At first glance, the Yemeni attack achieved its goal in the heart of the Israeli occupation, its forces tried to hide the details or promote claims of interception, but the fires, smoke plumes, and damage that shook vital facilities in Tel Aviv and were captured by Zionist activists on their mobile phones pushed them to change the narrative. So, what happened?
Exclusive – Al-Khabar Al-Yemeni:
So far, the occupation has not fully acknowledged the details of what happened, despite saying that the missile targeted five strategic sites, including a power station southeast of Tel Aviv, Ben Gurion Airport, and the “Modi’in” train station, in addition to an unnamed strategic site.
The scenes coming from Tel Aviv through social media platforms, which military censorship failed to block, show significant destruction inside the ground train station and on one of the most important suspended bridges in Tel Aviv. Smoke plumes have already risen from a power station in the occupation capital and near Ben Gurion Airport.
According to the official Hebrew narrative, the Yemeni missile safely reached its target, classified as a remote area between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem. The fires and destruction seen across Tel Aviv, according to the same account, reflect the falling fragments of the missile sometimes and at other times the result of the falling of air defense interceptor missiles.
Part of the Zionist narrative may seem true, especially regarding the fall of interceptor missiles of the “Hatis” and “David’s Sling” types that cost millions of dollars, and their explosions rival the Yemeni missile that traveled about two thousand kilometers and was so fast that even the latest defense systems could not intercept it, but it is certainly a new setback for the occupation, as Yemen doesn’t need to launch more than one missile at the capital of the occupation to achieve significant goals, as the occupation’s defensive system is responsible for achieving the remaining objectives.
As for the Yemeni missile falling in a remote area surrounded by five strategic sites, the closest being Ben Gurion Airport, it carries several implications. The first is that Yemen wanted to send messages to the occupation about its ability to easily reach those sites, and the second is that those sites have effectively become within the range of Yemeni missiles, which may force the occupation to evacuate their residents in anticipation of further attacks.