Arash Azizi

Airstrikes won’t stop the Houthis’ Red Sea attacks

A Houthi fighter takes control of a ship in the Red Sea (Credit: Getty images)

It was less than two weeks ago that the US and UK introduced a new element to the multi-faceted conflict in the Middle East. On 12 January they carried out joint strikes against the Houthis, a militia that controls Yemen’s capital Sanaa and large parts of Yemeni territory and is recognised as the country’s government by its main backer, Iran.

The UK and US strikes came in response to weeks of Houthi attacks on ships passing through the Red Sea. The militia claimed its attacks were in response to Israel’s assault on Gaza but in practice it was targeting any and all shipping in the area as well as US and UK warships. In other words, they started it.

The US and its Western allies are now involved in a multi-faceted conflict in the Middle East

Since then, the US has hit Houthis seven more times. On 23 January, the UK once again joined it in its eighth strike.

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