By Federico Pieraccini
September 30, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" - Many
may have hitherto been led to believe that the
Houthis were a ragtag armed force lacking in
sophistication. Many, seeing the drone and
missile attacks on Saudi oil plants, may have
declared it to be a false-flag attack carried
out by Riyadh to boost Aramco’s market value;
either that or it was an operation carried out
by Iran or even Israel. On Saturday September
28, the Houthis put paid to such speculation by
confirming what many, like myself, have been
writing for months; that is, that the
asymmetrical tactics of the Houthis, combined
with the conventional capabilities of the Yemeni
army, are capable of bringing the Saudi kingdom
of Mohammed Bin Salman to its knees.
The Yemeni army’s missile forces are able to
carry out highly complex attacks, no doubt as a
result of reconnaissance provided by the local
Shia population within the Kingdom that is
against the House of Saud’s dictatorship. These
Houthi sympathisers within Saudi Arabia helped
in target identification, carried out
reconnaissance within the plants, found the most
vulnerable and impactful points, and passed this
intelligence on to the Houthis and Yemeni army.
These Yemeni forces employed locally produced
means to severely degrade Saudi Arabia’s
crude-oil-extraction and processing plants. The
deadly strikes halved oil production and
threatened to continue with other targets if the
Saudi-conducted genocide in Yemen did not stop.
On Saturday 29 the Houthis and the Yemeni
army conducted an incredible conventional attack
lasting three days that began from within
Yemen’s borders. The operation would have
involved months of intelligence gathering and
operational planning. It was a far more
complex attack than that conducted against
Aramco’s oil facilities. Initial reports
indicate that the forces of the Saudi-led
coalition were lured into vulnerable positions
and then, through a pincer movement conducted
quickly within Saudi territory, the Houthis
surrounded the town of Najran and its outskirts
and got the better of three Saudi brigades
numbering in the thousands and including dozens
of senior officers as well as numerous combat
vehicles. This event is a game changer, leaving
the US, Mike Pompeo and the Israelis and Saudis
unable to lay the blame on Iran as all this took
place a long way from Iran.
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The large-scale operation was
preceded by Yemeni rocket artillery
targeting
Jizan airport, with 10 missiles
paralyzing any movements to and from the
airport, including denying the
possibility of air support for the
encircled troops. The Houthis also hit
the King Khalid International Airport in
Riyadh in a key operation that targeted
Apache helicopters, forcing them to
leave the area. Nearby military bases
were also targeted so as to cut off any
reinforcements and disrupt the chain of
command. This led to the Saudi forces
fleeing in disorganization. Images shown
by the Houthis show a road in the middle
of a valley on the outskirts of Najran
with dozens of Saudi armored vehicles
trying to flee while being attacked from
both sides by Houthi RPGs together with
heavy and light weapons. Visual
confirmation of the debacle can be seen
in the number of casualties as well as
in the number of prisoners taken. Images
show lines of Saudi prisoners walking
under Yemeni guard towards prison camps.
This is something extraordinary to
behold: the Saudi army, the third
largest purchaser of weapons in the
world, getting comprehensively walloped
by one of the poorest countries in the
world. The numbers say it all: the
Houthis were able to control more than
350 kilometers of Saudi territory. Given
that the Saudi military budget is almost
90 billion dollars a year, this
achievement is made all the more
extraordinary.
Houthi forces employed drones, missiles,
anti-aircraft systems, as well as electronic
warfare to prevent the Saudis from supporting
their troops with aviation or other means to
assist their trapped men. Testimony from Saudi
soldiers suggest that efforts to rescue them
were half-hearted and of little effect. Saudi
prisoners of war accuse their military leaders
of having left them prey to their opponents.
The Yemeni army and the Houthis were within
less than 10 days able to inflict a devastating
blow to both the credibility of US defense
systems and the Saudi military. They did this by
employing creative methods suitable for the
objective at hand.
They initially revealed the internal
vulnerability of the Kingdom through such a
level of penetration into Saudi Arabia that they
were able to conduct internal reconnaissance
through the assistance of infiltrators or local
collaborators so as to know exactly where to hit
the oil installations for maximum effect and
damage.
They subsequently demonstrated their
technical and cyber capabilities through an
asymmetrical operation employing drones of
various types as well as electronic warfare to
blind the US Patriot system’s radars, in the
process halving Saudi Arabia’s oil production
for a period of time Aramco is yet to determine.
Finally, the most surprising and astounding
aspect of these recent events is this most
recent Yemeni ground operation that was carried
out in hostile territory and succeeded in
surrounding three brigades consisting of
thousands of men and their equipment. Thousands
of Yemeni soldiers loyal to Ansarullah (Houthis)
took part in this successful operation,
supported by drones, ground-attack aircraft and
air-defense batteries. Such capabilities are
ordinarily better associated with well-trained
and well-equipped militaries rather than
militaries coming from the Third World.
The Houthis issued a clear message to Riyadh
when they hit its oil installations. They
effectively let it be known that they had the
means and capability to damage the Kingdom
irreparably, leading ultimately to the overthrow
of the House of Saud.
The Yemeni army spokesman announced, after
hitting the Saudi oil facilities, that they
would stop all offensive actions using drones
and missiles, leaving it up to Riyadh to decide
whether things stopped there and they sat down
at the negotiating table to end the conflict, or
whether Saudi Arabia was in the mood for more of
the same treatment.
Mohammed bin Salman would no doubt have
received manifold reassurances from the
Americans, explaining away the failure of the
Patriot systems and assuring him that more
American assistance was on the way; and that it
would, moreover, be impossible to come to an
agreement with the Houthis, especially given
that they are considered to be a proxy of the
Iranians (a debunked lie); not to mention, of
course, the huge loss of prestige that would
befall the Saudis, Israelis and Americans were
such a capitulation to occur.
There is already talk in Riyadh of receiving
new supplies of the THAAD system (similarly
useless against Houthi asymmetrical warfare) and
other very expensive American air-defense
systems. It is too bad for the Saudis that the
US has nothing like the Pantsir and the Russian
BUK systems, which allow for a multi-layered air
defense, ideal for defending against small,
low-flying drones and missiles that are
difficult to intercept with such systems as the
Patriot and THAAD.
Instead of starting peace talks to stop the
ongoing genocide in Yemen and being hit again by
the Houthis in response, Mohammed bin Salman and
his advisors seem to have seen it fit to commit
further war crimes in Yemen.
Faced with such intransigence, the Houthis
went ahead with a new attack even more
devastating for Saudi morale and
discombobulating for Western policy-makers.
Thousands of men and their equipment were either
killed, wounded, or taken captive in a pincer
movement reminiscent of the DPR and LNR’s
actions in Ukraine in 2015 where Kiev’s forces
was similarly surrounded and destroyed.
Usually such pincer movements require
thorough reconnaissance to determine where best
to surround the enemy. Furthermore, air support
and air-defense systems would be necessary to
ward off American and Saudi responses. In
addition to all this, troops and their equipment
are needed together with the necessary training
for such assaults that require coordination as
well as quick and effective execution of orders.
All these requirements were met as a result of
the excellent preparation and knowledge of the
terrain by the Yemeni army and the Houthis.
If the attack on Saudi oil facilities had
such an impact, then the even more dramatic
attack of this last Saturday will have forced
Mohammed bin Salman and his American allies to
face a very harsh reality. Saudi Arabia, it will
now need to be recognized, does not have the
capacity to defend its borders from Yemen,
leaving the Houthis and the Yemeni army free to
enter Saudi territory at will while showing
little regard for the opinion and feelings of
the Saudis and Americans.
This is a triple checkmate for the Houthis
against Riyadh. Firstly, they showed that they
had enough local support within Saudi Arabia to
have ready internal saboteurs in the event of an
all-out war with Iran or Yemen. Then they showed
they have the capacity to cripple Saudi Arabia’s
oil production. Ultimately, Yemen’s conventional
forces could redraw the boundaries between Saudi
Arabia and Yemen in the latter’s favor should
Yemeni leaders decide to invade and occupy a
strip of Saudi territory to secure a buffer
zone, given that Saudi forces have been
violating Yemen’s sovereignty and massacring
civilians willy nilly for the last five years.
It bears reflecting on the significance of
these events. The third-biggest arms spender in
the world is incapable of defeating the poorest
Arab country in the world. It is, moreover,
incapable of protecting its national interest
and borders from this impoverished Arab country.
The Houthis are showing to the world what a poor
but organized and motivated armed force can do
using asymmetrical methods to bring one of the
best-equipped militaries in the world to its
knees. This conflict will be studied all over
the world as an example of how a new means of
warfare is possible when technological and cyber
capabilities are democratized and available to
those who know how to use them appropriately, as
the Houthis have shown with their use of drones
and electronic warfare.
With the Houthis enjoying a high level of
leverage, through a combination of missile
capabilities, the holding of many prisoners of
war, and saboteurs spread throughout Saudi
Arabia (apropos, a strange fire
occurred in Jeddah on Sunday at the Al-Haramain
railway station), it may be time for Riyadh to
accept the tragic consequences of this useless
war and sit down at the negotiating table with
Ansarullah.
Washington and Tel Aviv will try in every way
to prevent such negotiations. But if Mohammed
bin Salman and his family wish to save their
kingdom, it is better to start talking to the
Houthis immediately. Otherwise it is only a
matter of time before another attack by
Ansarullah leads to the complete collapse and
ruin of the House of Saud and the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia.
Federico Pieraccini, Independent freelance
writer specialized in international affairs,
conflicts, politics and strategies.
This article was originally published by
"Strategic
Culture Foundation "-
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