The dangerous British role in the aggression against Yemen: Report

Yemen recently announced the start of the trial of agents who were working for the British intelligence service.

The espionage activity of a number of British intelligence officers and others in Yemen reveals the dangerous British role in this war against Yemen, such as tracking, locating, confirming, and uploading information and coordinates.

The cell consisting of 6 individuals confirms that British intelligence trained them and entrusted them with carrying out their espionage and sabotage activities in several governorates of the Republic of Yemen, including Sana’a, Amran, Saada, Al-Jawf, Ma’rib, Al-Mahrah, and Hadramout.

The British role in the aggression against Yemen was not hidden.

Since the announcement of the aggression on Yemen in March 2015, Britain has participated in military and intelligence operations, as well as providing Riyadh and Abu Dhabi with lethal weapons that have caused the killing of thousands of children and women and the destruction of the Yemeni infrastructure.

The British newspaper “Daily Express” published a report about the injury of two British soldiers from the SAS brigades, which are classified as among the most dangerous forces in the world, and they are part of a team of twelve elements that have been deployed on a top-secret mission in Yemen, within a joint mission alongside a unit of the American “Green Hats” team.

The British MP and former Minister for International Development, Andrew Mitchell, said that the British army’s participation in this war is part of Britain’s “shameful complicity” in this suffering.

Recently the British government announced its intention to sell more weapons to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, despite the mounting calls for an end to arms sales.

Britain is the sixth largest arms exporter after the United States, Russia, France, Germany and China, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

Saudi Arabia’s purchases accounted for 43% of total British arms sales over the past decade, according to press reports.

The most prominent indications of direct British intervention in Yemen is what happening in Al-Mahra governorate, east of Yemen, where Britain began to appear clearly through the harmony in diplomatic moves and intelligence tactics that justify this intervention.

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A trial session for a number of CIA and British intelligence elements in Sana’a

Britain’s efforts to achieve its goals:

Britain is handling the Yemen file in the UN Security Council, as well as the UN envoy to Yemen is British.

The British diplomatic intervention in Yemen resulted in catastrophic effects, the worst of which was the failure of the Stockholm Agreement on Hodeidah and its ports.

The British ambassador’s statements in which he called for stopping what he called “attacks” on Marib and Al-Jawf, and to prove the desire for peace, provoked Yemeni reactions, especially as it came at a time when Britain agreed to sell weapons to Saudi Arabia worth 1.4 billion dollars.

The head of the national delegation, Muhammad Abd al-Salam, commented to the British ambassador that the one who must first stop his attacks is the criminal aggressor.

Abdul Salam said in a tweet, “Britain and non-Britain must remember that they continue to aggressively impose a blockade on the Yemeni people, and whoever must first and immediately stop is the criminal aggressor.”

Britain is seeking to achieve its goals in the region by deepening cooperation with Saudi Arabia and the UAE in preparation for the division of Yemen then return to occupy the south.

This is evidenced by the statements of the head of the so-called Southern Transitional Council, Aidaroos Al-Zubaidi, to London, and his call to Britain, to return to southern Yemen.

Al-Zubaidi’s statement revealed the British ambitions to support the separatists and to establish bases on the Red Sea and the Gulf, and control the Indian Ocean, obtain economic and political control in the region.

Britain’s ambitions in Yemen date back to the 1947 AD agreement of the last century, which was signed between the Soviet Union, Britain, America, and France after World War II: “The High Seas Agreement”, which regulates the presence of major powers.

Britain is trying to revive the agreement, and it has already started with the first step by pushing to hand over the islands of Tiran and Sanafir to Saudi Arabia, which basically will sooner or later be delivered to Israel.

Resource: ansarollah website.

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