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Map of Yemeni diplomatic missions. This is a list of diplomatic missions of Yemen, excluding honorary consulates. Current missions ... Djibouti City (Embassy) [1] [2]
Due to the Yemeni Civil War, several countries have closed their embassies in Sana'a. ... Embassy 1969 [73] See also. Foreign relations of Yemen; Notes
On 17 September 2008, a group of seven militants attacked the United States embassy in Sanaa, Yemen.The attackers first attempted to infiltrate the embassy compound disguised as security forces, but later resorted to an attempt to breach the wall of the embassy with a suicide car bomb after they were compromised, though the bombing failed as the vehicle had detonated from an inner security ...
LEGATION RAISED TO EMBASSY - At same time American Legation at Taiz was raised to Embassy status in Yemen Abdullah al-Sallal: Lyndon B. Johnson: June 14, 1963: July 24, 1963: Mohsin Ahmad al-Aini: Abdul Latif Dayfallah: Lyndon B. Johnson: February 3, 1967: February 7, 1967: Abdul Aziz Futiah
The Yemeni Embassy in Washington and Saudi Arabia, which leads a coalition fighting the Houthis, did not respond to questions. Abd al-Kuri is about 35 kilometers (21.75 miles) in length and about ...
The U.S. Embassy in Sanaa suspended operations on February 11, 2015, and all U.S. personnel were withdrawn after security conditions deteriorated in the midst of the Yemeni civil war; however, the United States did not sever diplomatic relations with Yemen.
Vice President Dick Cheney and President Ali Abdullah Saleh discuss joint efforts to fight terrorist activity at a press conference in Sana'a, Yemen, 14 March 2002. In November 2001, two months after Al-Qaeda's terrorist attacks on the United States, Yemen's then-President Saleh visited Washington, D.C., and Yemen subsequently increased its counter-terrorism cooperation efforts with the United ...
According to the BBC, Yemeni media say the embassy closures come after "six trucks full of weapons and explosives entered the capital, and the security forces lost track of the vehicles." [154] Trucks driven by militants, previously under security surveillance, had entered Sana'a and lost the surveillance at that point. [155]