ethics and the customs on the
basis of a deal to exchange the POWs with the aggressors".
Video showed
armoured vehicles, some ablaze, with stencilled Saudi markings, along with
large piles of weapons and ammunition the rebels say they seized.
The images also
appeared to show bodies and men in Saudi military uniforms. Several identified
themselves as Saudis.
Very much alone'
Yemen's stalemated
war has killed tens of thousands of people, badly damaged its infrastructure
and crippled its health system.
Catherine Shakdam
from the Next Century Foundation told Al Jazeera there was no reason to doubt
what the Houthis are saying.
"The video
and images coming through are actually affirming the statement. It's a pivotal
point in this war that now Yemeni are moving on Saudi land. It's quite
interesting to see with all the talk of a grand Saudi coalition that Saudi is
very much alone in this fight," Shakdam said.
Yemeni government
troops, supported by air strikes of the Saudi-led coalition, have in recent
months fought Houthi forces in the Kataf region of Yemen's northern Saada
province near the Saudi border. Local sources have said the Houthis have
captured scores of Yemeni troops in the battles.
The Saudi-led
coalition, which receives arms and intelligence from Western countries,
intervened in Yemen in March 2015 after the Houthis ousted the internationally
recognised government from power in the capital Sanaa a year earlier.
'War of attrition'
Shakdam
said it appears the Houthis now have the upper hand in the conflict as Yemen's
people have "rallied around" the rebels because of Saudi human rights
abuses, famine and the immense hardship caused by the war.
"This
war of attrition has worked against Saudi Arabia... Through their military
advances they're gaining access to more weapons, more territory and essentially
pushing the Saudi against the wall," she said.
Shireen al-Adeimi
from Michigan State University said the attack might change the Saudi
leadership's perceptions of the four-and-a-half-year conflict.
"It's
incredibly embarrassing for the Saudis giving how much support they have from
not only the UAE but also the United States, the UK and several other
countries. If the Houthis are able to carry out this level of operation it
poses a significant turn in this war," al-Adeimi told Al Jazeera.
The Houthis, who
had recently stepped up missile and drone attacks on Saudi cities, have claimed
responsibility for the largest-ever
attack on Saudi oil facilities on September 14.
Riyadh dismissed
the claim, saying the assault did not come from Yemen and has blamed Iran.
Tehran denied this.
Damaged prestige
The Houthis said
on September 20 they would halt missile and drone attacks on Saudi Arabia if
the alliance stopped its operations. The coalition has not responded to the
proposal.
Iran's foreign
minister urged Saudi Arabia to accept "security cannot be bought",
saying an end to the war in Yemen would quell regional tensions.
In an interview
with Tehran's official IRNA news agency, Mohammad Javad Zarif accused the Saudi
leadership of stirring up strife.
"They think
that, in the same way that they have so far bought everything with money and
have managed to buy weapons, friendship and support, they can buy security with
money as well," he said, urging Riyadh to "put aside this
illusion".
Zarif said the
solution "is absolutely clear and that is an end to the Yemen war".
"Tension in the region will end and it
will stop Saudi Arabia's prestige being further damaged," he said.
Source: Al Jazeera Media Network.
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