so been broken.
Why did Trump attack Yemen?

Donald Trump has opened a new case in Yemen at a time when his promises and threats in other foreign policy cases have fallen flat.
According to the Tasnim News Agency International Group, since he took office in the White House, Donald Trump, the President of the United States of America, has been forced to backtrack on almost every sharp threat or optimistic promise he made in the field of foreign policy.
Trump's backtracking on threats
He had said this more than 10 times during the election campaign that he would end the war in Ukraine within 24 hours if he became president, but now he has not only not unraveled any of the knots in this case, but has also further complicated its knots and has finally been forced to say that his election promises were a joke.
Regarding Gaza, he set a deadline of several days last month, saying that if Hamas did not release all prisoners “by 12 noon on Saturday,” the gates of hell would be opened to them. Trump’s promised Saturday arrived, but nothing happened, and he threw the ball into Israeli territory, saying that Israel must decide what to do.
He has also backed away from his plan to relocate Gaza residents. Trump has repeatedly said that he intends to relocate Gaza residents to Jordan or Egypt and turn the region into a “Middle East Riviera,” but after facing global condemnation and Palestinian resistance, he said just a few days ago that “no one said the people of Gaza should leave their land.”
In the area of the tariff war, the situation has been just as dire for Trump, if not more so. He had threatened to double tariffs on steel and other metals from Canada to 50 percent, but only backed down hours later when Ontario countered.
On auto tariffs, he suspended tariffs on autos in Mexico and Canada for a month after talks with three U.S. automakers.
Trump's promises to annex Greenland, Panama, and Canada have al