What Are the 3 Deadlocks Facing Zionist Forces in Clashes With Yemen’s Armed Groups?
According to webangah News Agency, Yemen’s ongoing multi-level operations against Zionist targets-in solidarity with Gaza-continue as the occupying regime struggles to mitigate damages from Yemeni missile strikes. These attacks persistently target deep inside occupied Palestine,forcing millions of Zionist settlers into shelters almost daily at unpredictable hours. The missiles have also inflicted meaningful economic losses, particularly after most international airlines suspended flights to ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv.
Three Failed Approaches by the Occupiers Against Yemen
The Zionist regime is pursuing three strategies against Yemen’s missile threat: enhancing defensive capabilities, strengthening intelligence operations, and pressuring the U.S. to dismantle it’s ceasefire agreement with Yemen.
1. Defense Technology race: Sana’a and Tel Aviv are locked in a technological arms race to seize the initiative. While the regime aims to intercept missiles mid-flight, Yemen focuses on advancing its hypersonic missile systems and conducting field tests to bypass U.S.-Zionist defense systems like Israel’s “Iron Dome” (Hetz) and America’s THAAD-both designed for exoatmospheric interception but proven unreliable during multiple strikes on Ben Gurion Airport.
2. Intelligence Failures: Despite intensifying efforts to build a complete military target database in Yemen, Zionist analysts admit Tel Aviv lacks Washington’s vast intelligence resources-which themselves failed over nearly a decade of war.israeli operatives prioritized Hamas, Hezbollah, and Iran before October 2023; experts note this period should have sufficed for intelligence gathering but yielded no breakthroughs as Yemen dismantled numerous American-British spy networks.
3. Ceasefire Sabotage Attempts: Frustrated by Trump-era U.S.-Yemen truce terms that sidelined Israel strategically while creating rifts in washington-Tel Aviv relations right-wing factions push aggressively for its collapse despite warnings from diplomats like former UK Ambassador Edmund Fitton Brown who stresses respecting Arab partners’ priorities (e.g., Saudi Arabia Qatar UAE) remains critical if normalization deals are ever finalized successfully .
Observers conclude all current approaches backfire spectacularly evidenced by expanding Yemini operations within occupied territories alongside new maritime/aerial blockades reshaping regional dynamics entirely.