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News ID: 98746
Publish Date : 10 January 2022 - 21:39

Saudi Scandal: Using U.S. Film to Accuse Iran

SANAA (Dispatches) -- The
Saudi-led coalition in Yemen appears to have used footage from a documentary about the U.S. invasion of Iraq to accuse Yemeni forces of developing ballistic missiles.
At a press conference, Turki al-Maliki, the military spokesperson for the coalition, claimed to have incriminating evidence of weapons development in the Red Sea port city of Hudaydah. The remarks were broadcast on the Saudi state-run Al-Saudiya channel, and shared to its YouTube channel.
“Hudaydah port is the primary port for receiving Iranian ballistic missiles. The missiles are put together and assembled in [the port] under the supervision of Iranian security officials,” he brazenly claimed, while displaying purported satellite images of the coastal area.
“I will show you a video which shows the ballistic missiles in Hudaydah,” Maliki continued. At this moment, a two-second clip of two large warheads is shown on screen.
“This is in a specific location, inside Hudaydah port, which is composed of workshops of ballistic missiles, which are then transported out of the port,” Maliki claimed, going on to say that the exact location of the missile could not be revealed at this time.
That is perhaps because the exact location of the clip in question appears to be Baghdad, and the footage was taken on April 10, 2003.
Activists and journalists took to social media to compare the footage with a scene from the 2009 film Severe Clear, a documentary based on a U.S. marine’s video diary of the 21-day advance on Baghdad during the U.S. invasion.
The clip is identical to footage at the 1 hour 10 minute mark of the film, which is available to watch on YouTube. In the specific scene, American troops film an “ammo dump”, showing weapons left behind by Saddam Hussein’s forces.
The two-second clip appears to have been cut by Saudi Arabia very carefully so as not to show American troops, who can be seen in the room inspecting the warheads in the documentary.
Yahya Saree, spokesperson for the Yemeni armed forces, hit out at Saudi Arabia and its allies, citing the depth of the “scandal” and “bankruptcy” which they have gone to by using footage from an American film.
“This is the aggression which from the start is filled with lies and deception and attempts to cover their eyes with sand but the string of lies is short,” he said.
The clip has sparked outrage and ridicule online.
“I wonder how these people are in power - what a joke,” tweeted Saudi activist Lina al-Hathloul.
“This kind of top-down military buffoonery is exactly why Saudi Arabia is stuck in a seven-year quagmire in Yemen. This war will never end when intel is fabricated from an Iraq invasion documentary,” said Khalid al-Jabri, the son of dissident former Saudi intelligence operative Saad al-Jabri.
“What’s next? Show clips from Saving Private Ryan and claim the war is won/over?”
Saudi Arabia invaded Yemen in March 2015, beginning a now seven-year conflict with the impoverished nation. The so-called coalition backs Yemeni ground forces with airstrikes and a blockade, both criticized by human rights defenders.
A UN Development Program report last month said the Saudi war would have claimed 377,000 lives by the end of 2021, through both direct and indirect impacts.