US plans to keep special forces in Yemen: Report
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US Marines assigned to the 13th Marine Corps Expeditionary Unit are seen during operations on the bridge wing of guided-missile destroyer USS Gonzalez (DDG 66), in the Gulf of Aden, April 30, 2016.
The US reportedly plans to extend its military presence in Yemen by keeping a force of special operations advisers in the war-torn country.
The force, deployed at the request of the Emirati government around the port city of Mukalla back in April, would remain in Yemen for the foreseeable future, The Washington Post reported.
The force, which consists of about a dozen personnel, would help troops from the UAE fight militants from al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), the paper cited unnamed US officials as saying.
In March, forces loyal to former President Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi and Emirati troops overran the city of Mukalla after AQAP militants left the seaport in southeast Yemen.
Early in May, the US military deployed more than 200 US Marines in the port city, which is located in the central province of Hadramout.
Yemen’s southern coast is now under the control of US troops, who are deployed to the region under the pretext of battling AQAP.
The deployment of US troops comes more than a year after the withdrawal of the forces from Yemen.
In March 2015, the US evacuated its remaining forces out of al-Anad airbase “due to the deteriorating security situation” a day after al-Qaeda captured the nearby city of al-Houta.
Al-Qaeda has become stronger in Yemen taking advantage of the chaos created by the Saudi military campaign against Houthis more than a year ago.
Lately, Riyadh and its allies have announced an offensive against al-Qaeda in a decision seen by analysts as an attempt to ward off international criticism of the Saudi intervention in Yemen.
Courtesy -- Press TV
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