“This security achievement reveals the extent of US-Israeli-Saudi hostility and aggression toward Yemen, and comes amid continued attacks and escalating measures aimed at weakening or thwarting the Yemeni people’s support for their Gazan brethren, their cause, and the legitimate right of a Palestinian state,” President Mahdi al-Mashat said in a statement, according to Press TV.
He praised the cooperation, vigilance and awareness of all strata of Yemeni society, stressing that all enemy plots failed in the face of the country’s resilience and steadfastness.
Mashat said the teachings of the Qur’an were a great achievement, saying that they greatly contributed to understanding the nature of the Yemeni state’s struggle against its enemies, especially the United States and Israel, and how to confront them.
Furthermore, the Sanaa-based regime’s deputy intelligence minister said that the destruction of the US-Israeli-Saudi spy network falls within the framework of Yemen’s ongoing conflict in support of Gaza, claiming that Saudi Arabia is directly collaborating with the Zionists and supporting the war against Gaza.
“The spying activities of the United States, Israel, and Saudi Arabia against Yemen prove Riyadh’s participation in the Zionist enemy’s onslaught against Gaza and the Palestinian people.
“These actions by Saudi Arabia amount to a serious violation of the ceasefire agreement agreed between Sanaa and Riyadh, under which detente with Saudi Arabia came into effect and relative stability and calm was established on the front,” Nasreddin Amer said.
He stressed that there is no justification for Saudi Arabia to embark on this adventure in Yemen and supporting Israel.
“What was destroyed today was a major blow to the U.S., Israeli and Saudi spy organizations in Yemen,” Amer said, warning that these organizations are active across Yemen.
Yemen’s interior ministry spokesman said on Saturday that the country’s security forces had arrested members of a spy network linked to a joint operations room shared by the CIA, Mossad and Saudi intelligence agencies headquartered in the Persian Gulf monarchy.
The ministry said the results came after “intelligence and surveillance operations” that exposed “enemy plans and methods of traitorous operatives.”
Officials added that the Joint Operations Room had set up several small, independent cells connected to a central command center based in Saudi Arabia, directing sabotage and espionage operations targeting Yemen.
MNA
