US strikes Houthi target after British oil tanker comes under fire
A member of Houthi security forces srtand guard in Sanaa, Yemen, Jan. 26, 2024. (AFP Photo)


U.S. forces struck an anti-ship missile in Houthi-held Yemen that they said was ready to fire Saturday, hours after the Iran-backed rebels caused a fire on a British tanker in the Gulf of Aden with a similar munition.

U.S. and British forces have launched joint strikes aimed at reducing the Houthis' ability to target vessels transiting the key Red Sea trade route – attacks the rebels say are in support of Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, where Israel is raising a deadly war that killed over 26,000 people.

Washington has also carried out a series of unilateral air raids, but the Houthis have vowed to continue their attacks.

The U.S. military's Central Command, CENTCOM, said it had carried out another strike early Saturday on a Houthi "anti-ship missile aimed into the Red Sea and which was prepared to launch.

"Forces subsequently struck and destroyed the missile in self-defence," it said on social media platform X.

The Houthis' Al-Masirah television said the United States and Britain had launched two airstrikes on the port of Ras Issa in Yemen's Hodeida province, which hosts the country's main oil export terminal.

There was no immediate confirmation from Washington or London, and the Houthis did not provide details on the attack or the extent of the damage.

The previous evening, the Houthis' military spokesman Yahya Saree said missiles fired by the rebels had hit the Marlin Luanda, an oil tanker operated by a British firm on behalf of trading giant Trafigura Group.

"The strike was direct, and resulted (in) the burning of the vessel," Saree said.

Tanker ablaze

CENTCOM later confirmed the hit, saying it had started a "major fire."

Other vessels had come to the ship's assistance, including the U.S.S Carney, the French Navy Frigate FS Alsace and Indian Navy Frigate INS Visakhapatnam.

"Thanks to this rapid response by the U.S., Indian and French navies, the fire is now extinguished," it said in an update Saturday.

"There were no casualties in the attack, the ship remains seaworthy and has returned to its previous course," it added, confirming an earlier statement from Trafigura.

In its statement, the company said that "no further vessels operating on behalf of Trafigura are currently transiting the Gulf of Aden".

The Indian Navy said the Marlin Luanda has 22 Indians and one Bangladeshi onboard.

It said a fire-fighting team of 10 Indian naval personnel battled the blaze for six hours along with the ship's crew before bringing it under control.

On Friday the Houthis also fired an anti-ship ballistic missile from Yemen toward the Carney in the Gulf of Aden, CENTCOM said.

"The missile was successfully shot down by U.S.S Carney. There were no injuries or damage reported," it added.

British Defense Secretary Grant Shapps on Saturday said his government remains "as committed as ever" to protecting freedom of navigation following the latest "intolerable and illegal" attack by Houthi rebels.

"It is our duty to protect freedom of navigation in the Red Sea and we remain as committed to that cause as ever," he said.

The United States is leading a coalition to protect Red Sea shipping – an effort the Pentagon has likened to a highway patrol for the waterway.

Washington is also seeking to put diplomatic and financial pressure on the Houthis, redesignating them a "terrorist" organization last week after previously dropping that label soon after President Joe Biden took office.