Ansarollah Website Official Report
Published: Rabiʻ I 23, 1447 AH
Since the beginning of September, and in just 14 days, Yemen – with all its strength and resilience – has turned into an echoing center in the arena of regional conflict. It has delivered a lesson to the world in the arts of tactics, timing, and breaching the Iron Dome, as its missiles and drones struck deep into Zionist territory with painful precision. American and Israeli technologies were forced to bow under the weight of Yemeni strikes.
Varied and Calculated Strikes
The latest Yemeni strikes stood out for their diversity in both means and targets:
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At Sea: The SCARLET RAY vessel north of the Red Sea, off the coast of Yanbu, was hit by a ballistic missile. Another ship, the MSC ABY, was struck by a cruise missile and two drones.
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Strategy: Seven Yemeni missiles of various specifications hit sensitive Zionist controlled targets. Two cluster missiles struck vital locations in occupied Yaffa, while another cluster missile hit the outskirts of occupied al-Quds. The hypersonic Palestine-2 missile struck two key Zionist targets—one in occupied Negeb and another west of al-Quds. Meanwhile, the Zulfiqar missile struck two targets in Yaffa.
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Drones: In the same period, 22 drones roamed the skies of occupied Palestine, from Umm ar-Rashrash to “Ramon” Airport, the Negeb, the Zionist entity's General Staff building, Lod Airport, Hadera power station, Askelan, Asdod, Dimona, and Haifa near Lebanon. Among the operations:
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The General Staff building in occupied Yaffa was struck by a Samad-4 drone.
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Lod Airport, Hadera power station, Asdod port, Askelan, and Haifa targeted.
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“Ramon” Airport repeatedly shut down due to drone strikes.
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Dimona was hit by a precision drone strike.
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Multiple drone swarms targeted sensitive military and civilian sites across Negeb, Yaffa, Umm ar-Rashrash, and beyond.
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In the Air: Yemeni air defenses launched surface-to-air missiles during Israeli raids, forcing enemy formations to retreat and neutralizing most of the attacks.
Drones Tear Down the Enemy’s Defense Prestige
The skies once thought secure are no longer safe. Samad-4, Zulfiqar, and Palestine-2 drones flew over Yaffa, Hadera, Haifa, Ramon, and Dimona. Their strikes were calculated—not random—and hit airports, power plants, and ports.
One drone reached "Ramon" Airport undetected and struck the passenger hall. Another circled above Dimona for half an hour, with two failed interception attempts admitted by the enemy. What was once forbidden is now an open target. Zionist air superiority is crumbling before Yemeni patience and growing technical prowess.
Millions of settlers fled to shelters. Airports shut down, ports closed, shipping companies changed routes, and financial markets trembled. All this came from a besieged, independent power producing its own missiles and drones, developing tactics within its borders, without foreign bases or allies.
Zionist media outlet Globes admitted Yemen had found the formula: precision in choice, diversity in timing, and clever evasion. Maariv acknowledged that the Yemeni campaign is no longer a tactical nuisance but a “strategy of attrition” that repeatedly exposes the failure of Israel’s most advanced defense systems.
The Yemeni Threat Surrounds the Entity 360 Degrees
Senior figures in the Zionist entity—from generals to economic analysts—were forced to acknowledge reality: Yemen’s threat is measured not by distance but by effect.
A brigadier in the Zionist enemy's Air Force admitted: “We face a multi-front aerial threat surrounding us from every direction,” noting that Yemeni drones bypass radars and reach deep into Zionist territory despite advanced electronic warfare.
Zionist outlet "Israel Hayom" published remarks by the head of the Zionist enemy's Air Defense Directorate, Brigadier General Zvika Haimovich, who acknowledged Yemen’s growing capabilities and its transformation into a strategic threat. He admitted the Houthis are learning, refining, and fully manufacturing drones and missiles inside Yemen.
Haimovich emphasized that "Israel now faces a “360-degree threat,” not just from the south but also potentially from the east and west. He warned that any direct hit on an airport or vital facility could cause “enormous damage.” He concluded: “Israel cannot normalize the Yemeni threat or live under it. Ignoring it will bring unacceptable consequences.”
Striking the Zionist Economy
Parallel to the military and naval strikes, the economic impact resembled a silent flood. The Tel Aviv Stock Exchange faltered, investors fled, and “Ramon” Airport—once seen as a safe haven—was closed by the buzz of drones.
Zionist outlet The Marker described the Yemeni effect as capable of disrupting "Israel"’s economy not just through direct strikes but by imposing sustained panic that unsettles trade, tourism, and finance. It confirmed that the drone strike on Ramon Airport exposed the fragility of "Israeli" defenses.
Yemen also succeeded in closing Eilat port completely, paralyzing goods movement and forcing millions into shelters weekly. Despite military and political pressure, the Zionist enemy has failed to halt the Yemeni front, miscalculating that assassinations or strategic strikes would cripple Sana’a’s capabilities. Instead, Yemen escalated and expanded to more sensitive targets.
Globes reported a 0.4% drop in the Tel Aviv Index following the Ramon strike, with insurance shares losing over 2%. The shekel rose to a two-month high against the dollar amid market volatility. It noted that while airline stocks rose due to speculation, the broader financial outlook remains unstable.
Globes added that “Bank of Israel,” unlike the U.S. Federal Reserve, may not necessarily cut interest rates in its next decision — reflecting the anxiety dominating monetary policy amid fluctuating markets and growing security risks.
Globes confirmed that the "Israeli" stock market has become increasingly sensitive to any security or military incident in the region, especially with escalating Yemeni attacks that have imposed themselves as a major player in shaping Israel’s economic and security landscape.
Defensive Failure, Political Paralysis
This is no passing escalation but a rare strategic shift in the conflict. The Yemeni Armed Forces—with patient tactics, homegrown weapons, and steadfast support for Gaza—have become a new pillar of deterrence. Yemen proved that geography is no barrier: willpower and knowledge, and the power of belief in Allah can besiege even a nuclear-armed enemy with satellites.
Yemen’s response is not mere retaliation. It is deliberate, unbroken, and methodical—deciding when to launch missiles, when to send drones, and when to reveal its strength. Each strike reminds the Zionist enemy that those who dedicate themselves to Allah and their cause cannot be bargained with, broken, or defeated.
Globes confirmed that Yemen’s evolving tactics—new routes, timings, and targets—represent a growing challenge. The Ramon drone strike, followed by another drone loitering over Palestine for 30 minutes, marked a dangerous escalation. The paper concluded: Israel’s Iron Dome and David’s Sling are not designed for such threats, and the cost of intercepting Yemeni drones exceeds their production cost. This equation works in Yemen’s favor.
The strikes, it stressed, signify a dangerous transformation. As Yemen continues to escalate and refine its methods, the Zionist enemy faces an ongoing threat it cannot normalize or live under.