US Secretary of State Tony Blincoln speaks with UN envoy Martin Griffith on the phone to step up diplomatic efforts to end the civil war in Yemen.
Secretary Blincoln and Griffith’s call yesterday (14) came as the civil war in Yemen, which sparked the worst humanitarian disaster in the Middle East, is intensifying again.
State Department spokesman Ned Price said in a statement that Secretary Blincoln expressed concern about the civil war in Yemen, including the humanitarian situation in a call with the Griffith Special Envoy. “The United States supports a unified and stable Yemen without the influence of foreign forces, and He said that he emphasized the point that there is no.
Secretary Blincoln also stressed that the efforts of the US envoy Timothy Rendering to Yemen will revive diplomatic efforts to end the civil war in Yemen, along with the United Nations, and said he supports the UN’s efforts to reach agreement among all parties. .
Huti rebel spokesman Mohammad Ali Al Huti responded on Twitter today as “positive” to Blincoln’s “support for Yemen without foreign influence.”
Spokesman Houti stressed that the United States must prove its intentions by ending involvement in Saudi-led coalition military operations.
Earlier, the Huti rebels said that the US armistice proposal “reflects only the positions of Saudi Arabia and the United Nations,” and insisted that a declaration of an end to the war in Yemen must precede the US
Meanwhile, Huti rebels today say they launched a drone attack on Abba Airport and King Khalid Air Force Base in southern Saudi Arabia.
Reuters reported, citing local sources, that the Huti rebels launched a missile attack the day before, killing three children and 15 soldiers in southwestern Taiz, under the jurisdiction of government forces.
VOA news