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    Home » Blog » Houthis warn Saudi Arabia of retaliation if it backs US attacks

    Houthis warn Saudi Arabia of retaliation if it backs US attacks

    April 1, 2024Updated:April 1, 2024 US News No Comments
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    Houthi militants from Yemen have renewed their threats to Saudi Arabia, warning it not to support U.S. cuts against the country.

    Saudi Arabia will be a goal if it permits American fighter jets to attack Yemen, according to Mohammed Ali Al-Houthi, a part of the Houthis ‘ Supreme Political Council, in an interview with Al-Masirah TV.

    Since the start of this year, U.S. and U.K. causes have been attacking Houthi military installations to stop the group from attacking boats in the Red Sea, a crucial channel for international trade.

    Saudi Arabia, which edges Yemen, has not stepped up those airstrikes or a marine activity under the leadership of the United States to allow commercial ships to enter the southern Red Sea and Gulf of Aden. Yemen’s civil war, which has raged for the majority of the past decade but has been resolved peacefully with the Houthis since 2022, is a goal for the nation.

    Beginning in 2015, the Saudi state spearheaded a U.S.-backed military offensive against the Houthis. However, it now considers harmony in Yemen to be essential to maintaining stability in the wider Gulf region and advancing its enormous economic change plans.

    Before the peace, the Houthis often struck Saudi place. In 2019, they claimed an abuse that quickly knocked out about half the village’s oil production.

    The Houthis, an Islamist group supported by Iran, have continued to attack ships and professional boats with missiles and uavs on a nearly daily basis and have been unaffected by the U.S. and U.K. attacks.

    They just announced that their plan would focus more on ships that sail around southern Africa and avoid the Red Sea.

    Al-Houthi claimed that the country needed to take more critical steps toward a serenity plan in order to increase tensions between the Houthis and Saudis.

    He emphasized that negotiations wo n’t start until the kingdom agrees to resume the provision of some salaries, electricity, and other services in Yemen.

    Al-Houthi also confirmed that the organization had assured China and Russia that their ships would n’t be targeted.

    He declined to discuss the Huang Pu, a Chinese-owned fuel tanker that was struck by a weapon in the Red Sea on Saturday, in an interview with Al- Masirah Television, a channel owned by the team. The ship issued a distress call but suffered minimal damage and did n’t need assistance, according to the U. S. military.

    It’s unclear if the Houthis mistakenly identified some ships in their past attacks when it comes to the Huang Pu.

    ___

    © 2024 Bloomberg L. P

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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