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Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene says former President Donald Trump warned her that releasing the Epstein files could “hurt his friends,” and claims he refused her request to meet Epstein survivors at the White House. Greene says her final call with Trump ended with him yelling at her over the files. The DOJ began releasing Epstein-related documents earlier this month, including emails showing Trump flew on Epstein’s private jet multiple times in the 1990s — while also warning that some materials contain “untrue and sensationalist” claims. High-profile figures named in the documents have denied wrongdoing. Greene’s revelations come as she has increasingly broken with Trump on foreign policy and backed legislation calling for full transparency of the Epstein files.

#TrumpEpsteinFiles #EpsteinDocuments #MarjorieTaylorGreene #TrumpNews #EpsteinCase #EpsteinSurvivors #PoliticalNews #BreakingNews #EpsteinRevelations #TrumpHeadlines #USPolitics #EpsteinTransparency #GreeneVsTrump #EpsteinInvestigation #DOJFiles #EpsteinJetFlights #HighProfileNames #EpsteinUpdates

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00:00Yemen, a country already teetering on the edge of chaos, and now December 30, 2025,
00:22Saudi warplanes strike the port of Makala, two ships targeted, allegedly carrying weapons and
00:30armored vehicles, destined for the UAE-backed Southern Transitional Council, or STC.
00:37Civilians had been warned. The coalition calls it a limited operation, a measure to stop
00:44unauthorized arms. But on the ground, it looks like something much bigger. This strike isn't
00:51just about ships or weapons. It exposes a deep fault line between Saudi Arabia and the UAE,
00:58two countries that have fought together against the Houthis, now squabbling over who gets to control
01:04Yemen. Saudi Arabia sees the STC as a threat to national security, demanding UAE forces pull out
01:12within 24 hours. In response, the STC declares a state of emergency and blockades Makala for 72 hours,
01:21halting port operations. To understand this, you need to know who the STC is. Formally established
01:28in 2017, they are a separatist movement backed by the UAE, trained and armed to control the South.
01:36The UAE's strategy is clear. Secure strategic ports like Aden and Makala, counter Iranian influence via
01:45the Houthis, and possibly create a friendly South Yemen that can guarantee access to oil and gas.
01:52For Saudi Arabia, the priority is different. They want a unified Yemen under the Presidency Leadership
01:58Council. The STC's separatist ambitions? A threat to Yemen's unity and Saudi border security.
02:06The STC is pushing hard. 2025 has been a year of gains. Early December, they take Hadramout,
02:15including the city of Sayun and its oil facilities. Mid-December, they move into Mahra, disrupting
02:21smuggling routes. Late December, they claim Abiyan and other governorates. Nearly half of Yemen is now
02:28under STC control, including 80 percent of its oil reserves. In Saudi, they respond with air strikes
02:36and 15,000 troops on the border. This isn't just a local fight anymore. It's a coalition strain,
02:43a power struggle, and a warning that the Civil War could escalate. Why does this matter? Because this
02:50isn't just about military strikes or oil. It's about history, grievances, and identity. The STC claims they
02:58are fighting for Southern self-determination, pointing to the 1990 unification and the 1994 Civil War,
03:05where Southern Yemen felt marginalized. And now, with UAE's support, they're close to declaring
03:12independence. Protest rallies in Sayun echoing demands for a Southern state. Saudi Arabia pushes back,
03:20demanding withdrawals, canceling UAE deals, trying to preserve a unified Yemen. But with the STC gaining
03:28ground, the risk of a broader conflict and even regional instability is higher than ever. In Yemen,
03:37oil and power don't just drive economy, they drive wars. And right now, the struggle for control,
03:44for influence, for identity has just intensified.
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