What happened? The IAF attacked Houthi terrorist targets in several places in Yemen last night for the third time since October 7 2023 with dozens of combat, fueling and intelligence jets.
- This included a strike in the capital Saan’a for the first time where a military camp and a large power plant in the southern part of the city were attacked. Media outlets in Yemen reported that many places in Sana’a and in Hodeidah suffered an electricity outage are in a blackout.
- The strikes followed the firing of a ballistic missile by the Houthis towards Israel. IAF intercepting the missile with the long-range Arrow air defence system before it could cross into Israeli territory. Alarms were activated in several places in central Israel and a few people sustained light injuries on their way to shelter. Shrapnel caused vast damage in Ramat Gan, effectively demolishing a school.
- The Lebanese Al Mayadeen news service reported that four attacks were carried out on the Hezyaz power plant in the southern part of the capital Saan’a, two on the Dhahban power stations to its north, four on Hodeidah Port and two on the oil facility at Ras Issa. Those reports state that nine people were killed.
- The IDF said it “carried out a series of precision attacks on Houthi military targets in Yemen, including ports and energy infrastructure in Sana’a, which the Houthis have been using of their military operations..”
- “The Houthis are conducting attacks against Israel in contravention of international law – and the Houthi regime constitutes a threat to the region’s peace and security,” said IDF Spokesperson Hagari.
- The IDF also stressed that the regime in Iran “funds, arms and orders the Houthi’s terrorist activities.”
- Defence Minister Katz warned the Houthis about further attacks. “I suggest to the Houthi leaders that they see, understand and remember: anyone who lifts a hand against the State of Israel, that hand will be cut off. Anyone who attacks us, will be attacked sevenfold. We will strike with might and will not permit this situation of firing and threats to the State of Israel to continue.”
- Houthi politburo member Hezam al-Assad tweeted (once again in Hebrew) “Tel Aviv will not be safe as long as the siege and attacks on our people in Gaza continue.” Senior ranking Houthi official Nasr Al-Din also tweeted, “Yemen standing alongside Gaza is permanent and will not change, and Yemeni operations in support of Gaza will not stop. The response to Israeli aggression is inevitable.”
Context: The Houthis started operating in the early 1990s from the northern province of Sadat in Yemen as a religious revival movement of Shia Zaydi Islam who seized control of Yemen’s capital, Sana’a in 2014.
- Their slogan is “God is great, death to America. Death to Israel, curse on the Jews, victory to Islam.”
- Since Hamas’ attack against Israeli communities on October 7, the Houthis have fired 200 ballistic and 170 drones at Israel. They have also targeted about 100 merchant vessels with missiles and drones in the same period causing huge damage to global supply routes. The Houthis had launched 190 attacks between November 2023 and June 2024, affecting the interests of 65 states.
- From 11 January to 30 May 2024, the US and UK conducted five joint naval and air strikes against the Houthis in response to their ongoing attacks on shipping with Australia, Bahrain, Canada, Denmark, the Netherlands, and New Zealand providing non-operational support. Those strikes followed warnings by the UK Defence Secretary in 2023 that the UK was prepared to use military force to stop the Houthi attacks and a UN Security Council Resolution in January 2024 demanding a halt to them.
- The US has also conducted a series of separate actions. On Monday, the US military’s Central Command said that it hit “a key command-and-control facility” operated by the Houthis in Sana’a, later identified as the al-Ardi complex once home to the government’s Defence Ministry.
- Israel believes that weapons from Iran are transferred to the Houthis via the Hodeidah port.
- Following the weakening of Iranian proxies Hezbollah in Lebanon and the fall of the Assad regime, the Houthis and popular mobilisation units in Iraq are Iran’s best options for causing damage to Israel.
Looking ahead: Israel hopes that these strikes will deter the Houthis from further attacks, with the damage to the ports making it harder for the group to receive Iranian arms shipments.
- Negotiations with Hamas over a potential ceasefire and hostage release continue with negotiators believing the next few days could be critical.