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Following US and UK bombings, Yemen's Houthis respond, saying, "These attacks will not happen

Following US and UK bombings, Yemen's Houthis respond, saying, "These attacks will not happen


Following US and UK bombings, Yemen's Houthis respond, saying, "These attacks will not happen



Houthis in Yemen, who support Palestinians in Gaza, have pledged to hit back in spite of airstrikes by the US and the UK.


On February 4, Houthi tribesmen in Yemen came together as a protest against airstrikes by the United States and the United Kingdom on Houthi sites close to Sanaa.


On February 4, Yemen's Houthis pledged to retaliate, declaring that bombings by the United States and Britain "will not stop us" in response to the Houthis' repeated assaults in the Red Sea, which are supported by Iran. Following the deaths of three US servicemen in Jordan, the US attacked locations in Iraq and Syria that were connected to Iran.


This is the third occasion that US and British military have attacked the Houthis together. Because the Houthis support Palestinians in Gaza who are suffering from conflict, there has been a disturbance to global commerce.


The attacks on Saturday, which struck 36 Houthi targets in 13 places in Yemen that the Houthis control as they assault international and commercial vessels as well as the Red Cross, were confirmed by the United States, Britain, and other nations supporting the campaign against the Houthis in Yemen. This was done in retaliation for ongoing assaults on Navy ships. ocean."


"The airstrikes are aimed at promoting disrupt and degrade the Iranian-backed Houthi militia's capability to carry out reckless potentially destabilizing attacks," said US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin. "Coalition forces targeted 13 locations linked to the Houthis' deeply hidden weapons storage facilities, missile systems as well as launchers, air defense systems and radar," he said in the AP article.


According to Houthi military spokesperson Yahya Saari, 48 airstrikes were launched against the rebel-held city of Sanaa and other nearby regions. According to Yahya Sari, on the social networking network He said, "The latest attacks will not pass without response and punishment."


According to the British Defense Ministry, two ground control centers that were used to pilot attack and surveillance drones were among the targets struck by Royal Air Force Typhoon aircraft.


The Houthi anti-ship missile was "ready to launch against ships in the Red Sea," according to a dispatch from US Central Command (CENTCOM) on Sunday.



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