14 Jan 2024

US delivers 'private message' to Iran after Yemen strikes

9:59 am on 14 January 2024

By Frank Gardner, security correspondent and Malu Cursino for the BBC

US President Joe Biden speaks to the press as he departs from the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, DC, January 13, 2024. Biden will spend the weekend at Camp David. (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP)

US President Joe Biden speaks to reporters as he departs from the White House in Washington, DC, January 13, 2024. He was due to spend the weekend at Capm David. Photo: AFP

President Joe Biden says the US has delivered a "private message" to Iran about the Houthis in Yemen after the US carried out a second strike on the group.

"We delivered it privately and we're confident we're well-prepared," he said without giving further details.

The US said its latest strike was a "follow-on action" targeting radar.

This handout satellite picture courtesy of Maxar Technologies shows destroyed shelters in Hodeida airfield, in Hodeida, Yemen on January 12, 2024, after airstrikes by the United States and Britain. Yemen's Huthis launched an anti-ship ballistic missile on January 12, 2024 in retaliation for overnight American and British strikes targeting the Iran-backed rebels, a US general said.  The assessment of damage from the strikes by the United States and Britain -- which targeted nearly 30 locations using more than 150 munitions -- is still ongoing, Sims said, noting however that the number of casualties is not expected to be high. (Photo by Satellite image ©2024 Maxar Technologies / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / Satellite image ©2024 Maxar Technologies" - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS

A satellite image of destroyed shelters in Hodeida airfield, in Hodeida, Yemen on January 12, 2024, after airstrikes by the United States and Britain. Photo: Satellite image by Maxar Technologies / AFP

Iran denies involvement in attacks by the Houthis in the Red Sea.

However, Tehran is suspected of supplying the Houthis with weapons, and the US says Iranian intelligence is critical to enabling them to target ships.

Joint UK-US airstrikes targeted nearly 30 Houthi positions in the early hours of Friday with the support of Western allies, including Australia and Canada.

A day later, the US Central Command said it carried out its latest strike on a Houthi radar site in Yemen using Tomahawk land attack cruise missiles.

A Houthi spokesman told Reuters the strikes had no significant impact on the group's ability to affect shipping.

The Houthis are an armed group from a sub-sect of Yemen's Shia Muslim minority, the Zaidis. Most Yemenis live in areas under Houthi control. As well as Sanaa and the north of Yemen, the Houthis control the Red Sea coastline.

The official Western government line is that the ongoing air strikes on Houthi targets are quite separate from the war in Gaza. They are "a necessary and proportionate response" to the unprovoked and unacceptable Houthi attacks on commercial shipping in the Red Sea, they say.

In Yemen and the wider Arab world they are viewed rather differently.

There, they are seen as the US and UK joining in the Gaza war on the side of Israel, since the Houthis have declared their actions to be in solidarity with Hamas and the people of Gaza. One theory even says that "the West is doing Netanyahu's bidding".

People take part in a protest in the streets of the Yemeni Red Sea city of Hudeida, to condemn the overnight US and British forces strikes on Huthi rebel-held cities, on January 12, 2024, amid ongoing battles between Israel and the militant Hamas group in Gaza. US and British forces struck rebel-held Yemen early on January 12, after weeks of disruptive attacks on Red Sea shipping by the Iran-backed Huthis who say they act in solidarity with Gaza. The pre-dawn air strikes add to escalating fears of wider conflict in the region, where violence involving Tehran-aligned groups in Yemen as well as Lebanon, Iraq and Syria has surged since the Israel-Hamas was began in early October. (Photo by AFP)

People take part in a protest in the streets of the Yemeni Red Sea city of Hudeida, to condemn the overnight US and British forces strikes on Huthi rebel-held cities, on January 12, 2024. Photo: -

It is still possible that these airstrikes will have a chilling effect on the Houthis. They will certainly degrade their capacity to attack ships in the short term.

But the longer these airstrikes persist, the greater the risk that the US and UK get sucked into another conflict in Yemen.

It has taken the Saudis more than eight years to extricate themselves from there after it intervened in the country's civil war - and the Houthis are now more entrenched than ever.

About 15 percent of global seaborne trade passes through the Red Sea, the US says. This includes 8 percent of global grain, 12 percent of seaborne oil and 8 percent of the world's liquified natural gas.

The US says the group has so far attempted to attack and harass vessels in the Red Sea and the gulf of Aden 28 times.

Some major shipping companies have since ceased operations in the region, while insurance costs have risen 10 times since early December.

London and Washington have backed Israel following the 7 October attacks by Hamas in which about 1300 people were killed and some 240 were taken hostage.

Israel's retaliatory military campaign of air strikes and ground operations against Hamas in Gaza have killed 23,843 Palestinians so far, according to the Hamas-run health ministry on Saturday, with thousands more believed dead under rubble.

This story was first published by the BBC.

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