U.S. launches airstrikes against Houthi rebels for deadly drone attack
The U.S. launched retaliatory airstrikes with the U.K. against Houthis in response to attacks on military bases that left three Americans dead.
The Iran-backed Houthi rebels vowed Sunday that a wave of joint U.S.-British retaliatory airstrikes “will not pass without response and punishment” as the Israeli-Hamas war teetered on the brink of a far broader and more deadly regional conflict.
“These attacks will not deter us from our moral, religious and humanitarian stance in support of the steadfast Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip,” Houthis spokesman Ameen Hayyan said in a statement.
U.S. and British forces struck 36 rebel targets in Yemen on Saturday, one day after targeting 85 sites linked to other Iran-backed militant groups in Syria and Iraq. The airstrikes Friday were in response to months of attacks on U.S. bases, including a drone strike on a U.S. base in Jordan near the Syrian border that killed three Americans.
The Houthis were targeted in response to scores of strikes on commercial ships in the Red Sea area since November. It was the third time that British and American forces have jointly targeted the Houthis, who say their attacks are in solidarity with Palestinians in war-battered Gaza, which has been bombarded since the Oct. 7 Hamas assault on Israeli border communities.
Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin said the latest U.S.-British response was “intended to degrade Houthi capabilities used to continue their reckless and unlawful attacks.”
US strikes Iran-backed groups: New sites in Yemen targeted
Developments:
∎ The Palestinian death toll has risen to 27,365, and the majority of the victims are women and children, the Ministry of Health in Gaza announced Sunday. More than 66,000 people were wounded and about 8,000 remain unaccounted for, the ministry said.
∎ Iran warned the U.S. not to target two cargo ships suspected of serving as an operating base for Iranian commandos. The Behshad and Saviz are registered as commercial ships with a Tehran-based company the U.S. Treasury has sanctioned for aiding Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard
∎ Palestinian news agency Wafa reported that at least two children were killed in an Israeli attack on kindergarten in the southern Gaza city of Rafah. Israel has repeatedly accused Hamas of using schools and other public spaces as cover and civilians as human shields.
The attack by Iran-backed militants on a U.S. base in Jordan that killed three American soldiers a week ago would not have happened if Donald Trump was president, the GOP presidential hopeful said Sunday.
“I had Iran in check,” Trump said on Sunday Morning Futures. He related a story from his presidency when he said the U.S. “hit them very hard” for something Iran did. Iran was compelled to hit back, Trump said.
“They feel they have to do that and I understand that,” Trump said. “They called me to tell me ‘we’re going to hit a certain location, but we’re not gonna hit it, it’s gonna be outside of the perimeter.’ So they aimed those missiles and they said, ‘please don’t attack us, we’re not going to hit you.’ That was respect, we had respect.”
Trump was apparently referring to the Iranian strike at an air base in Iraq housing U.S. troops. The January 2020 attack was in retaliation for the U.S. assassination of an Iranian general. The Pentagon, however, has said that multiple Iranian missiles hit the base that day. Scores of U.S. soldiers suffered traumatic brain injuries.
The lethal drone attack a week ago near the Syrian border was third attack in six months targeting the base known as Tower 22. The three U.S. deaths were the first from enemy fire in the region since the war began almost three months ago. Iran denied involvement in the attack, saying militants in the region do not take orders from Tehran
An Israeli raid in southern Gaza uncovered headquarters for the Khan Yunes Brigade that included the office of…
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