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Analysis

By avoiding confrontation with Iran and its proxies the West is stoking up further aggression

The failure to grasp this basic fact has enabled unprecedented Houthi success – with no sign of change

September 12, 2024 10:01
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Houthis take part in a pro-Palestinian rally in Sanaa amid the ongoing conflict in the Gaza Strip (Photo by MOHAMMED HUWAIS/AFP via Getty Images)
4 min read

Last week, the Yemeni Ansar Allah movement, better known as the Houthis, claimed to have downed a US-made MQ-9 drone over Yemen’s Marib Province, a key and contested oil and gas-rich area of the country. The US dismissed the claim. The dismissal notwithstanding, US and British aircraft carried out strikes against Houthi targets over the Hodaidah area of Yemen.

The latest exchanges of fire reflect the curious dynamic that governs the undeclared (and largely ignored) war between the Iran-supported Shia Islamist movement and the US and UK.

In every round of fighting, the Western allies demonstrate an obvious tactical superiority over their opponents. Yet for all this, the Houthis continue to enjoy the strategic advantage. Their nine-month drone and missile campaign against shipping on the Gulf of Aden/Red Sea route has succeeded in imposing a near complete closure of this route for commercial traffic. So how have the rag-tag rulers of a dusty stretch of Yemen and their Iranian backers managed to enforce their will on a key global maritime trade route? And what does this imply for the future?

First, a few facts and figures: the Houthi campaign against shipping on the Gulf of Aden/Red Sea route started in November. It forms an element of a partial but significant mobilisation by the Iranians of assets across the region in support of the Hamas war effort in Gaza.