The Guardian (USA)

US navy escorts cargo ships to safety after Houthi missile attack from Yemen

- Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor

Two ships sailing close to the Gulf of Aden were forced to seek the support of the US navy after explosions were heard nearby, as the Houthi group kept up their assault on commercial shipping off the coast of Yemen.

The Houthis have said their attacks are in solidarity with the Palestinia­ns as Israel bombards Gaza. The ships belonging to the Danish shipping company Maersk came under attack from three anti-ship missiles near the Bab el-Mandeb strait, the US central command (Centcom) said. No damage was caused either to the Maersk Detroit or the Maersk Chesapeake.

Maersk said in a statement: “En route, both ships reported seeing explosions close by and the US navy accompanim­ent also intercepte­d multiple projectile­s. The crew, ship and cargo are safe and unharmed. The US navy has turned both ships around and is escorting them back to the Gulf of Aden.”

Centcom also reported that on Tuesday night it had launched two preemptive strikes designed to stop imminent Houthi attacks. Previous attacks last Friday underlined the current inability of the US and UK to neutralise the Houthis despite multiple attacks on their missile sites.

The UK defence secretary, Grant Shapps, told MPs that risks to global navigation continued, with shipping costs rising by as much as 300%. He challenged what he described as absurd Houthi claims to be the Robin Hood of Yemen, saying their history proved the opposite. He said the attacks in which the UK participat­ed alongside the US destroyed Houthi surface-to-air missiles and the Houthis’ ability to hold the seas to ransom.

“Our military strikes did not cause any civilian casualties,” Shapps said.

The attacks on the Houthis were backed by the influentia­l chair of the UK’s foreign affairs select committee, Alicia Kearns, who said it was ahistorica­l to regard the Houthis as anticoloni­al freedom fighters.

Houthi forces in Yemen have written to the UN demanding that all UK and US staff leave the country within a month on the basis that their government­s are mounting assaults on Yemen. The warning also appeared to apply to NGOs working in the capital, Sana’a. In addition, it was reported that the Houthis had prevented a UN plane from landing in the strategica­lly important town of Marib on Wednesday.

The threatened expulsions by the Houthis followed strikes by the US and Britain, with support from other countries, against military targets of the Iran-aligned group. The US government last week also said it would return the Houthis to a list of terrorist groups.

The Houthi foreign ministry letter to the UN stated: “The ministry … would like to stress that you must inform officials and workers with US and British citizenshi­ps to prepare to leave the country within 30 days.” It was sent to the UN’s acting humanitari­an coordinato­r in Yemen, Peter Hawkins.

The letter also ordered foreign organisati­ons not to hire American and British citizens for Yemen’s operations.The US embassy said in a statement that it was aware of reports about the letter but “cannot speak on behalf of the UN or humanitari­an organisati­ons in Yemen as to what they may have received from Houthi ‘authoritie­s’”.

The British embassy said staff had not yet been told to leave and the mission was in close contact with the UN on the issue.

“The UN provide vital assistance to the Yemeni people … via the very sea routes that the Houthis are jeopardisi­ng,” the British mission in Yemen said in a statement. The UK’s Middle East minister called for the UN to be allowed to get on with the job.

Ahmed bin Mubarak, the foreign minister of the UN-recognised Adenbased government, also claimed Houthi militia had earlier in the week threatened to target a Sudanese civilian plane transporti­ng stranded Yemenis from Port Sudan to Mokha airport.

He made the claim in a meeting with the UN’s Yemen envoy, Hans

Grundberg, to illustrate the impossibil­ity of dealing with the Houthis, who resisted a concerted Saudi-led air campaign after capturing Sana’a and forcing the western-backed former president to flee in 2015.

In April 2022 a ceasefire between the Houthis and the Saudi-led coalition prompted a decline in violence, and fighting has largely remained in abeyance despite the official expiry of the truce in October.

Bin Mubarak stressed the need for the internatio­nal community to reconsider dealing seriously with the Houthi militias, remarks indicating that the UN-backed government­wants to see the internal peace process frozen because of the Houthis’ behaviour.

Grundberg also met the Saudi and UAE ambassador­s to Yemen, and the ambassador­s of the five permanent members of the UN security council.

He stressed the need to maintain “a favourable environmen­t for the continuati­on of dialogue in Yemen, and the importance of continuing concerted regional and internatio­nal support for peace efforts”.

Saudi Arabia is not an enthusiast­ic supporter of the western strikes on the Houthis because it fears they will destabilis­e peace talks.

 ?? ?? Flight operations on a US navy vessel in the Red Sea. Centcom said it launched two pre-emptive strikes against the Houthis on Tuesday night. Photograph: MC3 Kaitlin Watt/US navy handout/EPA
Flight operations on a US navy vessel in the Red Sea. Centcom said it launched two pre-emptive strikes against the Houthis on Tuesday night. Photograph: MC3 Kaitlin Watt/US navy handout/EPA

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