Business Day

Latest strikes on Houthis ‘destroyed intended targets’

- Phil Stewart and Idrees Ali

US and British forces carried out a new round of strikes on Monday in Yemen, targeting a Houthi undergroun­d storage site as well as missile and surveillan­ce capabiliti­es used by the Iran-aligned group against Red Sea shipping, the Pentagon said.

The Houthis, who control the most populous parts of Yemen, have said their attacks are in solidarity with Palestinia­ns as Israel strikes Gaza. They have disrupted global shipping, stoked fears of global inflation and have deepened concern that fallout from the Israel-Hamas war could destabilis­e the Middle East.

In the latest response, US and British forces carried out strikes at eight different locations in Yemen, with support from Australia, Bahrain, Canada and the Netherland­s, according to a joint statement signed by the six countries.

“Our initial evidence from last night’s strikes is ... that all intended targets were destroyed,” British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak told parliament on Tuesday.

A senior US military official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said roughly 25 to 30 munitions were fired, some of them from warplanes launched from a US aircraft carrier.

Eight rounds of strikes over the past month have failed so far to stop the Houthi attacks .

The Houthis’ military spokespers­on, Yahya Sarea, said on Tuesday that the US-British alliance had carried out 18 air strikes: 12 in the capital Sanaa, three in the port city of Hodeidah, two in Taiz and one in alBayda province.

“These attacks will not go unanswered or unpunished”, Sarea said.

US officials say the strikes have degraded the Houthis’ ability to carry out complex attacks. But they have declined to offer any specific numbers of the missiles, radar, drones or other military capabiliti­es that have ceeb destroyed so far.

“We are having the intended effect,” the US military official told Pentagon reporters.

Speaking after the latest strikes, British foreign minister David Cameron said the action had sent a clear message to the Houthis.

“We will continue to degrade their ability to carry out these attacks while sending the clearest possible message that we back our words and our warnings with action,” he said.

President Joe Biden said last week that air strikes will continue while acknowledg­ing they might not be halting the Houthi attacks.

Last week, the Houthis fired two anti-ship ballistic missiles at a US-owned tanker ship that hit the water near the vessel but caused no injuries or damage.

Biden’s emerging strategy on Yemen aims to weaken the Houthi militants but stops well short of trying to defeat the group or directly address Iran, the Houthis’ main sponsor, experts say.

The strategy — a blend of limited military strikes and sanctions — appears aimed at punishing the Houthis while limiting the danger of a wider Middle East conflict.

Sunak said Britain and the US are working closely on new sanctions measures to be announced in the coming days.

Container vessels have been pausing or diverting from the Red Sea, which leads to the Suez Canal, the fastest freight route from Asia to Europe. Many have taken the longer route around the Cape of Good Hope instead.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Lethal variety: RAF Armourers (Weapon Technician­s) prepare a Royal Air Force Typhoon.
/Reuters Lethal variety: RAF Armourers (Weapon Technician­s) prepare a Royal Air Force Typhoon.

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