The republic supported the Iraqi army against Khomeini’s scream .. So Houthi was established to discipline Yemenis (1-2)

English - Monday 15 February 2021 الساعة 07:52 am
Sanaa, NewsYemen, Special Report:

(How many pictures of Soleimani will stay at the entrances of Sanaa, Abu Mahyoub. The first anniversary has passed two months ago. Please , show us pictures of Al-Samad ,Al-molsy and Al-khahoom ... You also find that Kimni provoked me despite my admiration for the Iranian revolution ... you make me feel that my country is occupied by foreigners) ...

The text of the above tweet by the writer Muhammad al-Maqaleh, one of the leftist leaders who joined the Houthi militia, the Iranian arm in Yemen, and supported them and supported them during the wars to put down its rebellion, before announcing his joining it and becoming one of the members of what was called the Supreme Revolutionary Committee established by the Houthi militia to manage the affairs of government after its coup On the authority and control of state institutions on September 21, 2014.

Regardless of al-Maqaleh’s disagreements with the militia leaders since the Supreme Revolutionary Committee’s abolition, the content of his previous tweet reflects the anger of the residents of the capital, Sana’a, at the Houthi’s excessive declaration of loyalty and affiliation with Iran, as happened in its glorification of the leader of the Revolutionary Guard, Qassem Soleimani, who was assassinated by an American air strike in Iraq, by hanging its pictures in the streets of Sana'a, mixed with expressions of loyalty and subservience to Iran.

The beginning of subservience to Iran .. cry of death and claims of the founder

 A decade before his leadership of the first armed rebellion against the Yemeni government, Hussein Badr al-Din al-Houthi exploited his political position as a member of parliament for the Al-Haq Party, which he established in 1990 AD to promote his doctrinal ideas based on allegations of defending the Zaidi sect and consolidating claims of divine truth, passing through by declaring the ideology of the Iranian revolution, both doctrinal and politically. His speeches and what was later known as the lieutenant included admiration and glorification of Iran's revolution and its leader, Khomeini, criticism and praise of the Iraqi war against Iran and Yemen's participation in supporting Baghdad in that war militarily. He even claimed that God would punish President Saleh and the Yemeni army who volunteered to help the Iraqi army in its war against Iran. In the eighties of the last century.

And because Hussein al-Houthi - and most if not all of his family - all received an education in Tehran or traveled there and stayed there for a period of time, it was not surprising that the influence of Iran and its sectarian and political extremism were reflected in them, so Hussein al-Houthi, after his return from visiting Hezbollah, took advantage of the establishment of what He was known as the "Believing Youth" organization in 1991, so he used it as a tool to promote his extremist ideas linked to the ideology of the Iranian Khomeini revolution, both ideologically and politically, before he announced the first armed rebellion against the government in 2004 AD through the militias that took the cry of death to America as a slogan - a slogan imported from the Iranian revolution - By this, he would provide additional evidence that his militia is nothing but another armed arm of Tehran in the region, as is Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Popular Mobilization Forces in Iraq.

Employment from rebellion to coup

 With the first war launched by the government against the rebellion of the Houthi militias led by the founder of the Syrian militia, Hussein Al-Houthi in 2004 AD, the political leadership, headed by the former president, martyr Ali Abdullah Saleh, rushed to reveal Iran's involvement and standing behind the support of the Houthi militia, and Tehran's intention to use the Houthis as a tool to settle political scores against Saudi Arabia and neighboring countries This accusation extended to include Libya, whose information confirmed its involvement in supporting the Houthis in the context of its differences with Saudi Arabia. Therefore, the Yemeni government announced on May 12, 2007 that the Yemeni ambassadors in Iran and Libya had been summoned for consultations following information about "external interference in Yemeni internal affairs."

Despite the Yemeni government and political leadership repeatedly accusing Iran of being involved in supporting the Houthis, political differences with the opposition parties represented by the joint meeting, at that time, cast a shadow over this issue, as the latter refuted the statements of President Saleh and his government about Iran's support for the Houthis and claimed that it was just a bubble aimed at provoking Fears of the Gulf countries, led by Saudi Arabia, to obtain financial support, which are lies, unfortunately, that have found their way with some quarters in neighboring countries.

Although the leaders of the Houthi militia continued to deny any relationship with Iran or to receive support from it throughout their six armed rebellions against the Yemeni government, they failed to hide that relationship, as they attacked Saudi territory and killed a Saudi soldier on the border in November 2009 during their sixth rebellion against the state. Which represented the first practical evidence that Tehran began using the Houthis as its military arm to settle its scores with Saudi Arabia, this time by directly harming it in its southern borders.

And after its coup against power and its control of state institutions, the statements coming from Tehran, in which an Iranian official said that Sanaa had become the fourth Arab capital to fall into Tehran's hands, was the first apparent evidence of the subordination and employment of the Houthi militias to Iran, which was strengthened quickly after the militias rushed to sign an agreement Cooperation between its coup authority and the Iranian authorities, which included operating more than 14 weekly flights between Tehran and Sana'a, before the Houthi militias presented new evidence that they are nothing more than an armed military arm moved by Iran when it carried out a military maneuver on March 13, 2015 in Saada, near the Saudi border And that military maneuver was nothing but the spark that lit the fuse and conveyed the content of the Iranian message to Saudi Arabia that Tehran had a harmful claw on its southern flank, so that Riyadh found from that message a justification for leading the military alliance and waging the Decisive Storm against the Houthi militia.