PNN – The Zionist newspaper Jeruz Elm Post wrote in a report that the dispute between the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia has led to the increase in the power of Ansarullah in Manjreh and Yemen has led to a direct security challenge for the Zionist regime.
According to the report of Pakistan News Network, the Zionist newspaper added in the report: The conflict between the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia in Yemen led to the collapse of the integrated strategic structure that the West and the Israeli (regime) had relied on for years.
According to the report, this conflict has become a dangerous security vacuum that allows Ansarullah to be stronger today than ever.
The report adds that Yemen has transformed from a peripheral issue into a direct security challenge for the Israeli regime, as the Red Sea is a vital artery for it.
According to this report, the absence of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates in the Bab al-Mandab Strait has directly threatened Israeli shipping.
The report adds that the result of these conditions for the Zionist regime is the lack of a unified Arab partner on which it can rely, and this has left the regime’s strategic planners facing a complex and changing regional situation.
A Yemeni expert previously warned of the escalation of “hidden conflicts” between Saudi Arabia and the UAE in his country, emphasizing: The current events are no longer the consequences of a civil war, but rather Yemen becoming a field for settling scores between Abu Dhabi and Riyadh.
The head of the Yemeni Center for Human Rights Culture told Al-Ma’uluma News Agency: Riyadh and Abu Dhabi are exerting increasing pressure on Yemen to prevent any practical support for the Palestinian cause, and this approach intersects with the perception of the people of this country that it is “clearly biased” (Riyadh and Abu Dhabi) towards the policies of the United States and the Israeli regime.’
The head of the Yemeni Center for Human Rights Culture emphasized: Continuing this approach will lead to further division in Yemen and threaten regional stability, and any real political agreement will not be successful without stopping the foreign conflict over influence in Yemen.

