Ship Hit By Suspected Houthi Missiles In Red Sea

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A commercial ship traveling through the Red Sea came under repeated attack, leaving the vessel “not under command” in an assault suspected to have been carried out by Yemen’s Houthi rebels, reports CBS News. 

Hit By Projectiles 

The attack saw men on small boats first open fire with small arms, the British military’s United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations Center said. The ship also was hit by three projectiles, it added.

The vessel reports being not under command,” the UKMTO said, likely meaning it lost all power. “No casualties reported.”

UKMTO did not identify the vessel, which was carrying 25 crew members. They said it was attacked about 72 nautical miles west of Hodeida and that all crew members were reportedly in good health. The ministry confirmed damage to the vessel from the attack and said it remained where it had been struck, adding that it had been routed from Iraq to Greece.

Late Acknowledgment 

The Houthis did not immediately claim the attack, though it can take them hours or even days to acknowledge their assaults.

Thus far the group has sunk two ships, most recently a Liberian-flagged bulk carrier called the Tutor that went down in June. Nobody was killed in that attack, but the sinking vessel is believed to have severed several undersea communications cables.

The first ship sunk by a Houthi attack was a British-owned vessel struck by a missile in early March. U.S. officials said a Houthi missile attack on another commercial ship, in the Gulf of Aden, also in March, killed at least three people and injured four others.

The attacks have drawn a coordinated military response from the U.S. and Britain, which have bombed Houthi infrastructure in Yemen for months and shot down dozens of Houthi-launched drones and missiles, but failed to stem the attacks in the vital shipping lanes of the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden.

The Houthis call the attacks a direct response to the Israel-Hamas war. The Yemeni rebels are backed by Iran, like Hamas. The U.S. accused Iran in December of being “deeply involved” in the attacks on ships in the Red Sea. Officials in Tehran reject any culpability, insisting the Houthis and other groups that operate across the region with Iran’s support – often referred to as proxies – plan and act independently.

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Source: CBSnews