These moves show that Riyadh will need its own boots on the ground, as well as planes in the air, if it wants to continue the disastrous quagmire it started in Yemen in 2015.
A Yemeni human rights group said civilians are paying the human cost of the country's five-year war.
Once overflowing with handicrafts, the old Al-Shinayni market in Yemen’s third city of Taiz is now bursting with Kalashnikovs and bullets as traders scramble to scratch out a living in the war-wracked country.
"The attacks hit weapons depots in the air base and other military facilities," the army spokesperson Yahya Saree said in a statement.
Yemen’s warring parties have agreed new measures to enforce a ceasefire and facilitate a troop pullback from the flashpoint port of Hodeida, the United Nations said.
UN Envoy to Yemen Martin Griffiths is in Riyadh meeting with resigned Hadi regime representatives
Yemen Watchnet