Get you up to speed: Yemen’s Houthi rebels launch missile towards Israel, escalating conflict
Yemen’s Houthi rebels have launched a missile targeting Israel, marking their first involvement in the ongoing conflict since it began one month ago after the US and Israel initiated Operation Epic Fury. A military spokesman for the Houthis stated they are prepared to join the war on behalf of Iran following attacks on power and nuclear sites.
Yemen’s Houthi rebels have launched a missile towards Israel, marking their entry into the ongoing conflict following the US and Israel’s Operation Epic Fury, according to a military spokesman for the Houthis. The group has stated they are prepared to respond with “punishment or retaliation” after recent airstrikes targeted Iranian sites.
Yemen’s Houthi rebels have declared their preparedness to join the war on behalf of Iran following targets being struck by the US and Israel. They have accused the West of ‘blatant aggression’ and vowed to respond with ‘punishment or retaliation’ after recent airstrikes hit numerous targets in the region.
Who are the Houthis? Yemen’s rebels joining war against the US in the Middle East | News World
Yemen’s Houthi rebels have joined the conflict in the Middle East, launching a missile bound for Israel.
It marks the first time the country has involved itself in the war, which began one month ago today after the US and Israel launched Operation Epic Fury.
Strikes have covered the region ever since, with Trump targeting Tehran while Iran launches strikes at US military bases.
Now, a military spokesman for the Houthis said they are prepared to join the war on behalf of Iran after the US and Israel targeted power and nuclear sites.
This is not the first time they have involved themselves in conflict in the region.
Two years ago the breakaway faction repeatedly launched drones and missiles against commercial vessels, claiming to be attacking Israeli ships in support of Palestine.
It accused the West of ‘blatant aggression’ and after airstrikes on Friday hit dozens of targets, vowing to respond with ‘punishment or retaliation’.
Britain has walked a tightrope over Yemen’s civil war for the last decade – keep reading to find out who’s involved and why some fear the situation could escalate into a full-blown war in the region.
Who are the Houthi rebels?

Thousands of people gather at Sabeen Square, under the control of the Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen, to protest the killing of Iran’s leader Ali Khamenei (Picture:Mohammed Hamoud/Anadolu via Getty Images)
The Houthi movement is a political and military group that follows a minority strand of Islam called Zaydism, and draws its name from an ancient Arab tribe from northern Yemen called the Houthis.
Following rising instability in the wake of the Arab Spring, they seized control of the Yemeni capital of Sana’a in 2014, sparking one of the deadliest civil wars in recent history – which is still ongoing today.
Yemen’s official government, recognised by most countries including the UK, is backed by a Saudi-led coalition which Britain has supplied with weapons.
Both sides are widely believed to have carried out war crimes and atrocities against civilians, overseeing some of the worst humanitarian conditions in the world.
The Houthis are currently in control over almost all of northern Yemen, although much of the country has been devastated, with a death toll of over 150,000.

The Houthis are locked in one of the deadliest conflicts in recent history (Picture: Reuters)
What does their involvement in the conflict mean for the war?
Although the involvement of the Houthis may help Iran bolster supplies, it does not help them strategically.
A former top UK military commander told WTX.co.uk: ‘This development increases the risk to political stability and has the potential to further undermine economic confidence. It is a cause for concern.
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‘Modern warfare, as demonstrated in Ukraine and recently in the Middle East, has shown that while countering the drone threat is difficult, it is not impossible. It is a cat-and-mouse game and addressing it demands skill, patience, and technology.
‘However, it is important to recognise that tactical military solutions do not resolve strategic problems. The issue surrounding the conflict with Iran is strategic in nature and the weapons of war won’t resolve that.
‘It will be resolved when one or both sides reach a point of exhaustion and turn toward negotiation and diplomacy. We are just four weeks in and it is far too early to determine the outcome.
‘Historically, wars end either in total defeat or exhaustion. In this case I think we are going to see more exhaustion than complete destruction.’
Have the Houthis been involved in conflict before?
Houthi forces launched dozens of drone and missile strikes on commercial vessels two years ago following the Israel-Hamas war on October 7.
The faction’s goal was ‘prevent Israeli ships from navigating the Arab and Red Seas in support of the oppressed Palestinian people’.
In reality, though, almost all the targets were international trading ships – some making port in Israel, many simply passing through to other parts of the world.

HMS Diamond and US jets shot down the biggest wave of drone and missile attacks in the Red Sea on container ships (Picture: MOD)
One of the first incidents – when the Houthis hijacked what they claimed was an Israeli cargo ship in November – actually involved a British-owned ship run by a Japanese firm and staffed by crew from all around the world.
More recently, a Houthi spokesperson said any ship destined for Israel is a ‘legitimate target’. The UN’s shipping watchdog has since confirmed that the Houthis are continuing to attack ships with no links to Israel whatsoever.
Who supports the Houthis?

Yemeni men brandish weapons and portraits of leader Abdul Malik al-Houthi (Picture: AFP)
Yemen’s Houthis are backed by Iran, which began increasing its aid to the group in 2014 as the civil war broke out.
Iran’s theocratic government follows the Shia branch of Islam, of which the Houthi’s Zaydist belief system is a strand.
Iran has given the militants training and an array of sophisticated weapons and military technology, with the alleged help of Lebanon’s Hezbollah terrorist group.
The West has accused Iran of involvement in the Red Sea attacks two years ago and ordering the Houthis and other Middle Eastern militias to carry out their attacks on Israel, which Iran denies.
The UN Panel of Experts on Yemen previously found that Iran has ‘failed to take the necessary measures to prevent the direct or indirect supply, sale or transfer’ of various ballistic missiles that the Houthis have deployed against all the vessels.
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