How does Iran carry a reprisal agenda from the Yemeni army because of 1980s war ?‏

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أرشفية
أرشفية

Khaleeja newspaper reported on Wednesday details of Iran's regime avenging the Yemeni army by supporting the Houthis to dismantle the army.

Alyaman Alaraby quoted the newspaper "Al Watan" as saying that it obtained an old audio recording of Hussein al-Houthi, appeared threatening and threatened to retaliate against the Yemeni army, because of its participation in the Iran-Iraq war in 1980 - 1988.

"Yemen has participated with a large number of the army, they went to fight the Islamic state of Iran, and the president and the Yemeni army must be punished for what they have done," he said in the tape obtained by the paper from a leader of the General People's Congress.

This threat is similar to the role currently being played by the Houthis on the ground in Yemen, from the dismantling of the national army, and the pursuit of the military commanders that participated in that period.

While the Houthis repeatedly try to repudiate and deny, all the evidences reveal their truth, and these practices are similar to those carried out by Iranian militias in Iraq, where a large numbers of troops who participated in the war were executed , and the leader of the conference, said ,only, "This is what the Houthis do now, and then deny their subordination to Iran ".

For his part, the director of the Arab Center for Justice in Iraq, Dr. Mohammad Sheikhli, accused Iran of intervening in the Iraqi issue, to issue a decision to retaliate against Saddam Hussein, the seizure and confiscation of all his property, pointing out that this decision was passed through the horns of Iran.

Sheikhli said in a statement to al-Watan that "Tehran regime carries a reprisal agenda as a result of its defeat in the eight-year war, which was provided by the Iraqi regime after 2003, including the assassination of all Iraqi commanders involved in the war and the killing of pilots that attacked targets inside Iran . All these decisions are made through the clients of Iran, led by former Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki.