Chink in the armour: Houthi attacks expose Saudi’s military gaps

The conflict between Saudi Arabia and the Houthis has been going on since 2015 when a Saudi-led coalition intervened in Yemen’s war to fight the Houthis who receive support from Saudi Arabia’s regional rival Iran.

Update: 2022-03-31 19:35 GMT

There were no signs of calm, just days before a cease-fire signed on Monday was supposed to halt the fighting in Yemen’s civil war.

Following Friday’s attack on a Saudi oil factory by the Iran-backed Houthi movement, the Saudi-led international coalition targeted positions of the Houthi militia near Yemen’s capital, Sanaa, on Sunday.

According to media reports, at least eight civilians were killed, including five children.

And yet the image that will be remembered is the dramatic black plume rising from the burning oil factory close to the Formula 1 racetrack in Jeddah — a powerful symbol exposing the vulnerability of Saudi Arabia, home to 35 million people. Sebastian Sons, an expert with the Germany-based Center for Applied Research in Partnership with the Orient, told DW that the timing of the strike was no coincidence. “Attacks like this are a horror scenario for Saudi Arabia, given that the world could realize that the Houthis are capable of attacking Saudi Arabia in a variety of places,” Sons said.

The conflict between Saudi Arabia and the Houthis has been going on since 2015 when a Saudi-led coalition intervened in Yemen’s war to fight the Houthis who receive support from Saudi Arabia’s regional rival Iran.

Since then, the Houthis have been repeatedly attacking Saudi Arabia’s strategic targets, like oil facilities and the airport. Given the significant increase of Houthi attacks in recent weeks, it seems surprising why the rich powerhouse appears to be militarily below par.

One reason is the strained relationship with Saudi Arabia’s biggest ally and arms provider, the US.

America had withdrawn support after the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi — who was dismembered inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in October 2018. As a consequence, the Patriot anti-missile batteries and the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system, which were installed in 2019 after a Houthi attack on Saudi Arabia’s oil production and airport, were scaled down. Furthermore, thousands of troops were relocated from the Prince Sultan Air Base, about 115 kilometers (70 miles) from Riyadh that summer. Eventually, Saudi Arabia began seeing a shortage of missiles, weakening the country’s defense capability even more.

Though Riyadh has signalled interest in cooperating on its defense systems with partners such as China, Greece and, at least until the invasion of Ukraine, Russia, Sons said, the kingdom’s most important partner remained the United States. And following Riyadh’s “urgent request” in mid-March this year after the latest increase of attacks, the United States brought new Patriot interceptor missiles to the Arabian Peninsula, according to several media outlets. Yet in order to properly boost the country’s defense capabilities, the Patriot missiles would have to be complemented by another defense system.

“The Saudi defensive system is doing a good job. The problem has been the unmanned aerial systems, also called cruise missiles or armed drones,” Bilal Saab, senior fellow and founding director of the Defense and Security Program at the Washington-based think tank Middle East Institute, told DW. That is the kind of cruise missiles that hit Aramco’s oil factory on Friday.” It’s not an interceptor-shortage problem: It’s a radar problem. Those radars are not able to detect low-flying weapons,” Saab explained.

“The Houthi attacks are a risk for Vision 2030 — not because they prevent significant progress on the ground, but because they create a climate that could deter foreign investors,” Sons told DW, adding that “despite contrary declarations by the Saudi state there are definitely bottlenecks and problems in the implementation of Vision 2030 due to the pandemic and the global economic downturn.”

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