Number of Saudi-led coalition troops in Yemen rises to 10,000: Al-Jazeera
A Saudi-led alliance has deployed 10,000 troops to
Yemen, Qatari news channel Al-Jazeera said on Tuesday, in an apparent
sign of determination to rout Iran-allied Houthi forces after they
killed at least 60 Gulf Arab soldiers on Friday.
Yemen’s
neighbours ramped up air strikes on the capital Sana’a on Tuesday and
hope to launch a decisive assault soon on the city which the militia
seized last year.
“The number of coalition soldiers
who have already entered Yemen has risen to 10,000,” Al-Jazeera
correspondent Abdul Mahsi al-Sheikh reported from southern Saudi Arabia.
Yemen’s
government fled to Riyadh in late March as Houthi forces, who say they
are fighting a revolution against them, closed in on their last redoubt
in Aden, triggering the foreign intervention and fighting which has
killed over 4,500 people.
Iranian influence
The
Arab alliance states see their campaign as a fight against creeping
Iranian influence in their backyard, but the Houthis deny being beholden
to Tehran and say the exiled government in Riyadh and the coalition are
American puppets.
Loyalist Yemeni forces and Gulf
soldiers took back Aden and most of Yemen’s south in July, but battle
lines have barely moved since as the allied forces face stiff resistance
in the Houthis’ northern redoubts.
Houthi militiamen
and their allies in Yemen's army fired a Soviet-era ballistic missile
at an army base in the central province of Mareb on Friday, killing
dozens of Emirati, Saudi and Bahraini troops.
Ground war imminent?
The
attack was the deadliest yet for Gulf soldiers in the war, and may
herald a turning point in the conflict as countries appear to be
committing to a ground war they had so far avoided.
Saudi-owned newspaper Al-Sharq Al-Awsat quoted
coalition sources saying that some Egyptian and 6,000 Sudanese troops
would soon join the fight inside Yemen. Their governments did not
immediately comment.
But a source close to the Qatari
military confirmed that the Gulf emirate was sending “mechanised
infantry and armoured vehicles” and that Sudan had committed to send
6,000 troops.
“The operation in Sana’a ... will use extensive bombing, air power, to support the ground offensive,” the source added.
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