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Far from being cowed by US airstrikes, Yemen's Huthis may be relishing them

Far from being cowed by US airstrikes, Yemen's Huthis may be relishing them

CNN —
For weeks, US airstrikes have pounded Huthi targets in Yemen, hitting oil refineries, airports and missile sites, with President Trump vowing to use 'overwhelming force' until the US achieves its goal of stopping the Huthis from targeting shipping in the Red Sea.
The Huthis began the campaign in solidarity with Palestinians when Israel went to war in Gaza in October 2023. The group has carried out more than 100 attacks and have sunk two vessels. The result: 70 percent of merchant shipping that once transited the Red Sea now takes the long route around southern Africa.
The US says the campaign is working. National Security Advisor Mike Waltz said that multiple Huthi leaders had been killed.
But every round of strikes provokes more defiance.
The Huthis are what one veteran Yemen-watcher calls the honey badgers of resistance, referring to the belligerent mammal known for its fearless attitude toward predators. Bitten by a cobra, they get up minutes later and attack the snake.
While as many as 80 Huthi military officers may have been killed, according to analysts, the senior echelon of its military and political leadership appears intact. So are at least some of its missile-launching sites. Since mid-March, the Huthis have launched a dozen ballistic missiles at Israel, and barrages of drones and missiles at US navy ships. While none caused major damage, the threat remains.
CNN reported on Friday that the total cost of the US military's operation against the Iran-backed Huthi militants in Yemen is nearing $1 billion in just under three weeks, according to three people briefed on the campaign, but the attacks had so far had limited impact on destroying the group's capabilities.
'We are burning through readiness — munitions, fuel, deployment time,' said one official.
Far from being cowed, the Huthis have threatened to extend their range of targets to the UAE, which backs the rival government to the Huthis in Yemen's Civil War. Similarly, Saudi officials say the Kingdom's air defenses are on high alert.
Men check the damages in an area struck by a US airstrike in Huthi-controlled Sanaa, Yemen on March 20.
Mohammed Huwais/AFP/Getty Images
'The dozens of airstrikes on Yemen will not deter the Yemeni Armed Forces from fulfilling their religious, moral, and humanitarian duties,' said a Huthi spokesman earlier this week.
There's no doubt that the US campaign has degraded the Huthis' capabilities. Michael Knights, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute, says he suspects the Huthis 'have lost a lot of drone manufacturing capability, and there does seem to be more effective interdiction of resupply shipments coming via the sea and via Oman. So the Huthis are not comfortable.'
But history shows that the Huthis have an extraordinarily high tolerance for pain. And the Trump administration's determination to eradicate the threat they pose may ultimately require a ground offensive.
'The Huthis are just inured to being at war with a first world military,' Knights says.'They're ideological, but they're also very tough tribal fighters from northern Yemen.'
The Huthis' ability to survive is helped by an elaborate smuggling network that brings in missile parts and other equipment. Last year, hidden among cargo on one intercepted ship, air frames and fins for artillery rockets, small turbojet engines and hydrogen fuel cells were discovered, according to an investigation by Conflict Armament Research (CAR).
Such equipment could enable Huthi UAVs to carry larger payloads and to travel for far longer periods. That would 'greatly extend the potential threat posed by the Huthis,' CAR reported.
Flames and smoke rise from the Greek-flagged oil tanker Sounion, which has been on fire since August 23, on the Red Sea, on August 25, 2024.
Eenavfor Aspides/Reuters
The Huthis survived several offensives during the long presidency of Ali Abdullah Saleh in Yemen, then a Saudi offensive ten years ago, followed by more recent Israeli, UK and US airstrikes.
Ahmed Nagi, a senior analyst on Yemen at the International Crisis Group, says Israel and western powers lack a deep understanding of the Huthis. 'Their opaque leadership and internal structure have created persistent gaps in intelligence.'
Another Yemen expert, Elisabeth Kendall, questions the endgame of the US campaign. 'The Huthis have been bombed tens of thousands of times over the past decade and remain undeterred. So one is left thinking that the bombing is largely performative: let's show the world – we'll do it because we can.'
Coercing the Huthis, Knights told CNN, is 'really, really difficult.'
'They are an extremely aggressive movement. The best way to end them permanently is to overthrow them, remove them from the capital, remove them from the Red Sea coast.'
Regional diplomatic sources, as well as analysts, say that ultimately only a ground offensive can dislodge the Huthis, who currently control the Yemeni capital, Sanaa, its major port, Hodeidah, and much of northern Yemen.
Ahmed Nagi, a senior analyst on Yemen at the International Crisis Group, says the US is wrong to believe that airstrikes can compel the Huthis to back down. 'This approach failed under the Biden administration and is unlikely to succeed under the Trump administration.'
'Their logic is shaped by years of war; they see resilience as a form of strength and are driven to prove they are not easily deterred.'
'The only times I've ever seen the Huthis go to the negotiating table or compromise has been when they've been threatened with the realistic prospect of defeat on the ground: territorial loss, loss of control of populations and loss of access to the Red Sea coastline,' said Knights.
That briefly happened in 2017 when forces backed by the United Arab Emirates threatened Huthi access to the Red Sea, critical for the Huthis' revenue and military supplies.
The Huthis, if anything, may actually be relishing US strikes. They are a 'direct answer to the Huthi prayers to have a war with the US,' said Farea Al-Muslimi, a Yemeni research fellow at Chatham House. The group 'wants to drag the US into a larger regional escalation.'
A ground offensive
The Huthis are fighting for control of Yemen against the internationally recognized government that controls part of the south and is supported mainly by the UAE. The unanswered question is whether forces loyal to that government can take the fight to the Huthis. 'They're already trained and equipped,' says Knights. But there are doubts about their unity.
Analysts do not expect the US to put any troops on the ground, beyond a handful of special forces to help direct airstrikes. The US would perhaps provide [Yemeni forces] 'with a bit of logistics, certain key munitions,' Knights says.
The UAE would be 'quietly supportive' as it has long supplied the Aden-based government, he adds.
A man stands amidst the rubble of a collapsed building at the site of a reported US air strike on Yemen's Huthi-held capital Sanaa on March 24.
Mohammed Huwais/AFP/Getty Images
The Saudi perspective is less clear. Knights believes Riyadh is apprehensive about the Huthis retaliating with long-range drones and missiles against its infrastructure. But the US has accelerated deliveries of anti-missile defenses to Saudi Arabia in recent months.
The US will have to say to Riyadh: 'We are going to protect you in the same way that we protected Israel in 2024 from the two rounds of Iranian strikes,' says Knights.
Regional diplomatic sources say preparations are underway for a ground operation that would be launched from the south and east, as well as along the coast. A coordinated offensive could also involve Saudi and US naval support in an attempt to retake the port of Hodeidah.
'Whether such an operation is feasible remains unclear, as the past decade has shown mixed outcomes, successes in some areas and failures in others,' Nagi told CNN.
The Iran link
From day one, President Trump and other US officials have linked the campaign against the Huthis to Iran. Trump said he would hold Iran responsible for 'every shot' fired by Huthi rebels and it would face 'dire' consequences for any attacks by the Yemeni militants.
So far it hasn't, and it's unclear whether Tehran can simply order the Huthis to stop firing. While very much part of Iran's axis of resistance, the Huthis retain considerable autonomy.
Trump continues to warn Iran that it will face a massive bombing campaign if it doesn't do a deal to limit its nuclear and ballistic missile programs. For the administration, the Huthi campaign and the 'maximum pressure' campaign on Tehran are two sides of the same coin.
The Iranians are treading carefully, offering moral support to their ally in Yemen. Former Iranian Revolutionary Guards commander Mohsen Rezaee hailed 'the barefooted resistance forces of Yemen, who will bring advanced American warships to their knees.'
But the Iranian leadership does not want to be seen providing further military support for the Huthis right now as it tries to work out Trump's mixture of small carrot and large stick.
The US appears ready to expand its campaign. B-2 bombers and KC-135 refuelling planes have arrived on the island of Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean. That may presage strikes on hardened targets in Yemen but may equally be a signal to Iran.
The next few weeks may be a crucial test of the honey badgers' resilience.

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