In Yemen's "60 Minutes" Moment, No Mention That the U.S. Is Fueling the Conflict
For more than two years, the U.S. government has backed Saudi Arabia’s intervention in Yemen every step of the way.
For more than two years, the U.S. government has backed Saudi Arabia’s intervention in Yemen every step of the way.
Saudi Arabia has all the advantages in its rivalry with Iran — and still falters at every step.
Saudi Arabia blocked shipments of humanitarian aid because it said rebels in Yemen were getting missiles from Iran.
Congress voted on a resolution that declares it has not authorized U.S. support for the Saudi war in Yemen, but also decided to do nothing about it.
Mohammed bin Salman has essentially seized two foreign leaders, started a horrendous war in Yemen, and is heating up a conflict with Iran.
A document marked "strictly private and confidential" lays out a plan to manipulate markets and short Qatar.
A bipartisan legislative attempt to force a vote on authorization for the Yemen War faced a major setback last week.
The crackdown will test the claims of Saudi Arabia- and UAE-backed Washington think tanks that say they pride themselves on their ability to speak freely.
Former White House adviser Steve Bannon spoke at a neoconservative confab, weighing in on a Middle East diplomatic row.
“Light up Damascus," the Saudi prince told Syrian rebels, as they grew increasingly reliant on foreign support.
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