UAE denies nuclear plant
targeted by Houthi missile
NEWS / MIDDLE EAST
Yemen Middle East
The UAE is a member of the Saudi-led coalition
that has been waging war against the Houthis in
Yemen since March 2015 [Khaled Abdullah/
Reuters]
The United Arab Emirates (UAE ) has
denied a report that Yemen's Houthi
rebels fired a cruise missile towards its
airspace.
The National Emergency Crisis and
Disaster Management Authority
(NCEMA) said in a statement on Sunday
that "the UAE's air defence system is
capable of dealing with any threats".
Houthi rebels, who control vast swaths
of Yemeni territory, earlier said they
had launched a cruise missile towards a
nuclear plant in Abu Dhabi, the capital
of the UAE.
According to a report in the Houthi-run
Saba news agency, the missile hit the
Barakah nuclear power station, which is
under construction. A website for the
Houthi-owned television network al-
Masirah also reported the attack.
"The missile force announces the
launching of a winged cruise missile ...
towards al-Barakah nuclear reactor in
Abu Dhabi," said a statement posted on
both websites.
In a statement, authorities in the UAE
told residents "not to pay attention to
such rumours disseminated by media
agencies issuing false news that
question the UAE's capabilities,
strength and security".
The UAE is a member of the Saudi-led
coalition that has been waging war
against the Houthis in Yemen since
March 2015.
"A cruise missile would not go all the
way to Abu Dhabi, so we would be
talking about ballistic missiles," said
Andreas Krieg, an assistant professor at
the Defence Studies Department of
King's College London.
"I think this is a media stunt, a
narrative stunt trying to wind
everybody up, and showing that they
have the intent to very much disrupt,"
"But I don't think they have the intent,
and they also don't have the capability
because they would need a ballistic
missile to do that, and that would be a
game changer," he added.
"Had they fired a ballistic missile
towards Abu Dhabi, that would have
completely changed the environment in
Yemen, bringing other people to the
table, including the Americans and the
West, because that would had been
seen as completely unacceptable."
Earlier this month, the Houthis said that
one of their missiles hit a military
target inside Saudi Arabia, without
specifying the location.
Saudi officials, however, said they
intercepted the missile.
The Saudi-led coalition has previously
accused Iran of helping to arm the
Houthis throughout the ongoing
conflict, and has closed air, land and
sea routes.
On November 4, Saudi Arabia
intercepted another ballistic missile
launched towards an area near Riyadh's
King Khalid International Airport, and
labelled the attack as a potential "act of
war".
At the time, the Saudi state news
agency SPA accused Iran of "flagrant
military aggression" and
"manufacturing and smuggling
[missiles] to the Houthi militias in
Yemen for the purpose of attacking the
Kingdom, its people, and vital
interests".
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