Houthis consider resuming strikes on US targets to back Iran
Yemen's Houthi rebels are considering resuming strikes on US targets in the Middle East and intensifying attacks on Israel in support of Iran, Yemeni security sources said on Sunday.
The sources, based in Sanaa and Beirut, told The National that the group's leadership is considering the escalation in response to the US's apparent military support for Israel.
"The Yemeni [Houthi] leadership may resort to escalating its confrontation against aggression in the region," said one of the sources.
"There is information that Israeli aircraft are using US carriers in the northern Red Sea to launch attacks on Iran, and that refuelling is being conducted in the skies over northern Syria and northern Iraq."
Another source said: "The Houthis are seeing the US again as a legitimate target now."
Last month, US President Donald Trump said the Iran-backed Houthis 'capitulated' and that America would stop striking the rebels after they agreed to cease attacking ships in the Red Sea.
Badr Al Busaidi, Oman's Foreign Minister, confirmed later that efforts to de-escalate the situation caused by the Hamas-led attacks on Israel on October 7, 2023, had resulted in a ceasefire between the two sides.
However, the recent Israeli offensive against Iran could prompt the rebels to resume attacks on US forces in solidarity with Tehran, which has come under Israeli fire since Friday and responded with missile strikes on Israel.
Taking advantage
On Sunday, the Yemeni rebels claimed to have launched missiles at Israel in co-ordination with Iran, in the first acknowledged military action in support of Tehran by one of its regional proxies since the start of Israeli attacks.
The Houthis launched ballistic missiles at Tel Aviv in the previous 24 hours, the group's spokesman Brig Gen Yahya Saree said in an announcement reported by the rebel-aligned Saba news agency.
The region is braced for a protracted conflict after Israel's surprise bombardment of Iran's nuclear and military sites killed several senior generals and nuclear scientists. Iran responded by launching hundreds of ballistic missiles at Iran, and neither side has shown any sign of backing down.
The Houthis, along with Hezbollah in Lebanon, began launching drone and missile attacks on Israel after the start of the Gaza war in October 2023.
Hezbollah was once considered Iran's first line of defence against Israeli attacks, but Israel's retaliatory strikes against the group last year killed its political and military leaders and largely destroyed its arsenal. Lebanese officials have urged Hezbollah not to respond to the Israeli attacks on Iran and the group has assured them it would not, security sources told The National on Saturday.
Iran-backed groups in Iraq, who also launched attacks on Israel over the war in Gaza, have responded to the attacks on Iran by calling for the accelerated departure of US troops from the country, with the powerful Kataib Hezbollah warning of 'additional wars in the region'.
Israel has carried out a series of retaliatory strikes on Houthi-held areas in Yemen in recent months.
"It is not unlikely that Yemen's attacks will expand if Israel's escalating crimes against our people – including against Iran – are not stopped. Israel brings ruin to the entire region, without exception. Isn't it likely that Israel will target Iraq next?," said one of the sources close to thinking of the Houthi rebels.
"It is only natural that the Yemenis take advantage of Israel being preoccupied with facing waves of Iranian strikes," added the source.
"Applying pressure on the Israeli entity from multiple directions, fronts, and avenues, militarily, politically, and economically, helps deter the Israeli government and its crimes across the region."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Middle East Eye
7 minutes ago
- Middle East Eye
Israeli settlers continue raids in the occupied West Bank despite Iran attacks
Israeli settler groups have continued their attacks on Palestinian property in the occupied West Bank even as Israel entered a state of emergency over ongoing Iranian attacks. Palestinian sources reported that settlers attacked Palestinian property and set fires near Ramallah, Nablus and Qalqilya. In al-Mazra'a al-Sharqiya, east of Ramallah, settlers vandalised and set fire to Palestinian property on Saturday evening. One group of settlers attacked an industrial facility in the town and smashed the windshield of a vehicle. Abdel Samad Abdel Aziz, the owner of the facility, told Middle East Eye that 70 settlers had attacked the stone factory with the intention of destroying it, and the townspeople gathered to confront them. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters "When we went to the factory, we found the settlers had set fire to the existing vehicles and mobile rooms," he explained. "They were all armed, and we tried to confront them, unarmed." The settlers attacked the townspeople with sticks and stones while the Israeli army was still present and did nothing to disperse the settlers. The industrial zone in which the factory is located employs 800 Palestinian workers and is worth $200m to the local economy. 'They were all armed, and we tried to confront them, unarmed' - Abdel Samad Abdel Aziz "The settlers' goal is to undermine the Palestinian economy in the eastern part of Ramallah, which is concentrated in our town," said Abdul Aziz. "This area includes two cement and brick factories, 11 stone factories, and several blacksmith and carpentry workshops that serve tens of thousands of Palestinians." Abdul Aziz and his brothers, who own several factories, hold American citizenship, but this was ignored by the Israeli army and the settlers, he said. The settlers then attempted to burn down several homes in the town, but residents continued to confront them and defend their property. The Israeli army, however, intercepted and attacked the Palestinians. "They don't want quiet, they want constant problems. They even destroyed the olive trees on the sides of the road. Everything in their ideology is terrorism," he added. Sporadic attacks Settler attacks have not ceased despite the declaration of a state of emergency following the outbreak of war between Israel and Iran. The Israeli army has imposed a complete closure on the West Bank, preventing Palestinians from moving freely. Settlers attacked Palestinian vehicles with stones on Monday on al-Mu'arrajat Road, northwest of Jericho, and uttered provocative language, disrupting traffic and forcing several vehicles to turn back and take other routes. Israeli forces kill 80 Palestinians in ambushes on Gaza aid centres Read More » Another group dismantled a tin house belonging to a Palestinian in the neighbouring village of Arab al-Malihat, which had been inhabited by a family displaced during the previous attack on the Arab al-Kaabneh Elementary School in the village a few months earlier. A settler demolished an agricultural room in Kafr ad-Dik, west of Salfit, with a bulldozer on Monday morning, claiming it lacked a permit. The operation was carried out with full protection from the Israeli army. For several days, a group of armed settlers has been carrying out extensive land levelling operations on Palestinian land in the village of Yasuf, east of Salfit. Since the inauguration of the current Israeli government in 2022, settlers have escalated their attacks and assaults against Palestinians, with direct government support and instructions from far-right ministers Itamar Ben Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich.


Middle East Eye
7 minutes ago
- Middle East Eye
Why Netanyahu is frantically trying to pull the US into Israel's war on Iran
On Friday, 13 June 2025, Israel launched an unprovoked military attack on Iran, striking more than 100 targets - including military bases, nuclear facilities and senior leadership. The attack, which has heightened fears of a wider regional war, killed Iran's military chief of staff, the head of the Revolutionary Guard, and several members of its nuclear programme - just two days before the sixth round of US-Iran nuclear talks was set to resume. Since then, a total of 14 nuclear scientists have reportedly been assassinated in air strikes and car bombings. Tehran had been working to reaffirm its commitments under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), allowing peaceful uranium enrichment under the supervision of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Israel, however, has long opposed not only potential weaponisation but also any form of nuclear development in Iran. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters It seeks to dismantle the programme entirely, denying Iran access to nuclear energy altogether, even as it has possessed nuclear weapons since the late 1960s, remains outside the NPT and has never officially declared its arsenal. This latest assault follows years of destabilisation efforts, including covert sabotage, assassinations and violations of Iranian sovereignty - all met with silence from the international community. The United States, for its part, had advance knowledge of the strike. While White House officials have denied direct involvement, senior congressional leaders were briefed in advance - and President Donald Trump publicly praised the strikes as "successful" and said the US "knew everything" about the operation. Israel's gambit may yet backfire - ending in strategic failure and dragging the US into another unwinnable Middle East war Having long sought to provoke a large-scale confrontation, Israel is now exploiting the impunity granted by western powers amid its genocidal war on Gaza and broader regional aggression to escalate its violent campaign even further. Israeli officials who have claimed credit for regime change in Syria are now openly threatening to assassinate Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and seeking to topple the Iranian government. But to destroy Iran's fortified nuclear sites and overthrow its leadership, Israel requires full US military support. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's strategy is to provoke a wider conflict - one that forces Washington into direct war with Iran. That gambit, driven by Israel's hegemonic ambition to remain the region's sole nuclear power, may yet backfire - ending in strategic failure and dragging the US once more into a costly and unwinnable war in the Middle East. Securing the realm Since the 1979 Iranian revolution, the US and Israel have regarded the Islamic Republic of Iran as a major threat - an obstacle to US hegemony and Israeli domination in the Middle East. A key US strategy for curbing emerging regional powers has been to create counterbalances in the region. Trump's Middle East moves revive the question of who's in charge Read More » This policy explains America's tacit support for Iraq's invasion of Iran in 1980, which it fuelled for eight years before the war ended inconclusively in 1988. When Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait in 1990, the US pivoted to a dual containment policy targeting both Iran and Iraq, while simultaneously expanding its military footprint in the region. After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the US emerged as the sole global superpower - a unipolar moment. This was seen by pro-Israel political forces, both in the US and in Israel, as a golden opportunity to extend American primacy in a way that furthered Israeli regional dominance. By May 1996, Netanyahu was elected as the Israeli prime minister at a time when pro-Israel policymakers were already gaining significant influence within the Clinton administration. By the end of that year, a strategic blueprint titled "A Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm" was published. The "realm" in question was not the US, but Israel. General Wesley Clark, the former Nato Supreme Allied Commander, revealed in 2003 that shortly after the 11 September 2001 attacks, neoconservatives in the Bush administration had crafted a sweeping plan to remake the Middle East in Israel's favour. After toppling the Taliban in Afghanistan, the plan was to invade and dismantle seven Muslim-majority countries: Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, Libya, Sudan, Somalia - and ultimately Iran. In The Israel Lobby and US Foreign Policy, political scientists John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt argued convincingly that pro-Israel forces in the US played a central role in driving the invasion of Iraq. Since then, the US and Israel have worked to weaken or remove any government in the region not aligned with their interests, many of them the very countries listed by Clark. Among these, Iran has always posed the most difficult challenge. The Islamic Republic's revolutionary foundation makes it uniquely resistant to external pressure and regime change, despite decades-long sanctions, isolation and western destabilisation campaigns. The nuclear pretext For 25 years, Netanyahu has relentlessly warned that Iran was just "weeks away" from developing a nuclear bomb. However, intelligence assessments, including those from the IAEA, have consistently found no evidence that Iran was pursuing nuclear weapons. In 2015, the US and other permanent members of the Security Council, as well as Germany, reached a landmark agreement with Iran, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). The US policy of 'maximum pressure' failed, accelerating Iran's enrichment rather than halting it It allowed Iran to enrich uranium under strict international oversight, within the framework of the NPT. However, Netanyahu and his allies in the US Congress launched a campaign to kill the deal. In 2018, they succeeded in convincing Trump to withdraw from the JCPOA. Since then, both the Trump and Biden administrations have pursued a "maximum pressure" strategy - imposing harsh sanctions, financial restrictions and political isolation in an effort to coerce Iran into relinquishing its right to enrich uranium. But the policy failed. Iran accelerated its enrichment efforts, raising its uranium purity from 3.75 percent to 60 percent and amassing over 400kg of enriched uranium. When Trump returned to office in January 2025, he was eager to negotiate a new deal that would dismantle Iran's enrichment capability. On the campaign trail, he promised to avoid new wars and end America's military entanglements. However, he soon found himself facing a defiant and extremist Israeli government that had radically revised its military doctrine following the Hamas-led Toufan Al-Aqsa attack on 7 October 2023. That attack deeply shook Israeli society, which has long relied on deterrence as the most critical pillar of its military doctrine. However, a major consequence of the events at Toufan Al-Aqsa has been the undermining of this foundational element. Follow Middle East Eye's live coverage of the Israel-Palestine war To restore deterrence against the Palestinian resistance, the Zionist regime embarked on a genocidal campaign in Gaza that has already spanned more than 600 days. Meanwhile, Israel, which possesses nuclear weapons, has long opposed any regional rival developing even peaceful nuclear capabilities. It bombed nuclear reactors in Iraq in 1981 and Syria in 2007 with total impunity. Despite these precedents, it has so far failed to destroy Iran's far more advanced and dispersed nuclear infrastructure - some of which is buried deep in mountains and highly fortified. Strategic miscalculation In April 2025, Trump issued a 60-day ultimatum to Iran to accept a deal that would effectively end its nuclear enrichment capability. After five rounds of talks, a sixth round was scheduled for 15 June. However, Trump, admittedly, was complicit and engaged in a deceptive campaign to allow Israel to wage its war and bomb nuclear sites two days before their scheduled meeting. The deception worked. Israel carried out a massive decapitation strike on 13 June, assassinating over 20 senior Iranian military figures. The goal was not only to derail the talks and destroy Iran's mature nuclear programme, but to cripple Iran's military leadership and nuclear experts - in the hope of sparking regime change. By allowing Israel to bomb Iran, Trump is pushing Tehran to go nuclear Read More » As Netanyahu rejoiced and Israelis gloated, Trump tried to take some credit as many pundits and politicians were revelling and writing the Islamic Republic's obituary. But as Mark Twain once quipped: "The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated." History teaches us that it is not who fires the first shot that wins, but the one who fires the last. If one were to determine the victors during the following dates in these conflicts - such as the Iraq-Iran war in October 1980, the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in August 1982, or the American invasions of Afghanistan in October 2001 and Iraq in March 2003 - they would have wrongly predicted the outcome in every case. However, in the current conflict, Iran responded swiftly and forcefully. Within hours, Iran's supreme leader appointed new commanders, who launched a massive barrage of ballistic missiles and drones in retaliation, targeting Tel Aviv, Haifa and other Israeli cities. The scope and scale of the response were unprecedented in Israel's history. Suddenly, the Zionist regime found itself paralysed. Millions of its people were forced into bomb shelters. The vaunted Iron Dome defence system was overwhelmed. Netanyahu's calls for regime change in Iran, once brash and confident, now sounded desperate and fraught. Boxed in Israel faces a grim strategic dilemma. It cannot destroy Iran's nuclear programme without US military help. It cannot induce regime change - a feat the US has failed to achieve despite decades of effort. Thus, Netanyahu is frantically trying to pull the US into war. On the other hand, Trump faces serious constraints. His base - the "Maga" movement - strongly opposes another Middle Eastern conflict. A war with Iran could jeopardise his domestic agenda and inflame tensions with geopolitical rivals like China. Moreover, US assets in the region are vulnerable. There are 90,000 US troops (mostly in support and logistical roles rather than combat) stationed across dozens of bases, many within Iran's missile range. A wider conflict could prompt Iran to block the Strait of Hormuz, through which 21 percent of global oil passes, or attack oil fields across the Gulf - potentially causing a global economic crisis. If Netanyahu fails to draw the US into the war, and cannot dismantle Iran's nuclear capability or cause regime collapse, Israel's deterrence will be permanently weakened Israel has boxed itself in. It defines its victory as either the dismantlement of Iran's nuclear programme or the fall of the regime. Anything less will be a crushing defeat. So, Netanyahu is once again trying to manipulate a US president. But the stakes are now dangerously high. There are three main scenarios that could unfold: 1) A prolonged war of attrition: In this scenario, Israel and Iran engage in a grinding conflict that remains contained. Iran absorbs the damage and continues to strike Israeli targets, eventually emerging as the prevailing party as Israel is battered and fails to curtail Iran's nuclear capabilities. As its nuclear activities survive, its regional influence is not only restored, but also grows. 2) US intervention: America is drawn into the war, seeking to destroy Iran's nuclear programme and force Tehran into a new agreement. But this could destabilise the global economy and is unlikely to achieve its aims, given Iran's ideology and its strategic ties to Russia and China. 3) Regional conflagration: A full-blown regional war draws in multiple actors, shatters existing rules of engagement, and possibly ignites a global conflict. Some analysts have warned that this could mark the beginning of World War Three. If Netanyahu fails to draw the US into the war, and cannot dismantle Iran's nuclear capability or cause regime collapse, Israel's deterrence will be permanently weakened. Ironically, such a blow may also force Israel to end its devastating genocidal war on Gaza and abandon its quest for unchallenged regional hegemony. As Vladimir Lenin once observed: "There are decades where nothing happens; and there are weeks where decades happen." In the weeks ahead, the world may be living through one of those historic times that may define the region for decades to come. The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.


The National
12 minutes ago
- The National
President Sheikh Mohamed and Turkey's Erdogan call for dialogue as conflict rages between Israel and Iran
President Sheikh Mohamed and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan spoke by phone on Tuesday, stressing the need for diplomacy and dialogue as the conflict between Israel and Iran entered a fifth day. The leaders emphasised the importance of preserving security and stability across the region, state news agency Wam reported. Sheikh Mohamed and Mr Erdogan spoke of the implications of Israel's attack on Iran on Friday, which has triggered a deadly exchange of air strikes in the following days. Both sides reaffirmed their commitment to supporting all efforts to enhance peace in the region. Sheikh Mohamed and Mr Erdogan also discussed ways to strengthen co-operation between their countries during the call. Calming tensions Qatar's Foreign Ministry said on Tuesday that talks were under way between countries in the region and beyond to end the conflict. Meanwhile, a group of 20 countries, including the UAE, have criticised the situation in the Middle East, caused by what they called Israel's aggression against Iran. The group called for diplomacy and dialogue to restore stability. The foreign ministers of Algeria, Bahrain, Brunei, Chad, the Comoros, Djibouti, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Libya and Mauritania rejected military campaigns as a solution. Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Turkey and Oman also condemned the escalation. 'There's an imperative need to halt Israeli hostilities against Iran, which comes during a time of increasing tension in the Middle East, and to work towards de-escalation, to achieve a comprehensive ceasefire and restoration of calm,' a joint statement said.