Regional instability risks mount in the Red Sea following the Iran-backed Houthi attack on a Maersk container ship on Sunday. US Forces responded with attack helicopters that eliminated three small boats and ten rebels.
After the skirmish, a spokesperson for the Yemeni militia group warned of "consequences and repercussions" for the US aggression.
Houthi military spokesman Yahya Sarea confirmed on the Yemeni TV channel Al-Masirah that US forces killed ten of its fighters.
"US enemy forces attacked three boats belonging to the Yemeni Naval Forces, which led to the martyrdom and the loss of ten people from the Naval Forces," Sarea said.
The spokesman said its
fighters were "performing their humanitarian and moral duty" to deter
Israel-related commercial vessels from transiting the Red Sea "in
solidarity and support for the Palestinian people."
Yemen's Houthi spokesperson Yahya Sarea says the group will continue to seize ships linked to Israel in the Red Sea despite a US-led coalition being deployed pic.twitter.com/bX0QWs5EFu
— TRT World Now (@TRTWorldNow) January 1, 2024
He said the US "bears the consequences" for attacking and killing ten of its fighters, adding that the "military movements in the Red Sea to protect Israeli ships will not prevent Yemen (Houthi militia) from performing its humanitarian duty in support of Palestine and Gaza."
Perhaps even more problematically from a global escalation perspective, Iran dispatched a warship to the Red Sea.
The Alborz destroyer traversed the Bab El-Mandeb strait, a narrow choke point between the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, on Monday, Iranian state media said, adding that Iran’s naval fleet has been operating in the area “to secure shipping lanes, repel pirates, among other purposes since 2009.”
The move appears to represent a clear challenge to the US-led maritime security force established last month to protect ships from attack in the region.
Earlier in the day, US Central Command (CENTCOM) reported it received a distress call from a Singapore-flagged Maersk container ship named "Hangzhou."
CENTCOM wrote on X that a missile hit Hangzhou in the Red Sea.
USS GRAVELY shoots down two anti-ship ballistic missiles while responding to Houthi attack on merchant vessel.
— U.S. Central Command (@CENTCOM) December 31, 2023
Today at approximately 8:30 p.m. (Sanaa time), the container ship MAERSK HANGZHOU reported that they were struck by a missile while transiting the Southern Red Sea. The… pic.twitter.com/nUgifhkdC8
CENTCOM
said attack helicopters from the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS
Dwight D. Eisenhower and USS Gravely were quickly deployed and
eliminated three small boats and Houthi militants.
Iranian-backed Houthi small boats attack merchant vessel and U.S. Navy helicopters in Southern Red Sea
— U.S. Central Command (@CENTCOM) December 31, 2023
On Dec. 31 at 6:30am (Sanaa time) the container ship MAERSK HANGZHOU issued a second distress call in less than 24 hours reporting being under attack by four Iranian-backed… pic.twitter.com/pj8NAzjbVF
What's clear is that tensions across the Bab al-Mandab Strait are only worsening despite the Pentagon's Operation Prosperity Guardian mission to shield commercial vessels from attacks in the Red Sea.
(Article by Tyler Durden republished from ZeroHedge.com)