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WAR REPORT
Saudi strikes Yemen rebels as Iran warns of 'dangerous step'
By Jamal al-Jabiri with Fawaz al-Haidari in Aden
Sanaa (AFP) March 26, 2015


US Republicans: Saudi action reflects distrust of Obama
Washington (AFP) March 26, 2015 - US Republicans warned Thursday that Saudi-led air-strikes in Yemen, apparently conducted without US coordination, shows Arab allies have lost trust in the Obama administration as it navigates delicate nuclear talks with Iran.

As warplanes from Saudi Arabia and other allies pounded Huthi Shiite rebel positions for a second straight day, hawkish US lawmakers expressed alarm at the "proxy war" unfolding in the Middle East, and pinned part of the blame on President Barack Obama's foreign policy.

The Saudi-led intervention without notifying Washington ahead of time "signals a reality that the countries in the region no longer have confidence or are willing to work with the United States of America," Senator John McCain told reporters.

He said he heard "repeatedly from leaders in the region that they believe that we are forming some kind of Faustian bargain with the Iranians, which would then lead to the great danger to those countries."

Washington and other world powers are in the midst of intense negotiations with Tehran over limiting its nuclear program in exchange for a lifting of Western economic sanctions.

Senator Lindsey Graham, who has signalled he may run for president in 2016, accused Obama of softening America's power in the Middle East -- for example by refusing to engage more directly in Syria's civil war -- in order to not disrupt the delicate nuclear negotiations with Iran.

Such action has "led to the rise of (Islamic State group) ISIL, to their flourishing, and now it's leading to a full-scale sectarian war" which could spill over into Syria, Iraq, Libya, Lebanon and Jordan, Graham said.

US engagement has served for decades as a moderating influence in the region, Graham noted.

But "the fact that the Arab coalition no longer trusts us, or feels they need to inform us as what they're about to do, is chilling," he said.

General Lloyd Austin, head of US Central Command, told a Senate hearing that he had little advance notice of the Saudi air strikes launched on Wednesday.

US weighs tanker and radar planes for Saudi Yemen op
Washington (AFP) March 26, 2015 - The United States may provide refueling and early-warning radar aircraft support a Saudi Arabian-led operation in Yemen against Huthi rebels, officials told AFP Thursday.

"It's definitely on the table and being discussed," a defense official said of the possible US military assistance to the day-old intervention by an Arab coalition.

The White House said Wednesday that the United States will provide intelligence and logistics support to the Saudi-led coalition and officials said that would likely include information gathered from surveillance drones.

Although the Saudis and other Gulf and Arab states have substantial air forces, they do not have enough refueling tankers and airborne early warning and control (AWACs) aircraft for a major, open-ended operation, officials said.

About a dozen US military personnel are taking part in a "joint planning cell" at an undisclosed base in Saudi Arabia to coordinate American help to the Gulf states, officials said. And it was likely the team would expand in coming days.

The Pentagon said the US military would provide intelligence, logistical support and advice for the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries and their allies fighting the Iranian-backed rebels in Yemen.

"Their role is primarily to keep the lines of communication open between Washington DC and the GCC," Colonel Steven Warren told reporters.

There are no plans for the United States to take direct military action in Yemen against the Huthis, he said.

But events are moving quickly and the precise scope of US assistance and its strategic rationale for helping the Gulf countries in the Yemen conflict remains unclear.

Warplanes from a Saudi-led coalition bombed Huthi Shiite rebels Thursday in support of Yemen's embattled president, who headed to an Arab summit to garner support as Iran warned the intervention was "dangerous".

Powerful explosions rocked Sanaa soon after rebel leader Abdulmalik al-Huthi criticised the intervention as "unjustified" and called for supporters to confront the "criminal oppressive aggression".

President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi arrived in Riyadh, with officials saying he was on his way to Egypt to take part in a two-day Arab League summit starting Saturday.

That was the first confirmation of Hadi's whereabouts since the rebels began advancing this week on the main southern city of Aden, where the president had been holed up since fleeing the rebel-controlled capital last month.

Their advance raised Saudi fears the Shiite rebels would seize control of the whole of its Sunni-majority neighbour and take it into the orbit of Shiite Iran.

The White House voiced concerns about "reports of Iranian flow of arms into Yemen" as the Saudi-led coalition declared its first wave of strikes "successful" and vowed to prevent supplies reaching the rebels.

Saudi Arabia launched air strikes before dawn, saying it had assembled a coalition of more than 10 countries, including five Gulf monarchies.

The Saudi ambassador to the US, Adel al-Jubeir, said the coalition stood ready to do "whatever it takes" to protect Hadi's government.

On the eve of the Egypt summit, Arab League chief Nabil al-Arabi also declared full support for the strikes following a "coup".

But Iran reacted furiously, condemning the intervention as "a dangerous step" that violated "international responsibilities and national sovereignty".

- Fresh strikes -

President Hassan Rouhani said it amounted to "military aggression" and "condemned all military intervention in the internal affairs of independent nations".

After hitting targets overnight in Sanaa and elsewhere, the coalition launched fresh strikes late Thursday, hitting a rebel-held base in third city Taez and the airport and an arms depot in the Huthis' northern stronghold.

Explosions had been heard earlier in Sanaa as warplanes pounded an air base adjacent to the international airport and other locations, an AFP correspondent reported.

Families streamed out of Sanaa seeking the relative safety of the provinces.

"I am leaving with my family. Sanaa is no longer safe," said one resident, who gave his name only as Mohammed, as he piled his belongings into a minibus.

In the south, residents reported hearing explosions at the huge Al-Anad air base, north of Aden, which anti-government forces seized on Wednesday.

Saudi television said the kingdom had deployed 100 fighter jets to the operation, while the United Arab Emirates had committed 30, Kuwait 15 each and Qatar 10. Bahrain said it had committed 12 fighters.

Saudi Arabia had also mobilised 150,000 troops near the border, .

Riyadh said it was boosting security on its borders and across the kingdom, including at the OPEC kingpin's crucial oil facilities.

Washington said President Barack Obama had authorised the "provision of logistical and intelligence support" for the campaign.

US officials told AFP Washington was looking at providing refuelling and early warning radar aircraft in support of the operation.

A Saudi adviser said the strikes had taken out Huthi air defences and destroyed numerous fighter planes, adding that the air force "has pretty much secured most of the Yemeni air space".

Egypt, Jordan, Morocco and Sudan said they were joining the campaign.

Egypt, whose government announced it was prepared to commit ground troops, said its air force and Navy were taking part in response to "demands by the Yemeni nation for the return of stability and to preserve its Arab identity".

Like Iran, Shiite-majority Iraq said it opposed the Saudi intervention, with Foreign Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari calling for a peaceful settlement, and Lebanese Shiite movement Hezbollah accused Riyadh of "aggression".

US Secretary of State John Kerry held a conference call with Gulf ministers to discuss the operation and "commended the work of the coalition taking military action against the Huthis," a senior US official said.

- 'No impact' on nuclear talks -

The Saudi adviser said his country's defence minister warned the son of ousted Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh, "who is commanding the attack on Aden that his forces face 'obliteration' if they continue their push" on the city.

Saleh, who resigned in 2012 following a year of nationwide protests, is accused of allying with the rebels, relying on the loyalty of many army units that he built during his three-decade rule.

Dozens of people have been killed as the Huthis, backed by troops allied with Saleh, have clashed with pro-Hadi forces in their drive southwards.

Yemen has been gripped by growing turmoil since the Huthis launched a power takeover in Sanaa in February.

The Saudi-led intervention triggered a sharp rise in world oil prices on fears the conflict could threaten supplies.

Washington insisted the intervention would have "no impact" on nuclear talks with Tehran, as last-ditch efforts to reach a deal before a Tuesday deadline were launched in Switzerland.

"We have always been clear that the P5+1 negotiations are solely focused on the nuclear issue," a senior US official told AFP, referring to the group of six nations engaged in talks.

burs-mm/dv/al


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