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US & UK attack Houthi rebels in Yemen!

tiredretired

The Old Salt
Iran is attacking US military bases.

The US & UK are attacking Houthis.

Ukraine and Russia are still going at it.

Israel and Hamas are still going at it.

And NONE of this was happening when Trump was President. Biden said he’d restore our global standing.

All he did was cause a global war.
 
But those stomped ants won't be returning
There's a queen and her attendants in the nest making more everyday to come at you. You must destroy all the sources of the enemy to eliminate the threat. Otherwise accept them in your sugar bowl.

Don't get me wrong. Ants have a natural right to life. But not in my sugar bowl. They are not compatible with my lifestyle. So, stay away or die.

Same with terrorists.
 
But we are never really committed to stomping them out completely are we. This will be more of the same
We have been stomping those, inside the house, and world wide since 9/11/2001, when the towers were burned. And never went for the nests and the queens.

In fact, we have paid tribute to no avail.

And now, 22 years later, we have left our back door wide open with a welcome sign.

How is your trust in the government?

BTW;
This is how we used to handle Terrorists.
 
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But we are never really committed to stomping them out completely are we. This will be more of the same
We backed Saudi Arabia for years while they tried to stop on the Houthis.

We then tried to 'go along to get along' with them under the current administration.

They hate the US. PERIOD. Pretty much no way we can make peace with them. No way we can become friends with them. They want us dead. It is difficult to reason or negotiate with people who have only the goal of killing you.

So what will we do?

Probably not get rid of them, probably only temporarily disable them. But Iran will re-arm them.
 
Found this to be a very interesting take.
And I tend to agree with much of it.
The US/UK attacks will only embolden the Houthi rebels (unless we can actually destroy them, which seems unlikely)




The Houthis won’t back down after US and UK strikes on Yemen

Air strikes will not prevent further attacks in the Red Sea but have already regionalized Yemen’s civil war and delayed the fragile peace process.

12 January 2024
2024-01-12-houthi-response-US-1917401312.jpg
US and UK air strikes on Yemen on 11 and 12 January were characterized by the Biden administration as ‘a clear message’ that the US will not ‘allow hostile actors to imperil freedom of navigation’ in the Red Sea. UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak described the strikes as ‘limited, necessary and proportionate action in self-defence’.
The air strikes come after the Houthis ignored calls to end their assaults, including a private formal letter delivered to the group leadership by the UK on behalf of the international community (according to various senior Houthi leaders).
The US/ UK strikes are presumably intended as the only possible bad choice to pressure the Houthis to end their hostile activity. But these strikes are largely symbolic, mostly a response to pressure from local actors, shipping firms and other interests who have seen costs rise during the last months of Houthi attacks. One shipping company has already expressed its approval for the operation.
The questions are what actual effect will these air strikes have on Houthi operations, how will the Houthis respond, and what broader impact will the events have on the region?

Houthi capabilities

The air strikes are highly unlikely to have a significant impact on Houthi military capabilities, especially their maritime operations.
The Houthis are far more savvy, prepared, and well-equipped than many Western commentators realize.
The Houthis are far more savvy, prepared, and well-equipped than many Western commentators realize. They are highly experienced in waging war after years of brutal conflict, involving direct confrontation with Saudi Arabia and a lot of supporting and capacity building from Iran through the years.
For the last five years Houthi capabilities have been consistently underestimated, even as Iranian support has seen their drone and missile forces develop considerably. Their recklessness, and willingness to escalate in the face of a challenge, is also significant and always underrated.
The Houthis know that international support for US and UK strikes is thin. The recent UN Security Council resolution, calling for the Houthis to cease their attacks, provided the closest to international cover for the air strikes – though it did not endorse military action specifically. But other major countries were clearly not interested in participating in these US-led military operations.
The Saudis, for instance, have stayed out – having seen their own air strikes against the Houthis fail to achieve results for nine years. Other regional players remain distant, fearful of the politics involved in attacking a group that has framed its activities in the Red Sea as in solidarity with Palestinians.
Houthi leadership will have calculated, correctly, that a Western attack on Yemen will only increase local and regional support for their efforts.
Regardless, an anti-Israel/US stance is fundamental to Houthi ideology and their leadership will have calculated, correctly, that a Western attack on Yemen will only increase local and regional support for their efforts. The US and UK will more than ever be perceived by a majority in the Middle East as outright allies of Israel in a broader regional conflict.
These strikes will therefore not make the Houthis halt or reduce their attacks – which were unlikely to cease so long as the Gaza war continued.
If anything, the attacks on Yemen will have the opposite effect, instigating a widened Houthi campaign. This will include attacks on US and UK installations across the Arabian Peninsula, and oil infrastructure – using missile and weapons technology the Houthis have already demonstrated through their launches against Israel.

Yemen’s peace process

One thing the air strikes will achieve is to draw out and further regionalize and internationalize Yemen’s destructive civil wars, expand the conflict, and make long-awaited UN efforts to resume a peace process virtually impossible.
The airstrikes will also have a tremendously negative impact on food security and transport in the country – already a nightmarish situation following the fallout from the pandemic, the Ukraine war and Yemen’s own civil wars.
There will certainly be no call within Yemen for the Houthis to pull back.
There will certainly be no call within Yemen for the Houthis to pull back. Airstrikes, and force overall, don’t make a difference in this extremely complicated country. Even the Houthis’ foes in the civil war could not and will not endorse the US action – at least not publicly. In Yemen, even more than Iraq, there is a powerful sentiment against outsider interference.

Expanding the Gaza war

It is not clear if and to what extent Iran played a direct role instigating the Houthis’ activities, which will have required no encouragement from Tehran. The Iranians have been content to observe developments from a distance, denying direct involvement but approving of the threat to US interests and prestige.
 
In case you didnt know it our goverment has their head up their ASS!

This is the lowest rated terroist rating we have

30 days for the houthis to get their shit together before we start sanctons

source

The United States has announced the re-designation of the Yemen-based group Ansarallah, also known as the Houthis, as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist (SDGT). This move comes in response to a series of unprecedented attacks carried out by the Houthi militants against U.S. military forces and international shipping in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden.

National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan made the announcement, stating that the attacks by the militants have endangered U.S. personnel, civilian mariners, and partners, while also jeopardizing global trade and threatening freedom of navigation.

“These attacks fit the textbook definition of terrorism,” said Sullivan.

Since November, the Houthis have carried nearly 30 attacks on international shipping in the Red Sea, Bab-el-Mandab Strait, and Gulf of Aden, in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza. The attacks have forced many shipping companies to reroute their fleets around the Cape of Good Hope, adding to transit times and pushing freight rates higher. The Houthis have continued to launch attacks even after military strikes by the U.S. and Britain on multiple targets in Yemen, demonstrating that the group remains undeterred.

Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken previously removed the Houthis’ SDGT designation and de-listed it as a foreign terrorist organization (FTO) in February 2021 due to concerns the designation would impede assistance to the humanitarian crisis in Yemen after it was designated by the Trump administration in its final weeks. The group has remained sanctioned under an Obama-era executive order related to acts that threaten the peace, security, or stability of Yemen.

At the time of the revocation, Secretary Blinken said the administration “will continue to closely monitor the activities of Ansarallah and its leaders and are actively identifying additional targets for designation, especially those responsible for explosive boat attacks against commercial shipping in the Red Sea and UAV and missile attacks into Saudi Arabia.”

The newly-announced designation, which will take effect in 30 days, aims to impede terrorist funding to the Houthis, restrict their access to financial markets, and hold them accountable for their actions. However, if the Houthis were to cease their attacks, the U.S. has said it would immediately reevaluate this designation, Sullivan said.

This time around, the U.S. intends to put robust humanitarian carve outs in place so that the sanctions target the Houthis and not the Yemeni people. For example, commercial shipments into Yemeni ports, which are crucial sources of food, medicine, and fuel for the Yemeni people, are not covered by the sanctions.

“The people of Yemen should not pay the price for the actions of the Houthis,” said Sullivan. “We are sending a clear message: commercial shipments into Yemeni ports on which the Yemeni people rely for food, medicine and fuel should continue and are not covered by our sanctions. This is in addition to the carveouts we include in all sanctions programs for food, medicine, and humanitarian assistance.”
 
I saw a report that basically Biden was looking for a way to claim they are a terrorist organization so the media could report on it, which would be popular with the voters, but at the same time, not actually do anything about them. Seems that he found a way.
 
Apparently we are in a game of "whack a mole" with the Houthi rebels.

Clearly they are winning. Their game is to disrupt. Their game is stop shipping and cause massive economic damage. They are managing to do both, using mobile launch sites and disposable drones.





Houthi Rebels Fire Missiles At Two Ships As Red Sea Crisis Rages On

Iran-backed Houthi rebels targeted two commercial ships sailing in the southern Red Sea following airstrikes by the United States and the United Kingdom on dozens of locations across Yemen, Iraq, and Syria over the weekend. This escalation around the maritime chokepoint has led to a blockade of ships, marking a new round of cost-push inflation due to snarled supply chains.
Reuters quoted a Houthi spokesman who said anti-ship missiles were fired at the Morning Tide and Star Nasia, flying Barbados- and Marshall Islands flags, respectively, as British and American.
British maritime security firm Ambrey said Morning Tide suffered damage from a suicide drone while sailing southeast through the Red Sea. No injuries were reported.
The owner of the Morning Tide told Reuters the vessel was sailing "without problems" but declined to give further information.
The United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) reported after midnight GMT that a projectile was fired at the port side of a ship located 57 nautical miles west of Hodeidah. The ship's bridge suffered minor damage. It noted all crew were safe.
 
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For the life of me I do not understand our military strategy.
With our tech, we know exactly where the attack came from, and I would imaging within seconds.
Bomb the living phuk out of it and 9 more known launch sites. Immediately. No time for discussion. Fyre Frei!
 
For the life of me I do not understand our military strategy.
With our tech, we know exactly where the attack came from, and I would imaging within seconds.
Bomb the living phuk out of it and 9 more known launch sites. Immediately. No time for discussion. Fyre Frei!
War is now so political that the folks on the ground can't go to the bathroom without permission from the top.
 
So far NOTHING has changed.

Well maybe we have spent a huge amount of money knocking some of their missiles out of the air and patrolling the sea, but commercial shipping is crippled throughout that region.

And now the Houthis are firing their missiles over Saudi Arabia and into Israel.

Can someone tell me why we have not simply carpet bombed these idiots yet?


 
So far NOTHING has changed.

Well maybe we have spent a huge amount of money knocking some of their missiles out of the air and patrolling the sea, but commercial shipping is crippled throughout that region.

And now the Houthis are firing their missiles over Saudi Arabia and into Israel.

Can someone tell me why we have not simply carpet bombed these idiots yet?


No problem

Liberals and President Joe Biden.
 
So far NOTHING has changed.

Well maybe we have spent a huge amount of money knocking some of their missiles out of the air and patrolling the sea, but commercial shipping is crippled throughout that region.

And now the Houthis are firing their missiles over Saudi Arabia and into Israel.

Can someone tell me why we have not simply carpet bombed these idiots yet?


We didn't do it on the 2 previous sandbox or in Vietnam for that matter events why start now it stops the war business from raping the government over the coal for $$$$$$$$$

Same as cure for cancer etc. big business makes too much money on treating it as opposed to vaccines to prevent it (just my opinion but now after covid vaccine debachel I'm not sure this is a good idea).
 
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