Yemeni Operations: Painful Blows Expose the Entity’s Weakness and Lay Bare Regimes’ Complicity
Since the sun of the 21 September Revolution rose over Yemen, the regional equation has shifted. The Yemeni people have become a central player in the nation’s battle against the forces of arrogance and hegemony—foremost among them the Zionist enemy.
With every naval or aerial strike Yemen launches in support of Gaza, new truths emerge about the entity’s incapacity and the confusion of its backers—alongside the complicity of regimes that claim to stand with Palestine while secretly extending a hand to Tel Aviv.
The Red Sea: An Open Theater of Confrontation
The Yemeni Armed Forces announced entry into the fourth phase of military escalation in support of Gaza, turning the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden into open fire lines for any ship linked to or supporting the Zionist aggression. This escalation coincided with humiliating withdrawals by some Western powers—chief among them the United States and France, which announced an end to their participation in the “Aspides” mission—an unmistakable sign that confronting Yemen in its maritime environment is not a fight they can win.
Recent Yemeni operations have not only disrupted shipping and halted vessels bound for the enemy’s ports; they have also reached strategic strikes deep inside the occupied territories, forcing the entity to wage a two-front war: Gaza, which bleeds its forces, and Yemen, which chokes its maritime and commercial lifelines.
Yemeni Deterrence Outpaces the Iron Dome
Brigadier General Aziz Rashed explained that Yemeni missiles and drones penetrating the skies of occupied Palestine and hitting sensitive targets in Beersheba, Ashkelon, Haifa, and even Lod Airport have crippled air travel and commerce and inflicted direct economic losses exceeding the enemy’s projections.
These strikes confirm that Iron Dome and Patriot are little more than perforated umbrellas in the face of Yemeni precision—and that deterrence is no longer the monopoly of great powers. It now lies with the Resistance Axis, whose will cannot be broken.
U.S. Cover Blown: The Carrier Departs Defeated
It wasn’t only the French withdrawal that exposed the façade; it was followed by the humiliating departure of the U.S. aircraft carrier “Harry Truman” from the Red Sea after failing to assert itself as a deterrent against Yemeni threats.
Western military analyses—including Indian Defence Review—noted that the carrier was compelled to leave under pressure from escalating threats and qualitative attacks, with defensive systems failing to guarantee its safety.
The Americans fired hundreds of defensive missiles to shield ships linked to the enemy, yet the outcome amounted to a tacit admission: Yemen has imposed a new deterrence equation in the Red Sea, forcing even Washington to recalculate.
Regional Collusion: Betrayal by Egypt and Turkey
Amid a tightening maritime siege on the entity’s Red Sea ports, maritime sources revealed alternative supply lines running through Egypt and Turkey, with commercial vessels from both countries’ ports delivering goods to Haifa and Ashdod to prop up the Zionist economy.
This conduct is a stab in Palestine’s side, exposing the double-speak in Ankara and Cairo—while Yemen insists that any attempt to break the siege will be met with direct deterrence.
The 21 September Revolution: The Spirit That Changed the Equation
Today’s Yemeni military successes are not happenstance; they are the fruit of a revolutionary trajectory that began with the 21 September Revolution, which returned decision-making to the people and ended decades of subservience to foreign powers.
That revolution gave Yemenis the will and the weapons to confront the U.S.–Zionist alliance, transforming Yemen from a targeted arena into a forward operating base for the Resistance Axis.
Yemen and Gaza: A Shared Fate
Yemen today fights not only for Gaza, but to liberate the will of the entire ummah, proving that the final word does not belong to the entity or its international patrons.
With each passing day, ground, naval, and aerial operations intensify, making Yemen a hard number in the regional security equation—and a perpetual headache for the enemy.
From the Red Sea to the depths of occupied Palestine, stretch the battle lines the Resistance Axis has imposed on the enemy—affirming that victory is not merely possible; it is a compelling trajectory sketched by the blood of martyrs and the resolve of the free.