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AbyssiniaLady
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Eritrea needs to be more assertive in the Red Sea

Post by AbyssiniaLady » 02 Feb 2022, 15:54

The United States media has reported that Djibouti, Somalia, Yemen, Suadia Arabia are taking part in one of the largest US-led naval exercise in the Red Sea, launched on Monday, January 31, Eritrea is not participating because the United States hasn't invited Eritrea to take part in the exercise in the Red Sea.

I know the ruling mafia are traditionally goatherders and their whole lives revolves around Tigray & TPLF, they don't know anything about the law of the sea treaty, but under the unclos, Eritrea has the right to expel any warship from its waters.

The maritime boundaries between Eritrea and Yemen/Saudi Arabia.

Last edited by AbyssiniaLady on 02 Feb 2022, 17:22, edited 1 time in total.

Fiyameta
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Re: Eritrea needs to be more assertive in the Red Sea

Post by Fiyameta » 02 Feb 2022, 16:02

The only SEA you terrorist agame will SEE is the one in Denver, Colorado. :lol: :lol: :lol:




AbyssiniaLady
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Re: Eritrea needs to be more assertive in the Red Sea

Post by AbyssiniaLady » 02 Feb 2022, 17:07

You can't get Tigrayans out of your head, poor thing.


This video was posted by mentally ill tarik.


nizzy
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Re: Eritrea needs to be more assertive in the Red Sea

Post by nizzy » 02 Feb 2022, 18:09

AbyssiniaLady wrote:
02 Feb 2022, 17:07
You can't get Tigrayans out of your head, poor thing.


Aren't most of your posts about Eritrea? :lol:

tarik
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Re: Eritrea needs to be more assertive in the Red Sea

Post by tarik » 02 Feb 2022, 18:35

AbyssiniaLady wrote:
02 Feb 2022, 17:07
You can't get Tigrayans out of your head, poor thing.


This video was posted by mentally ill tarik.

abyssinialady aka eden aka sarcasm aka z smelly p@ssy nasty agame b!tch from cursed-land-tigray, stop mentioning my name u stank p@ssy b!tch and stop talking about us Eritreans aka ur masters 4 life u lowlife stinky P@SSY agame B!TCH. My Eritrea's Ports or Red-Sea is non of ur mozerfkkkking business, qimmalam agame. I got a p@ssy spray 4 ur fishy smelly p@ssy.
:lol: :mrgreen:

AbyssiniaLady
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Re: Eritrea needs to be more assertive in the Red Sea

Post by AbyssiniaLady » 02 Feb 2022, 19:31

nizzy wrote:
02 Feb 2022, 18:09
AbyssiniaLady wrote:
02 Feb 2022, 17:07
You can't get Tigrayans out of your head, poor thing.


Aren't most of your posts about Eritrea? :lol:
Yes, 90 percent about Eritrea, I have a stake in Eritrea.

AbyssiniaLady
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Re: Eritrea needs to be more assertive in the Red Sea

Post by AbyssiniaLady » 13 Apr 2022, 10:38

US Navy says new task force to patrol Red Sea amid Yemen war


Published: 13 April ,2022

The US Navy said Wednesday it will begin a new task force with allied countries to patrol the Red Sea after a series of attacks attributed to Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi militia in a waterway that’s essential to global trade.

Vice Adm. Brad Cooper, who oversees the Navy’s Mideast-based 5th Fleet, declined four times to directly name the Houthis in his remarks to journalists announcing the task force.

However, the Houthis have launched explosive-laden drone boats and mines into the waters of the Red Sea, which runs from Egypt’s Suez Canal down through the narrow Bab el-Mandeb Strait that separates Africa from the Arabian Peninsula.

“In a macro sense, this region literally and figuratively fuels the world,” Cooper said. “The area is so vast that we just can’t do it alone so we’re going to be at our best when we partner.”

The Combined Maritime Forces command, a 34-nation organization which Cooper oversees from a base in Bahrain, already has three task forces that handle piracy and security issues both inside and outside of the Arabian Gulf.

The new task force will be commissioned Sunday and will see the USS Mount Whitney, a Blue Ridge class amphibious command ship previously part of the Navy’s African and European 6th Fleet, join it.

Cooper said he hoped the task force of two to eight ships at a time would target those smuggling coal, drugs, weapons and people in the waterway. Coal smuggling has been used by Somalia’s al-Qaeda-linked al-Shabab to fund their attacks.

Weapons linked by the Navy and analysts to Iran have been intercepted in the region as well, likely on their way to the Houthis. Yemen also sees migrants from Africa try to cross its war-torn nation to reach jobs in Saudi Arabia and elsewhere.

The Red Sea is a vital shipping lane for both cargo and the global energy supplies, making any mining of the area a danger not only to Saudi Arabia but to the rest of the world.

Mines can enter the water and then be carried away by the currents, which change by the season in the Red Sea.

The Red Sea has been mined previously. In 1984, some 19 ships reported striking mines there, with only one ever being recovered and disarmed, a UN panel said.

https://english.alarabiya.net/News/gulf ... -Yemen-war

Zmeselo
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Re: Eritrea needs to be more assertive in the Red Sea

Post by Zmeselo » 13 Apr 2022, 11:11

Mo bin Salman, making fun of Biden: :lol: :lol: :lol:


Zmeselo
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Re: Eritrea needs to be more assertive in the Red Sea

Post by Zmeselo » 13 Apr 2022, 11:33



POLITICS
Saudi Arabia and the Emirates distancing themselves from the United States

Doubts remain about the relationship between the two leaders of the Arab world and the US giant

Raúl Redondo

https://atalayar.com/en/content/saudi-a ... ted-states

March 10, 2022


President Joe Biden in his office. AFP/ MANDEL NGAN

Various voices point to a notable distancing between Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates with the United States due to divergences arising from the position of Joe Biden's government in diplomatic matters regarding the Middle East.

In this regard, The Wall Street Journal reported that President Joe Biden failed to reach Saudi Arabia's Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Abu Dhabi's Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan by telephone, as reported by Al-Arab.

According to The Wall Street Journal, as reported by Al-Arab, the purpose of the call was to discuss international support for Ukraine in the wake of Russia's invasion and to address the huge rise in gas prices. This call from the White House reportedly went unanswered by the Saudi and Emirati leaders.

The US objective with these contacts was to receive support for its position against Russia and the sanctions against the country led by Vladimir Putin, which would mean that the Emirates and Saudi Arabia would not comply with the latest agreements within the framework of the OPEC+ alliance, an organisation that brings together the main oil-exporting countries along with other nations such as Russia. However, according to Al-Arab, Mohammed bin Zayed and Prince Mohammed bin Salman confirmed from the outset that the OPEC+ agreement is not affected despite the pressure.


PHOTO/ Bandar Algaloud/Courtesy of Saudi Royal Court/Handout via REUTERS - Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman

Mohammed bin Salman has reportedly been critical of President Joe Biden's administration over alleged US interference in the kingdom's internal affairs, implying that Saudi investment in the US would be reduced as a result. Saudi Arabia does not now admit that the US is trying to set the pace if it does not get involved in certain relevant Middle Eastern affairs. The Crown Prince gave an interview to The Atlantic in which he said that he "does not care" if Joe Biden misinterprets what he has said, leaving a certain feeling of unease, as it seems that the US president has had no contact with him despite the fact that he has been in the White House for more than a year, according to reports in Al Arab, until this latest attempt at a telephone conversation.

According to analysts, the lack of US interest in the region does not bind the Saudi kingdom on certain US-related issues.

The United Arab Emirates also showed signs of deviating somewhat from the US path by abstaining from voting on the US-sponsored bill at the United Nations condemning the Russian attack on Ukraine. In the second instance, however, the Gulf state did vote in favour of the resolution condemning the Russian offensive. The Emirati ambassador to the United States, Yousef al-Otaiba, reportedly pointed out that the UAE has not changed its position as a US ally, but that the US has lost interest in the Middle East region to focus more on Asia, due to the US interest in countering the great strength of China, its great economic and geopolitical rival at present. An example of this political shift is the US withdrawal from Afghanistan, which allowed the Taliban to come to power and increased political instability in the region.


PHOTO/BANDAR ALGALOUD - Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed al-Nahyan

Yemen and the Islamic Republic of Iran are points of discord in reference to the diplomatic ties between the two Arab countries and the US, as various analysts have pointed out, according to the Al Arab media.

Joe Biden's government has stopped selling arms to the Arab coalition fighting in Yemen against the Houthi rebels, a Shiite militia supported by Iran, a major regional enemy of the Saudi kingdom, which is the main symbol of the Sunni branch of Islam. A coalition led by Saudi Arabia, of which the Emirate is an important part, is fighting on the ground against the Houthi group, which is fighting to undermine the legally established Yemeni government.

It is also worth noting how Saudi Arabia and the UAE are badly affected because they have suffered several drone and missile attacks by the Houthis, who are supported by Iran, against airport facilities and oil installations. A difficult situation that requires greater support from the US, which has waned, according to analysts, as noted by Al-Arab.


PHOTO/HANI MOHAMMED - Houthi rebels raise their weapons during a rally in Sana'a, Yemen.

Iran is also a sticking point because the US could return to the nuclear pact with the Ayatollahs' regime, along with the European countries involved, given the latest negotiations between the different parties. This has not gone down well with Saudi Arabia and the Emirates, which consider the Iranian state to be a major threat, especially if it continues to develop its nuclear programme.

The aim of the Iran nuclear agreement signed in 2015 was to limit the Persian atomic programme in order to prevent it from leading to weapons development in exchange for certain economic advantages. But Donald Trump's administration pulled out of the agreement on the grounds of Iranian non-compliance and imposed political and economic sanctions. In response, the Iranian government reacted by violating some points of the agreement, especially those related to uranium enrichment. This has been causing international concern.

Now, under the Biden administration, there are new rapprochements with the Islamic Republic and this is causing concern among regional rivals such as the Saudi kingdom and the United Arab Emirates. Also another US ally, Israel, continues to warn of Iran's danger if it continues its atomic development.

AbyssiniaLady
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Re: Eritrea needs to be more assertive in the Red Sea

Post by AbyssiniaLady » 18 Jul 2022, 17:38

Iran-Backed Houthis Of Yemen Vow Not To Let Red Sea Turn Into ‘Israeli Lake’



The prime minister of the Houthi-controlled administration in Yemen says Sana’a will not allow the Red Sea to become an “Israeli lake”, IRGC affiliated Fars news reported.

The premier of the so-called Yemen’s National Salvation Government, Abdel-Aziz bin Habtour, said in capital Sana'a on Monday that Yemen has the final say in the Bab al-Mandab strait and will “preserve the Arab identity of the Red Sea in the face of the US conspiracy to turn it into a Zionist lake."

"Bab al-Mandab is an international waterway, but it is part of Yemeni territory," he emphasized.

The Bab-el-Mandeb strait – located between Yemen on the Arabian Peninsula, and Djibouti and Eritrea in the Horn of Africa -- connects the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden and acts as a strategic link between the Indian Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea via the Red Sea and the Suez Canal.

Echoing Iran’s position regarding US President Joe Biden’s tour of the Middle East and the summit of regional Arab countries in Jeddah, he said that during the visit Washington and Riyadh tried to cover up the reality of the Saudi-led “brutal aggression, the massacres, crimes and violations” they committed against Yemen, by portraying the crisis as just an internal conflict.

The Houthis receives military and political support from Iran in their conflict with other Yemenis backed who are backed by a Saudi-led coalition since 2014. Iran has been sharing its missile and drone technology with Yemen’s Houthis and has also supplied other proxy forces, such as the Lebanese Hezbollah and Iraqi Shiite militias.

https://www.iranintl.com/en/202207186788

AbyssiniaLady
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Re: Eritrea needs to be more assertive in the Red Sea

Post by AbyssiniaLady » 18 Jul 2022, 17:55

Yemenis are the most primitive Arabs, The Bab al-Mandab is neither an international waters nor fully part of Yemeni territory, Both Djibouti and Eritrea have sovereignty, sovereign rights and jurisdiction over half of the Bab al-Mandab waters.

The Bab-el-Mandeb strait will soon be known as the Afar strait.

AbyssiniaLady
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Re: Eritrea needs to be more assertive in the Red Sea

Post by AbyssiniaLady » 11 Oct 2022, 23:56

https://www.imo.org/en/MediaCentre/Page ... -1766.aspx

What is the need for unstable Ethiopia to have Maritime Security in the Red Sea? Ethiopia is determined to reclaim access to the Red Sea- Massawa/Assab once again.

AbyssiniaLady
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Re: Eritrea needs to be more assertive in the Red Sea

Post by AbyssiniaLady » 20 Dec 2023, 00:21

US and allies scramble to respond to Houthi attacks on key Red Sea shipping lanes


By Natasha Bertrand and Michael Williams, CNN Updated 3:08 PM EST, Tue December 19, 2023



FILE PHOTO: Armed men stand on the beach as the Galaxy Leader commercial ship, seized by Yemen's Houthis last month, is anchored off the coast of al-Salif, Yemen, December 5, 2023. REUTERS/Khaled Abdullah/File Photo.




Washington CNN — Attacks on commercial ships in the Red Sea have escalated to a level not seen in decades, leaving the United States and its allies scrambling to protect shipping in a key corridor for the global economy.

Houthi rebels have launched at least 100 attacks against 12 different commercial and merchant vessels in the Red Sea over the last month, a “very significant breadth of attacks” not seen in at least “two generations,” a senior US military official said Tuesday.

The official described the attacks, which the Iran-backed Houthis have launched using ballistic missiles and drones, as a “large change in the security environment than even what it was two months ago.”

The Red Sea is home to one of the most important maritime trade routes in the world, and the affects of the attacks have had far-reaching reverberations, with at least 44 countries having connections to vessels attacked by the Houthis, and wider international trade being disrupted due to the attacks.


Austin said on Monday. The US sent invitations to 39 countries to be part of the operation, and expects more will sign up in the coming days.


The full article here
https://edition.cnn.com/2023/12/19/poli ... index.html

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