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Gaza war: Why Houthis pose a stubborn challenge to US in Red Sea

American helicopters answering a distress call from a cargo ship early Sunday came under fire from Houthi boats in the Red Sea, the U.S. military said. And in the first direct lethal contact of its kind since U.S. forces sought to secure the key global shipping route during the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza, the U.S. military says it killed 10 Houthi sailors and sank three out of four small Houthi boats.

Houthi officials vowed revenge, and two ballistic missiles were fired into the area late Tuesday. In turn, the White House warned Wednesday that the Houthis would face “consequences” if they did not stop their attacks.

Why We Wrote This

From Lebanon to Iraq and Yemen, attacks by the Iran-led “Axis of Resistance” have raised concerns that the Israel-Hamas war could escalate into a regional conflict. In the Red Sea, a U.S. bid to secure shipping lanes faces a determined adversary.

The military encounters are adding to the risk of a regional escalation of the Gaza war. The Iran-backed Houthis, part of the Iran-led “Axis of Resistance,” have vowed to target commercial ships linked to Israel until the Jewish state stops its war in Gaza.

Analysts say the Houthis’ armed faceoff with American warships and helicopters boosts the militia’s bona fides.

“The Houthis are intoxicated by their new status,” says Abdulghani al-Iryani at the Sana’a Center for Strategic Studies. “Taking on the Americans has symbolic value. … They will continue to fire missiles at ships and disrupt the flow of commerce.”

Increasing military encounters between U.S. naval forces and Yemen’s Houthi fighters in the Red Sea are jeopardizing a key global transport route and adding to the risk of a regional escalation of the Israel-Hamas war. The Iran-backed Houthis have vowed to target commercial ships linked to Israel until the Jewish state stops its war in Gaza.

In the first direct lethal contact of its kind, the U.S. military says it killed 10 Houthi sailors and sank three out of four small Houthi boats that were attacking the Maersk Hangzhou cargo vessel in the southern Red Sea after dawn Sunday.

American helicopters answering a distress call from the ship came under fire from Houthis, the U.S. Central Command said on X, formerly Twitter.

Why We Wrote This

From Lebanon to Iraq and Yemen, attacks by the Iran-led “Axis of Resistance” have raised concerns that the Israel-Hamas war could escalate into a regional conflict. In the Red Sea, a U.S. bid to secure shipping lanes faces a determined adversary.

Houthi officials vowed revenge, and two ballistic missiles were fired into the area late Tuesday – the 24th such Houthi attack directed against Red Sea shipping since Nov. 19, when helicopter-borne Houthi fighters hijacked the vessel Galaxy Leader and took its crew of 25 hostage.

The White House Wednesday, in a joint statement with 12 other nations, warned that Houthis would face “consequences” if they did not stop the “illegal, unacceptable, and profoundly destabilizing” attacks.

But analysts say the Houthis’ armed faceoff with American warships and helicopters, in the name of defending Palestinians in Gaza, boosts the militia’s bona fides and provides another means that the Iran-led “Axis of Resistance” – which includes the Houthis – challenges Israeli and U.S. influence in the region.

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