Saudi Assault on Yemen Breach of International Law - Expert

Discussion in 'Latest US & World News' started by Jeannette, Mar 31, 2015.

  1. Scholar

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    They do stone people in Saudi Arabia. It is the punishment for adultery.

    It is simply Houthis, not Al-Houthis, because the locals will think you are referring to Malik and his brothers. Houthis is a regional organization that is bound in Yemen. They are not going to be fighting a war in Saudi Arabia. For one thing, they have been protesting Saudi intervention in the region since 2006.

    Boko Haram, Al-Shabaab, and Somali pirates are not in Yemen. If they are then there numbers rank no more than 20 agents. The key trend between all four of the groups that you just mentioned is that they are vying for control of their home country. All 4 have had their individual wars spread into neighboring countries, for example, Saudi Arabia, Chad, and Kenya. The other common trend is that Saudi Arabia, Chad, and Kenya have been supplying weapons against their respective rebel groups. They are not innocent or neutral participants. If Saudi Arabia does not want a war with Houthis, then they simply need to not get involved. It isn't rocket science, and I know you know that. You have only made that claim a million other times when talking about Iran.

    All the misinformation and misquided opinions are the least worrisome parts of your posts. The real problem is your how you refuse to see the big picture. Yes, there is lots of violence in Yemen. There will be violence as long as people like you continue supporting intervention in the region. A winner emerged who you do not like, and instead of realizing that this is an end to war in the country, you want to support an imperialist and self motivated power like Saudi Arabia in installing a puppet regime, which comes at the cost of more non-combatant lives.

    A long bloody war that has taken much effort, money, and lives has resolved itself. Let Yemen rebuild under their new government, which I still believe is a major improvement over the rest of the Middle East in terms of policy and democratic reforms.
     

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