News Flash
SANAA, Jan 12, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - US and British forces struck rebel-held
Yemen early on Friday after weeks of disruptive attacks on Red Sea shipping
by the Iran-backed Huthis who say they are acting in solidarity with Gaza.
The air strikes add to escalating fears of wider conflict in the region,
where violence involving Tehran-aligned groups in Yemen as well as in
Lebanon, Iraq and Syria has surged since the Israel-Hamas war began in early
October.
Hamas said it will hold Britain and the United States "responsible for the
repercussions on regional security."
The US, Britain and eight other allies said the strikes aimed to "de-escalate
tensions". But Iran and numerous other countries in the region and beyond
condemned the Western action or voiced concern that unrest could worsen.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan described the strikes as
disproportionate" and said: "It is as if they aspire to turn the Red Sea into
a bloodbath."
News of the air strikes sent oil prices up four percent. Bjarne Schieldrop,
chief commodities analyst at SEB bank, cited market fears that "the region is
on an unpredictable escalating path".
The Huthis have carried out a growing number of attacks on what they deem to
be Israeli-linked shipping in the key Red Sea international trade route since
October 7, when Hamas's unprecedented attack on Israel sparked the war still
raging in the besieged Gaza Strip.
Some 12 percent of global maritime trade normally passes through the Bab al-
Mandeb strait, but since mid-November the amount of shipping containers has
dropped by 70 percent, according to maritime experts.
The rebels have controlled a major part of Yemen since a civil war erupted
there in 2014 and are part of a regional Iran-backed "axis of resistance"
against Israel and its allies.
Friday's strikes targeted an airbase, airports and a military camp, the
Huthis' Al-Masirah TV station said, with AFP correspondents and witnesses
reporting they could hear heavy strikes in Hodeida and Sanaa.
The British Ministry of Defence said four RAF Typhoons hit a site in
northwestern Yemen in Bani, used to launch attack drones, as well as an
airfield in Abbs from where cruise missiles and drones were operated over the
Red Sea.
- 'Dire consequences' -
"Our country was subjected to a massive aggressive attack by American and
British" forces, said Hussein al-Ezzi, the rebels' deputy foreign minister.
According to official Huthi media, he added the two countries "will have to
prepare to pay a heavy price".
US President Joe Biden called the strikes a "defensive action" after the Red
Sea attacks and said he "will not hesitate" to order further military action
if needed.
With fighter jets and Tomahawk missiles, 60 targets at 16 Huthi locations
were hit by more than 100 precision-guided munitions, US Central Command said
in a statement.
Unverified images on social media, some of them purportedly of Al-Dailami
airbase north of the rebel-held capital Sanaa, showed explosions lighting up
the sky as loud bangs and the roar of planes sounded.
Huthi military spokesman Yahya Saree said at least five people had been
killed.
Nasser Kanani, spokesman for Iran's foreign ministry, said the Western
strikes "will have no result other than fuelling insecurity and instability
in the region", while "diverting the world's attention" from Gaza.
An AFP journalist said hundreds of people rallied in Tehran against the US,
Britain and Israel while voicing support for Gazans and Yemenis.
Protesters also marched in Yemen's Gulf neighbour, Bahrain.
Saudi Arabia's foreign ministry said Riyadh "is following with great concern
the military operations" and called for "self-restraint and avoiding
escalation".
The kingdom is trying to extricate itself from a nine-year war with the
Huthis, though fighting has largely been on hold since a truce in early 2022.
Oman, a mediator in attempts to end Yemen's civil war, said it "has warned
several times about the risk of the extension of the conflict in the region".
Iraq and Syria voiced similar concerns.
- 'Repeated warnings' -
Further afield, China said it was "concerned about the escalation of tensions
in the Red Sea" and Moscow condemned the "illegitimate" strikes.
Biden called the strikes a success and said he ordered them "against a number
of targets in Yemen used by Huthi rebels to endanger freedom of navigation in
one of the world's most vital waterways."
He said the rebels' "unprecedented" attacks included "the use of anti-ship
ballistic missiles for the first time in history".
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said the Huthis' breach of international
law merited a "strong signal" in response.
"People can't act like this with impunity," he said, adding the Huthi attacks
were "disrupting the global economy".
Britain's defence ministry released footage of Royal Air Force jets returning
to their Cyprus base after the mission, and US Centcom video showed warplanes
apparently taking off from a sea-based carrier.
US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin said the strikes "targeted sites associated
with the Huthis' unmanned aerial vehicle, ballistic and cruise missile, and
coastal radar and air surveillance capabilities".
The Huthis said they will not be deterred. Huthi spokesman Mohammed
Abdulsalam posted on X that "there is absolutely no justification for this
aggression against Yemen".
- Years of air raids -
As the rebels have weathered years of air raids by a Saudi-led coalition,
hitting them would have little impact and would only raise their standing in
the Arab world, Gerald Feierstein, a former US ambassador to Yemen, said
before the strikes.
"The Huthis are immune to air strikes," agreed Maged Al-Madhaji, co-founder
of the Sanaa Center for Strategic Studies think-tank.
US and allied forces in Iraq and Syria, where they are part of an anti-
jihadist coalition, have also faced stepped-up attacks since the Israel-Hamas
war began, with Washington responding to several by bombing the sites of pro-
Iran groups.
Israel has also hit targets in Syria, and has exchanged regular fire with
Lebanon's Hezbollah over its northern border.
Washington in December announced a maritime security initiative, Operation
Prosperity Guardian, to protect shipping in the Red Sea.
On Tuesday, however, the Huthis launched what London called their most
significant attack yet, with US and British forces shooting down 18 drones
and three missiles.
The intensifying attacks have caused shipping companies to divert around
South Africa's Cape of Good Hope, affecting trade flows at a time when supply
strains are putting upward pressure on inflation globally.