The Norwalk Hour

Saudi-led coalition strikes Yemen’s rebel-held capital

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CAIRO — The Saudi-led coalition fighting Iran-backed rebels in Yemen said Sunday that it had launched a new air campaign on the country’s capital and other provinces, in retaliatio­n for a series of missile and drone strikes targeting key military and oil facilities across Saudi Arabia.

“The targeting of civilians and civilian facilities is a red line,” Col. Turki al-Maliki, a spokesman for the coalition, was quoted as saying by the official Saudi Press Agency.

It was the first time in months that Sanaa was bombed by Saudi warplanes, an escalation that comes as the kingdom grapples with a major increase in cross-border strikes on its own infrastruc­ture, including an attack on a major offshore oil loading facility late Sunday.

The wave of Saudi bombings on Houthi rebel sites also represents the first since President Joe Biden’s long-awaited announceme­nt last month that he was ending U.S. support for the Saudi-led war in Yemen, including some arms sales to the country.

Residents in Sanaa, Yemen’s rebel-held capital, reported hearing huge explosions as a round of bombs fell on the city on Sunday. There were no immediate reports of casualties.

The Houthi-run al-Masirah satellite TV channel reported at least seven airstrikes on the Sanaa districts of Attan and al-Nahda. Al-Masirah did not identify the stricken facilities, but back smoke was seen rising over military camps in the area. The channel also reported an airstrike in the district of Bajil, in the key southweste­rn province of Hodeida.

In announcing its new air campaign, the coalition claimed the Houthi attacks have been encouraged by a Biden administra­tion decision to remove them form the U.S.’s terror list. The designatio­n of the Houthis as a terrorist organizati­on was announced in the waning days of former President Donald Trump’s administra­tion, and prompted widespread outcry from the United Nations and humanitari­an groups working in Yemen.

While Houthi attacks on Saudi Arabia rarely cause damage or casualties, strikes on major oil facilities in Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil exporter, have shaken energy markets and the world economy.

The strikes have increased in frequency and precision in recent weeks, raising concerns about Saudi Arabia’s air defenses and the expanding capabiliti­es of the Iranbacked rebels across the border.

The official Saudi Press Agency quoted an anonymous official in the Ministry of Energy as saying that a drone flying in from the sea struck one of the oil storage sites in Ras Tunura, the port run by Saudi Arabia’s state oil company, Aramco.

It claimed the strike did not cause any damage at the facility. Saudi Aramco, the kingdom’s oil giant that now has a sliver of its worth traded publicly on the stock market, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The Ministry of Energy denounced the strike as “an act of sabotage” targeting not only Saudi Arabia “but also the security and stability of energy supplies to the world.”

Shrapnel from an intercepte­d ballistic missile launched by the Houthis also rained down on a compound in the eastern Saudi city of Dhahran, where thousands of Aramco employees and their families live, SPA added. There were no immediate reports of casualties.

Residents reported hearing explosions rock cities across the kingdom — from the western port city of Jiddah to the eastern province of Damman. U.S. diplomats in Saudi Arabia issued warnings to Americans in the country, urging them to “stay alert in case of additional future attacks.”

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