‘Imminent threat’: US fires more missiles at Houthi sites

The US military fired another wave of ship- and submarine-launch missile strikes against Houthi-controlled sites, US Central Command said, marking the fourth time in days it has directly targeted the group in Yemen as violence that ignited in the wake of the Israel-Hamas war continues to spill over in the Middle East.

The strikes were launched from the Red Sea and hit 14 missiles that the command deemed an “imminent threat”.

The strikes followed an official announcement that the US has put the Houthis back on its list of specially designated global terrorists.

The sanctions that come with the formal designation are meant to sever violent extremist groups from their sources of financing.

“Forces conducted strikes on 14 Iran-backed Houthi missiles that were loaded to be fired in Houthi-controlled areas in Yemen,” Central Command said in a statement posted on X (formerly Twitter).

“These missiles on launch rails presented an imminent threat to merchant vessels and US navy ships in the region and could have been fired at any time, prompting US forces to exercise their inherent right and obligation to defend themselves.”

Despite the sanctions and military strikes, including a large-scale operation carried out by US and British warships and warplanes that hit more than 60 targets across Yemen last Friday, the Houthis are continuing their harassment campaign of commercial and military ships.

The latest incident occurred Wednesday when a one-way attack drone was launched from a Houthi-controlled area in Yemen and struck the Marshall Islands-flagged, US-owned and -operated M/V Genco Picardy in the Gulf of Aden.

The US has also strongly warned Iran to cease providing weapons to the Houthis.

On Thursday a US raid on a dhow intercepted ballistic missile parts the US said Iran was shipping to Yemen.

Two US navy SEALs remain unaccounted for after one was knocked off the vessel by a wave during the seizure and the second followed the overcome SEAL into the water.

On Wednesday, Pentagon press secretary Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder said the US would continue to take military action to prevent further attacks.

“They are exploiting this situation to conduct attacks against the ships and vessels from more than 50 countries … around the world. And so we’re going to continue to work with our partners in the region to prevent those attacks or deter those attacks in the future,” Maj. Gen. Ryder said.

There have been several incidents since the Friday joint operations.

The Houthis fired an anti-ship cruise missile toward a US navy destroyer over the weekend, but the ship shot it down.

The Houthis then struck a US-owned ship in the Gulf of Aden on Monday and a Malta-flagged bulk carrier in the Red Sea on Tuesday.

In response Tuesday, the US struck four anti-ship ballistic missiles that were prepared to launch and presented an imminent threat to merchant and US navy ships in the region.

Hours later, the Houthis claimed responsibility for the attack on the Malta-flagged bulk carrier Zografia. The ship was hit, but no one was injured and it continued on its way.

 

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US URGES RESTRAINT AS PAKISTAN,IRAN TRADE AIR STRIKES

The US has urged Pakistan and Iran to avoid escalating tensions after the two countries exchanged air strikes, as President Joe Biden said the clash showed Iran was not “well-liked” in the region.

Tensions between nuclear-armed Islamabad, a US ally, and Washington’s enemy Tehran have soared after Pakistan has launched missile strikes into Iran, killing nine people, after Iran carried out strikes in Pakistan.

Iran condemned the attack, which it said killed three women, two men and four children who were not Iranian.

The situation has also added to broader unrest in and around the Middle East.

“As you can see, Iran is not particularly well-liked in the region,” Biden told reporters at the White House when asked about the clashes.

Biden said the United States was now trying to understand how the Iran-Pakistan situation would develop, adding: “Where that goes we’re working on now, I don’t know where that goes.”

White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said the United States was monitoring the situation “very, very closely” and was in touch with Pakistani officials.

“These are two well-armed nations and again we don’t want to see an escalation,” Kirby told journalists traveling with Biden aboard Air Force One.

Iran carried out air strikes on Tuesday, saying it had targeted a Sunni Muslim extremist group behind a series of attacks in Iranian territory. Pakistan said two children were killed.

 

ISRAELI TROOPS KILL DOZENS OF MILITANTS

It comes as Israeli ground troops killed dozens of militants in “close-quarters combat” on Thursday local time, the army said, as it intensified operations in Khan Yunis, south Gaza’s biggest city.

In the occupied West Bank, where violence has soared alongside the war in Gaza, an Israeli raid continued into a second day around Tulkarem, an official said. Palestinian health officials reported a sixth person had been killed in the operation.

Tensions flared further in the wider region, following Pakistani strikes on an Iranian border zone and new US military action targeting Iran-backed rebels in Yemen.

“In Khan Yunis, the Givati Brigade is now fighting in the southernmost area that (Israeli) ground troops have operated in so far,” the army said, referring to a unit that had been based in Gaza before Israel’s 2005 withdrawal.

“The soldiers eliminated dozens of terrorists in close-quarters combat and with the assistance of tank fire and air support,” it said in a statement.

Soldiers raided the “Martyr’s Outpost” of Hamas’s Khan Yunis brigade and the offices of its commanders, seizing a weapons cache including AK-47 assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenades, it added.

Footage showed smoke rising over central-southern Gaza in the afternoon. The Hamas government reported dozens of strikes, including on Khan Yunis and refugee camps in central Gaza.

Gaza’s health ministry said 93 people had been killed overnight, including 16 in a strike on a house in the southern city of Rafah, where many people have fled.

Those killed in the Rafah strike included women and children, and 20 people were injured, the ministry said.

A man sat quietly among the rubble, his head bowed, examining a child’s glove. Umm Walid al-Zamli said she lost her children, and her house. “The eldest was a second-grade girl,” she said in a choked voice. “What did they do wrong?”

 

AID ENTERS GAZA

Meanwhile, Palestinian and Israeli officials on Thursday local time confirmed a shipment of aid, including medicine for hostages, had entered Gaza after French and Qatari mediation.

Qatar late Wednesday said the shipment, which also comprises humanitarian aid for Gazan civilians, had reached the territory under an agreement announced on Tuesday.

Two planes had earlier arrived in the Egyptian city of El-Arish near Gaza with 61 tonnes of aid provided by Qatar and France.

The International Committee of the Red Cross said it did not play any role in implementing the deal but welcomed it as “a much-needed moment of relief”.

Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said the army was hitting Khan Yunis particularly hard to dismantle the Hamas leadership, which the army says has already been done in northern Gaza.

Since ground operations began in late October, 193 Israeli soldiers have been killed in Gaza, the military says.

The war has displaced roughly 85 percent of Gazans, the UN says. Many have crowded into shelters where they struggle to get food, water, fuel and medical care.

At Israel’s Nir Oz kibbutz, Yossi Schneider is clinging to hope for his relative Kfir Bibas, a baby, despite Hamas’s announcing his death, along with that of his brother and mother.

The youngest hostage was less than nine months old when militants snatched him from his bed on October 7. He would be celebrating his first birthday on Thursday.

“We are thinking about them every day, every second, every minute,” Schneider said.

 

EU TO ADOPT SANCTIONS AGAINST HAMAS

The European Union will enact sanctions on Monday against Hamas in response to the Palestinian group’s deadly October 7 attack on Israel, France said on Thursday local time.

Brussels will adopt “a regime of sanctions against Hamas”, French foreign ministry spokesman Christophe Lemoine told reporters, adding that they would target “individuals and transfers of funds”.

The punitive measures will target Hamas and some of its leaders involved in the unprecedented October 7 attacks against southern Israel that resulted in the death of about 1,140 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.

Militants seized about 250 hostages during the October 7 attacks, around 132 of whom Israel says remain in Gaza.

On Tuesday, the EU added Hamas Gaza leader Yahya Sinwar to its “terrorist” sanctions blacklist over the October 7 attacks.

The move means that the accused mastermind of the attacks is subject to an asset freeze in the 27-nation bloc and bans EU citizens from conducting transactions with him.

In December, the EU added two of Hamas’s top military commanders, Mohammed Deif and Marwan Issa, to its terrorist blacklist.

Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas is already listed as a “terrorist” organisation by the EU.

Vowing to destroy Hamas, Israel is conducting relentless bombardment and a ground offensive which have killed at least 24,448 Palestinians, around 70 per cent of them women, children and adolescents, according to Gaza health ministry figures.

 

NO TIES WITH ISRAEL BEFORE GAZA CEASEFIRE

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia is unable to pursue talks about a landmark deal to recognise Israel until there is a ceasefire in Gaza, the kingdom’s ambassador to the United States said on Thursday local time.

“I think the most important thing to realise is the kingdom has not put normalisation at the heart of its policy. It’s put peace and prosperity at the heart of its policy,” Princess Reema bint Bandar al-Saud told a panel at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

“The kingdom has been quite clear. While there is violence on the ground and the killing persists, we cannot talk about the next day.”

Saudi Arabia, home to Islam’s holiest sites, has never recognised Israel and did not join the 2020 US-brokered Abraham Accords that saw its Gulf neighbours Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates as well as Morocco establish formal ties with Israel.

US President Joe Biden’s administration has pushed hard for Saudi Arabia to take the same step.

Under de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, son of the ageing King Salman, Riyadh had laid out conditions for normalisation, including security guarantees from Washington and help developing a civilian nuclear program.

In an interview with Fox News in September, Prince Mohammed said that “every day we get closer” to a deal, although he also insisted the Palestinian issue was “very important” for Riyadh.

That apparent momentum stalled soon after Hamas launched a large-scale attack on southern Israel on October 7 that resulted in the death of about 1,140 people, mostly civilians.

One week later, a source familiar with the normalisation talks told reporters Saudi Arabia had paused the process.

Vowing to destroy Hamas, Israel is conducting relentless bombardment and a ground offensive. These have killed at least 24,620 Palestinians, around 70 per cent of them women, children and adolescents, according to updated figures from the Hamas government’s health ministry.

– with AFP

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