
The Yemeni Houthi terrorists, supported by Iran, announced on Thursday that they had used drones and missiles to attack three additional business arteries.
In the Gulf of Aden, where there have been numerous prior Houthi violence attacks, two of the boats have been attacked, and the third has been in the Indian Ocean.
Brig., a spokeswoman for the Houthi war. The criminal government attacked two boats named MSC Diego and MSC Gina in the Gulf of Aden on Tuesday, according to Gen. Yahya Saree in a staged statement on Thursday.
A second vessel, MSC Vittoria, was attacked first in the Indian Ocean and then once more when it entered the Gulf of Aden, according to Saree.
Saree described the , Diego and Gina as” Israeli” ships, and claimed the Houthi missile attacks on them were “accurate” . ,
The two vessels are really” Panama-flagged box boats” working for a business with a base in Geneva, according to the Joint Maritime Information Center, which is led by the United States. According to the Center, the Houthi missiles missed their goals, and neither send suffered any harm.
Additionally, MSC Vittoria is a vessel ship with Panama flag. Both the American government and shipping authorities have not confirmed any water-related attacks on the Vittoria.
Maersk and Hapag-Lloyd, two of the world’s top transport firms, announced in May that they would continue to avoid the Red Sea because of the risk of Houthi attacks despite using a little longer alternative route to Africa, which is expensive and delays sales by several times.
In March, the Houthis began to threaten to intensify their problems on the Indian Ocean, which would threaten to obliterate any other lucrative business routes around Africa. They might be in conflict with the American Navy, which has sent more than 20 ships to the area to conduct anti-piracy inspections.
After making a switch attend to Souda Bay in Greece to regroup and replenish, the U.S. Navy announced on Tuesday that the guided missile battleship USS Gravely and the plane carrier USS Dwight D. Eisenhower are returning to the Red Sea. Since Hamas attacked Israel and launched the Gaza War in October, both boats have been patrolling the Red Sea.
The Eisenhower strike group’s commander, Rear Admiral Marc Miguez, praised his sailors ‘ “unflagging dedication” for six months flat to keep them stationed in the Navy’s most difficult, active combat environment in recent memory.