Traveling by air becoming least secure for Saudi citizens

Day by day the Saudi airlines are becoming least secure for its citizens as the Kingdom's main sites are being continuosly attacked by the Yemeni Ansar Allah.

 Questions have abounded all week as to how Saudi Arabia, the planet’s third-highest defense spender and steward of the world’s largest oil facility, allowed itself to fall victim to a drone and missile attack that has wiped out its crude production and also made its citizens less secure.

The Saudi Airlines announced on Twitter that it had to delay the flights against its will just for the protection of its passengers as the kingdom is continuosly under drone and missile attacks by Yemen's Houthis.

Meanwhile, Investors are likely asking themselves how the kingdom could have left itself so vulnerable and what that means for the future of oil, global markets and the long-awaited Aramco public stock offering.

So how did the Saudis, who in 2018 spent an estimated $67.6 billion on arms — second only to the U.S. and China — fail to defend their economic jugular vein?
 



 

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