Fri. Sep 20th, 2024


Revelations from members of an American-Israeli spy cell have shed light on strategies employed to target Yemeni women, obscuring their identities and enticing them into collaboration.

Recently, Security services disclosed the confessions of network members detailing how enemies recognize the pivotal role and influence of women within families and society. Their tactics aim to sow discord between genders and promote American agendas by elevating feminist leaders and implementing projects that contradict Yemeni customs, traditions, and Islamic teachings.

Abdulmoeen Azzan, a spy within the network, revealed that programs ostensibly supporting women’s empowerment and leadership actually serve intelligence objectives, fostering relationships and affiliations with female leaders under the guise of civic engagement and political participation.

Abdulkader al-Saqqaf expanded on these methods, citing initiatives promoting women’s freedom and political involvement as vehicles for ideological infiltration and societa
l division.

Jamal Sultan outlined broader strategies, including funding programs aimed at enhancing women’s capabilities in language, management, and human rights, fostering dependencies and undermining societal norms.

Education also emerged as a focal point, with targeted curricula promoting gender equality and civic engagement from early schooling through specialized citizenship programs and quotas.

Hisham al-Wazir underscored the impact on women, particularly amid conflict, exploiting their vulnerability to influence social dynamics through misinformation and biased reporting.

Shaif Al-Hamdani detailed his role, assigned by the US Agency for International Development (USAID), in advocating gender issues at international forums, manipulating discussions to incite societal rifts under the pretext of women’s rights.

These revelations underscore a systematic effort to destabilize Yemeni society by distorting cultural norms and exploiting gender issues to further foreign agendas, rather than addressing gen
uine societal needs.

Source: Yemen News Agency