US, allies attack Houthi targets in Yemen in response to missile barrages in the Red Sea

On Wednesday, National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby called on the Houthis to halt the attacks, warning that if they continued they would “bear the consequences.”

Still, the multinational strikes risked escalating a simmering Middle Eastern conflict sparked by Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel. President Joe Biden’s national security team has considered options for striking back at the Houthis in the last few weeks, but had until this point decided to hold off.

The latest Houthi attack came on Thursday morning, when the Iran-backed group fired an anti-ship ballistic missile into international shipping lanes in the Gulf of Aden. This was the 27th such attack since Nov. 19, the Pentagon said.

The Houthis, a Yemen-based movement, are among several armed groups in the region that have gone after Israeli, U.S. or other targets as Israel has retaliated against Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip.

The Biden administration’s No. 1 objective since Oct. 7 has been to keep the Israel-Hamas fight contained and prevent a broader regional war. But Biden has been under increasing political pressure to respond to the Houthi attacks.

Iran itself signaled it could get more directly involved in the conflict at sea on Thursday, when an Iranian navy ship unlawfully seized a Marshall Islands-flagged oil tanker while it was transiting the Gulf of Oman. The Iranian crew boarded and took control of the vessel, forcing it to change course toward Iranian territory, the Pentagon said. Its status is now unknown.

Thursday’s strike marks yet another attack by the U.S. on Iranian proxies since the war in Gaza broke out, and it raises questions about how much further the administration is willing to go to deter future assaults on U.S. troops and international commercial freighters.

In recent weeks, the United States had pulled together an alliance of countries to help police the affected waterways and deter the Houthis under Operation Prosperity Guardian. The U.S. and its partners have shot down over 80 drones and several Houthi ballistic and anti-ship missiles, which were aimed primarily at commercial shipping.

The U.S. and U.K. have deployed warships to the Red Sea as part of that effort, and each ship is capable of using missiles or air defense guns to knock down the drones and missiles. None of the warships has been struck, despite military officials from both countries saying some of the drones were likely aiming for the vessels.

In late December, U.S. Navy helicopters sank three Houthi boats, killing several fighters in the process. The Houthis were attempting to attack a commercial ship and had fired on the American helicopters.

Intelligence officials have closely monitored the situation in the region, collecting information about potential plans by various Iranian-backed rebel groups, including the Houthis, to directly target American forces or personnel stationed overseas, according to a senior intelligence official who, like others in this story, was granted anonymity to discuss sensitive national security operations.

Congressional Republicans have criticized the Biden administration for not taking tougher action to deter Tehran and its proxies.

On Thursday, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said Iran’s seizure of an oil tanker off the coast of Oman is “a further reminder that the Biden administration’s failure to impose serious costs and restore credible deterrence is emboldening Tehran.”

As the Houthis have targeted international commercial freighters, Israeli troops and Hezbollah militants have exchanged fire along Israel’s border with Lebanon. Iran-backed militias in Iraq also have launched attacks on U.S. forces, and the U.S. has responded by bombing storage sites.

The Houthi attacks in the Red Sea have sparked worries in Washington because of their impact on international trade, including severely delaying shipments and raising insurance rates, another senior official said.

Already, a number of major shipping companies have halted traffic through the Red Sea, instead directing ships to transit the Cape of Good Hope — adding weeks to the journey.

Thanks in part to Iran, the Houthis have grown in prominence and military strength as they fought a lengthy war with Saudi-led forces for control over Yemen. That war, which sparked a humanitarian catastrophe, had in recent years reached an uneasy truce.

It was not immediately clear if that truce inside Yemen would collapse in the face of the U.S. moves, but Saudi and American officials have tried to ensure that it does not.

Joe Gould, Paul McLeary and Erin Banco contributed to this report.