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Saudi-Led Airstrike in Yemen Threatens to Worsen Rift With U.A.E.

December 30, 2025
in News
Saudi-Led Airstrike in Yemen Threatens to Worsen Rift With U.A.E.

The Saudi-led coalition in Yemen said it carried out a “limited” airstrike on Tuesday targeting an arms shipment bound for a group of separatist who are backed by the United Arab Emirates, a significant escalation in a growing rift between two Gulf allies.

The Saudi-led coalition has supported Yemen’s internationally recognized government since the country splintered into various factions after the outbreak of civil war in 2014.

Brig. Gen. Turki al-Malki, a Saudi military official and coalition spokesman, said that the arms were intended for the Southern Transitional Council, or S.T.C., an Emirati-backed group that has swept through southern Yemen in recent weeks seizing territory.

The Saudi Foreign Ministry accused the Emirates of being behind the separatists’ recent advances, calling that an “extremely dangerous” move. The Emirati Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to questions on Tuesday.

The strike early Tuesday morning was on the southern port of Al Mukalla and was prompted by the arrival of two ships from the Emirates without permits, according to General al-Malki. He said in a statement that crew members had begun unloading a “large quantity” of weapons and armored vehicles.

“Given the danger and escalation posed by these weapons, which threaten security and stability, the coalition air forces conducted a limited military operation this morning targeting the equipment,” General al-Malki said. He did not say whether there had been any casualties.

After the strike, the Yemeni government said that it was ending a joint defense agreement with the Emirates and ordered all Emirati forces to withdraw from Yemen within 24 hours. The government also declared a 90-day state of emergency, saying it would close all entry points into Yemen by land, sea and air for 72 hours.

In a statement, the S.T.C. criticized the government’s call for the Emiratis to withdraw.

The airstrike was the first time Saudi forces had been known to have directly fired on assets that they said were linked to the S.T.C., though an official from the group accused the Saudis of targeting its affiliates with strikes on Friday. Saudi Arabia did not acknowledge any strikes at that time.

The attack on Tuesday came after a tense weekend in which Saudi Arabia issued an ultimatum demanding that the separatists withdraw from territory they have seized in the provinces of Hadramaut and al-Mahra.

The strikes marked a notable increase in tensions between the Gulf powers, analysts said.

“After years of indirect competition through local proxies, the dispute now appears to be moving toward a more direct confrontation,” said Farea al-Muslimi, a Yemeni research fellow at Chatham House, a think tank in London. The situation, he said, was “entering a particularly volatile and dangerous phase.”

Saudi Arabia and the Emirates once led a military coalition to try to defeat the Houthis, a rebel militia that seized control of the Yemeni capital Sanaa in 2014 with Iranian support.

But Saudi Arabia and the Emirates have diverged in their foreign policies in recent years, backing rival powers in Yemen and, farther afield, in Sudan.

The civil war in Yemen has settled into stalemate, analysts say, with the Houthis in control of the north, while the south is under the administration of the internationally recognized government, which is backed by the Saudis.

The S.T.C. is ostensibly part of the internationally recognized government, but it has long agitated for an independent state in southern Yemen. The group was founded in 2017 with financial and military support from the United Arab Emirates.

The Emirati government’s priorities in Yemen are opaque. Emirati officials typically say they support the Yemeni people’s aspirations, whether that means one or two states. But some analysts say they believe Emirati leaders are trying to build a crescent of influence along Yemen’s southern coast. That would allow them to control maritime trade routes by securing strategic ports and islands.

After Tuesday’s airstrike, the head of Yemen’s government, Rashad al-Alimi, said in a televised address that the separatists’ recent moves were pushing the country toward “chaos and division” and accused the Emirates of fueling the war. He had sent an official request on Friday to the Saudi-led coalition, asking for it to intervene on the government’s behalf.

Residents of Al Mukalla, which is the capital of the Hadramaut province, reported hearing a loud explosion at about 4:20 a.m.

Images from international news agencies showed a large industrial port crowded with dozens of military vehicles, mostly cars and pickup trucks, many of which were badly burned or destroyed.

Ahmed Saleh, a local journalist affiliated with the S.T.C., said by telephone that he saw numerous vehicles damaged after the strike and flames billowing from inside the port facility, with military vehicles encircling the area. “The explosions shattered and damaged the windows of the building near the port,” he added.

Ismaeel Naar is an international reporter for The Times, covering the Gulf states. He is based in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

The post Saudi-Led Airstrike in Yemen Threatens to Worsen Rift With U.A.E. appeared first on New York Times.

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