The Guardian (USA)

Three commercial vessels attacked in Red Sea by Houthi rebels, says US

- Dan Sabbagh in Jerusalem

Three commercial vessels came under attack in internatio­nal waters in the southern Red Sea, the US military said on Sunday, as Yemen’s Houthi group claimed drone and missile attacks on two Israeli vessels in the area.

“Today there were four attacks against three separate commercial vessels operating in internatio­nal waters in the southern Red Sea,” the statement from the US Central Command reads. “We have every reason to believe that these attacks, while launched by the Houthis in Yemen, are fully enabled by Iran.”

The Carney, a US destroyer, responded to distress calls and provided assistance following missile and drone launches from Houthi-controlled territory, according to US Central Command. It named the vessels attacked as Unity Explorer, Number 9 and Sophie II.

Yemen’s Houthi movement said its navy had attacked two ships, Unity Explorer and Number 9, with an armed drone and a naval missile and claimed the vessels were Israeli. A spokespers­on for the group’s military said the two ships were targeted after they rejected warnings, without elaboratin­g.

In a broadcast statement, the spokespers­on said the attacks were in response to the demands of the Yemeni people and calls from Islamic nations to stand with the Palestinia­n people.

The US military said the Carney shot down two drones as it helped the commercial vessels. It was not clear if the warship was a target. It said the attacks were a threat to internatio­nal commerce.

Israeli military spokespers­on Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari said the ships had “no connection to the state of Israel”. Hagari said: “One ship was significan­tly damaged and it is in distress and apparently is in danger of sinking and another ship was lightly damaged.”

US Central Command said Unity Explorer is Bahamas-flagged and UKowned, that Number 9 is Panamanian flagged, Bermuda and UK owned and operated, and Sophie II is Panamanian flagged.

Yemen’s Houthis, who have the backing of Iran, have launched several missile and drone attacks on Israel since the start of the war in Gaza on 7 October. They are not thought to have inflicted any serious damage.

More recently, the rebel group has stepped up its targeting of commercial vessels sailing in the Red Sea, which lies south of the Suez Canal, a strategic naval route between Europe and Asia and east Africa.

Separately, a US airstrike killed five Iraqi militants near the northern city of Kirkuk as they prepared to launch explosive projectile­s at US forces in the country, three Iraqi security sources said, identifyin­g them as members of an Iran-backed militia.

A US military official confirmed a “self-defence strike on an imminent threat” that targeted a drone staging site near Kirkuk on Sunday afternoon.

A statement by the Islamic Resistance in Iraq, an umbrella group representi­ng several Iraqi armed factions with close ties to Tehran, said five of its members had been killed, and vowed retaliatio­n against US forces.

The group had claimed several attacks against US forces throughout Sunday. Earlier Sunday, the US military official said US and internatio­nal forces were attacked with multiple rockets at the Rumalyn landing zone in northeaste­rn Syria, but there were no casualties or damage to infrastruc­ture.

Iraqi armed groups have claimed more than 70 such attacks against US forces since 17 October over Washington’s backing of Israel in its bombardmen­t of Gaza.

A fortnight ago, the Houthis released dramatic video of masked gunmen seizing the Galaxy Leader, a British-owned and Japanese-operated cargo ship, after landing a helicopter on deck. They group claimed it was owned by Israel but there was no immediate evidence to support this.

A week later, towards the end of November, a US warship, the USS Mason, seized five attackers who had tried to take control of the Central Park, a commercial tanker that had been carrying a cargo of phosphoric acid.

In the incident, two ballistic missiles were fired from Houthi-controlled areas in Yemen toward the general location of the two ships, but landed 10 nautical miles away in the Gulf of Aden, the US military said.

On Sunday, maritime security specialist­s told Reuters that an unnamed bulk carrier ship had been hit by at least two drones in the Red Sea. One company, Ambrey, said another container ship had reportedly suffered damage from a drone attack about 63 miles north-west of the northern Yemeni port

of Hodeidah.

Earlier, Britain’s Maritime Trade Operations agency said it had received reports of a drone attack in the Red Sea’s Bab el-Mandab strait, between Yemen, Djibouti and Eriteria. The body called on vessels in the vicinity to exercise caution.

In mid-October, the USS Carney shot down three ground-launched missiles as well as several drones that were fired by Houthi militants, the Pentagon said. At the time, the US said the missiles were “potentiall­y heading towards Israel” as justificat­ion for its action. Reuters contribute­d to this report This article was amended on Monday 4 December to correct a headline error that stated the three commercial vessels were US-owned.

 ?? ?? The guided-missile destroyer USS Carney, which responded to distress calls following missile and drone launches from Houth-controlled territory in Yemen. Photograph: Petty Officer 3rd Class Bill Dodge/AP
The guided-missile destroyer USS Carney, which responded to distress calls following missile and drone launches from Houth-controlled territory in Yemen. Photograph: Petty Officer 3rd Class Bill Dodge/AP

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