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How did Yemeni resistance put Israel in strategic impasse?
Pars Today- The naval blockade of the Zionist regime by Yemeni Armed Forces has limited the options for the regime and caused a great strategic problem for it.
According to Pars Today, quoting from Mehr news agency, the internal security agency of the Zionist regime (Shin Bet), wrote in an analysis of the security, economic and military hazards of the regime's siege by Yemen, "The threat enforced by Yemeni Armed Forces against Israel is not a mere consequence of the Gaza war, it is rather an element which has been intertwined with it directly."
Noting that the Yemeni missile attacks will continue as long as the Zionist regime persists in aggression of Gaza, the report stressed that this issue has created serious and new security and strategic challenges for Israel in the region.
This Israeli security center acknowledged that Sanaa enjoys a high capability in maneuver and independence of its military forces and this issue has brought ever-increasing power for it so that it cannot be deterred or stopped with classic tools.
The report of the Israeli spying center maintains that Sanaa is a regional power which has a high capability to make military decisions independently.
According to the report, this independence has highly complicated the attempts of the Zionist regime and its allies to prevent the military activities of Sanaa in the Red Sea and the adjacent waterways.
While the Zionist regime thought that it could control marine activities of Yemen's Armed Forces through striking some unspecified regions, these forces succeeded to escalate tension. This issue reveals that they can even challenge the American military operation in the Red Sea and change the route of its trade ships.
This study and security center of the Zionist regime continues that the mentioned trend is a real threat for the regime in crucial conditions and the naval blockade of Tel Aviv and its ships by Sanaa, besides missile threats of Yemeni Armed Forces, have succeeded to create problem for Israeli shipping and imposed further pressures on Israel's sea-based economy.
These pressures are imposed while Tel Aviv is already suffering from the repercussions of the Gaza war. It seems that Sanaa's threat against the Zionist regime is not just a military threat and it has broad economic and political consequences for the regime, too.
The impacts of Ansarullah's missile attacks against Israeli ships and closure of marine trade or hindering the regime's shipping in the Red Sea might force the Israeli regime to revise its reactions against Yemenis.
RM/ME