This target chould have been destroyed long ago, if only the Saudi-led Arab coalition had the exact information about its location. But it seems that recently the intelligence gaps among the coalition forces are closing in with the help of regional forces that have mobilized to paralyze the arm of Iranian suicide bombers operating in the service of the Houthis and threatening countries that are also thousands of kilometers away.
The Arab Coalition for in Yemen announced, at the dawn of Friday, the destruction of a central control center that includes UAV control rooms, west of Sanaa.
A coalition spokesman said the airstrikes were in response to the threat and the military need to protect civilians.
Destruction of the communications system
The coalition then noted that the Houthis use the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology in Sanaa to support their offensive operations.
A coalition spokesman added that a communications system used to operate front-loading relays to control UAVs had also been destroyed, thus allowing the explosive UAVs that launchers to operate away from Yemeni borders.
He also stressed that "cross-border attacks require more effective response in international humanitarian law".
He stressed that the Houthis were using Yemeni government offices for military purposes to carry out hostile actions, and said that in response to the threat, a site linked to civilian casualties and the recent attack on Abba International Airport in Saudi Arabia had been destroyed. He also asked, before the attack, that the civilians in the Yemeni government offices who had been indicted in Sanaa be evacuated.
It is worth noting that the Iranian-backed Houthi militia has recently stepped up its use of UAVs, using sites and civilian areas in Yemen.
She has also tried in recent weeks to attack sites in the UAE using suicide drones, which she has been proven to have received from Tehran, and has also tried to attack civilian targets in Saudi Arabia.