Yemen Rebel Missile Shot Down Near Saudi Capital

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Saudi Arabia said it shot down a ballistic missile, fired by Yemeni rebels, southwest of the capital Riyadh late Friday, ahead of US President Donald Trump's arrival in the Sunni-led kingdom.

Air defense units "intercepted a ballistic missile that was launched by Huthi militias", and it fell over an unpopulated area 180 kilometers from Riyadh, the Saudi-led coalition said in a statement.

Trump, whose country provides weapons, intelligence and aerial refueling for the coalition, is due to arrive on Saturday for two days of summits with Saudi, Gulf and Muslim leaders.

The missile would be the longest range attempted by the Huthi rebels and their allies, former members of Yemen's security forces linked to ex-president Ali Abdullah Saleh, since they began retaliatory attacks against the kingdom two years ago.

Occasional ballistic missile attacks, as well as more frequent short-range rocket fire over the southern border, have been conducted after coalition air strikes against the rebels in Yemen.

The coalition intervened in Yemen more than two years ago to support President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi.

Huthi-run Al-Masirah television said on its Twitter account that the rebels' "rocket forces launched a Volcano-2 (Borkan) ballistic missile on the capital of Saudi Arabia".

This coincided with coalition air strikes against the rebel-held capital Sanaa, other tweets from Al-Masirah said.

Riyadh and Washington accuse Iran of supplying weapons to the Huthis but a United Nations Panel of Experts in January reported that it "has not seen sufficient evidence to confirm any direct large-scale supply of arms" from Iran, Riyadh's regional rival.

Huthis claim to have locally-developed the Borkan missile, but the UN panel said the rebels have "initiated a propaganda campaign claiming the use of locally manufactured, as opposed to improvised, missiles."

It said they have, however, fired Scud-variant short-range ballistic missiles and free-flight rockets.

Saudi Arabia has deployed Patriot missiles to counter such attacks.

In October the rebels launched one of their longest-range strikes against Saudi Arabia, firing a ballistic missile that was brought down near the holy Muslim city of Mecca, an attack condemned by Riyadh's Gulf allies.

The rebels insisted that the missile had been fired at Jeddah, the Red Sea city in the sprawling Mecca region, not at the holy city itself.

Comments 8
Thumb ex-fpm 20 May 2017, 08:21

They can fire ballistic missiles at Saudi Arabia but they cannot buy food and medicine for their Cholera infested Sanaa!

Thumb justin 20 May 2017, 11:52

gigahabil

Your argument is as lame as your IQ and is irrelevant. A group that is funded by Iran can fire long range missiles but cannot get basic medical needs for its people in the areas it controls. Second, Sanaa is occupied and controlled by your shia huthi terrorists and that is where most of the Cholera outbreak is.

Third, Saudi Arabia has already taken all necessary measures to send medical supplies to counter the outbreak despite the fact your terrorists control Sanaa.

Thumb galaxy 20 May 2017, 12:18

do you see the 'well-funded Saudi backed Yemeni government' firing ballistic missiles at a neighboring country while its people are dying of Cholera ya giga hypocrite?

Thumb ___flamethrower___ 20 May 2017, 15:42

lulz lulz

Thumb Mystic 21 May 2017, 09:13

The Ansarullah deserve utmost Respect.

They are facing America, Saudi weakling coalition, Israel and cholera.

They are still fighting back, they could've hit Trump.

Thumb galaxy 20 May 2017, 17:26

nice to see you alternate between giga heretic and yyyessss;)

Thumb justin 20 May 2017, 21:07

Show us some evidence of your whooping

Thumb Kalzyturks 21 May 2017, 00:07

I thinking someone needs to check in to a medical Centre before this Whooping cough get out of Control
:)