Yemeni civil war
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Yemeni civil war
Summary
Yemeni civil war is a civil war[1]. It ranks in the top 5% of civil_war entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (8,356 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Yemeni civil war is in the country of Yemen[3].
- Yemeni civil war's instance of is recorded as civil war[4].
- The location of Yemeni civil war was Yemen[5].
- Yemeni civil war took place at Najran Province[6].
- Yemeni civil war is part of Yemeni crisis[7].
- Yemeni civil war is part of Iran–Saudi Arabia proxy conflict[8].
- Yemeni civil war's Commons category is recorded as Yemeni Civil War (2014–present)[9].
- Yemeni civil war comprises Saudi-led intervention in the Yemeni civil war[10].
- Yemeni civil war comprises Battle of Al Mukalla[11].
- Yemeni civil war comprises Battle of Aden (2015)[12].
- Yemeni civil war comprises Battle of Dhale[13].
- Yemeni civil war comprises Lahij insurgency[14].
- Yemeni civil war comprises siege of Taiz[15].
- Yemeni civil war comprises Shabwah campaign[16].
- Yemeni civil war comprises Abyan campaign[17].
- Yemeni civil war comprises Marib campaign[18].
- Yemeni civil war comprises Battle of Ibb[19].
- Yemeni civil war comprises Battle of Port Midi[20].
- Yemeni civil war comprises Battle of Utmah[21].
- Yemeni civil war comprises Battle of Al Jawf[22].
- Yemeni civil war comprises Shabwah Governorate offensive[23].
- Yemeni civil war comprises Battle of Al Mukalla (2016)[24].
- Yemeni civil war comprises December 2015 Taiz missile attack[25].
- Yemeni civil war comprises June 2016 Mukalla attacks[26].
- Yemeni civil war comprises September 2015 Marib Toshka missile attack[27].
Body
When and Where
Yemeni civil war took place on September 16, 2014[28]. It began on September 16, 2014[29]. Recorded location include Yemen[5] and Najran Province[6]. It is in the country of Yemen[3].
Context
Part of include Yemeni crisis[7], a crisis[30], in Yemen[31] and Iran–Saudi Arabia proxy conflict[8], a proxy war[32]. Yemeni civil war's instance of is recorded as civil war[4].
Participants
Recorded participant include Ali Mohsen al-Ahmar[33], Khaled Bahah[34], Ahmad Asiri[35], Hamoud Saeed Al-Makhlafi[36], Abd al-Malik al-Houthi[37], and Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi[38].
Why It Matters
Yemeni civil war ranks in the top 5% of civil_war entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (8,356 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 27 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[39] It is known by 18 alternative names across languages and contexts.[40]