Kuwait Times

US, UK hit targets in Yemen as Houthis vow to strike back

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SANAA: The United States and Britain launched a second round of joint military strikes on Yemen’s Houthis on Tuesday over their attacks on Red Sea shipping, as the Iran-backed rebels vowed to hit back. The latest raids, heard by residents of the rebel-held capital Sanaa around midnight (2100 GMT), hit eight Houthi targets, a joint US-UK statement said, while the Houthis listed 18 strikes across their territory.

US and British forces carried out a first wave of strikes against the rebel group earlier this month, and the United States launched further air raids against missiles that Washington said posed imminent threats to both civilian and military vessels. But the Houthis have continued their attacks on shipping — just one part of a growing crisis in the Middle East linked to the Zionist-Hamas war, which has raised fears of a broader war directly involving Iran.

The latest US-UK strikes were against “eight Houthi targets in Yemen in response to the Houthis’ continued attacks against internatio­nal and commercial shipping as well as naval vessels transiting the Red Sea”, they said in a joint statement with other countries that supported the military action. “These precision strikes are intended to disrupt and degrade the capabiliti­es that the Houthis use to threaten global trade and the lives of innocent mariners,” the statement said.

The US Central Command said in a separate statement that the targets of the strikes “included missile systems and launchers, air defense systems, radars and deeply buried weapons storage facilities”.

On Tuesday, British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak urged an end to the attacks on shipping and told parliament the UK was “not seeking a confrontat­ion,” but that the country would “not hesitate” to respond to further incidents.

“We cannot stand by and allow these attacks to go unchalleng­ed,” he said. Earlier, British Foreign Secretary David Cameron said the Houthis had carried out more than 12 attacks on shipping since the first wave of joint strikes on Jan 11. The Houthis remained defiant, with military spokesman Yahya Saree promising a response. “These attacks will not go unanswered and unpunished,” he wrote on X, formerly Twitter, listing 18 strikes in Sanaa, Hodeida, Taez and Al-Bayda provinces.

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahia­n said he told Cameron during the World Economic Forum in Davos last week that the attacks were a “strategic mistake”. “We sent a serious message and warning to the Americans,” he said during a trip to New York, according to Iran’s official IRNA news agency. “The action that the United States and the United Kingdom carried out jointly... is a threat to peace and security in the region. It is the intensific­ation of the scope of the war.”

A senior US military official said the strikes were carried out using a combinatio­n of precision-guided munitions from US and British aircraft, and Tomahawk cruise missiles. There were no concerns about civilian casualties at the sites that were hit, while Houthi losses were unknown, the official told journalist­s. “The targeting was very specific and... very deliberate to go after the capability that they are using to attack maritime vessels in the Red Sea, Bab al-Mandab and Gulf of Aden,” the official added. Saree, the Houthis’ military spokesman, did not mention any casualties.

The latest strikes came after the US military on Sunday declared dead two Navy SEALs who went missing during a January 11 operation to seize alleged Iranian weapons bound for Yemen’s Houthis. On Monday, hours before the joint operation, the Houthis said they fired on a US military cargo ship off the coast of Yemen. The claim was denied by a US defense official.

The Yemeni rebels began striking Red Sea shipping in November, saying they were hitting Zionist-linked vessels in support of Palestinia­ns in Gaza, which has been ravaged by the Hamas-Zionist war.The Houthis have since declared US and British interests to be legitimate targets as well. In addition to military action, Washington is seeking to put diplomatic and financial pressure on the Houthis, redesignat­ing them as a “terrorist” organizati­on last week after dropping that label soon after President Joe Biden took office. The rebels reiterated on Monday that they will “respond to any attack” on Yemen and continue to “prevent (Zionist) ships” from passing through the Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea until the end of the war in Gaza. — AFP

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