Houthis Declare 'Total Ban' on Israeli Red Sea Shipping
The group said Israeli-linked vessels will be treated as military targets after claiming missile strikes toward Israel amid the regional war.
- Yemen's Houthi rebels officially re-entered the regional conflict on Monday morning, launching a ballistic missile attack at Israel and shattering their compliance with a nominal regional ceasefire that had held since April 8.
- The group declared a "complete and total ban" on Israeli maritime navigation in the Red Sea, with military spokesperson Brig. Gen. Yahya Saree broadcasting a warning that any Israel-affiliated vessels passing through the waterway will immediately become active targets again.
- The Houthi missile targeted sensitive areas within the central Jaffa region near Tel Aviv, forcing the temporary closure of Israeli airspace before Israel's Channel 12 reported that the IDF's multi-layered air defense array successfully intercepted the incoming threat.
- Houthi leadership framed the escalation as a direct defense of the "Axis of Resistance," asserting that their actions are a coordinated response to intense Israeli military operations across Iran, Palestine, Lebanon, Iraq, and Yemen.
- The naval blockade threat raises immediate global anxiety over a renewed shipping crisis, coming just hours after Israel and Iran traded massive, direct air and missile salvos on the milestone 100th day of their broader conflict.
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98 Articles
A Huthi source told Newsweek, "We are part of the unity of the locations, the ideal solution to put an end to Israeli debauchery."
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Yemen’s Houthis said on Monday that they would ban ships linked to Israel from the Red Sea after Israel renewed its military attacks on Iran, adding to concerns about global shipping and energy flows. This is why it matters and what it means for the Iran war and the global energy crisis: How big is the risk to global energy markets? Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz since Israel and the United States attacked it on February 28 has disrupted…
Why the Houthis are threatening Red Sea shipping and what it means for oil markets
Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthis said on Monday they would ban vessels linked to Israel from transiting the Red Sea, following renewed Israeli military strikes on Iran. The move has raised concerns about global shipping security and energy flows. The announcement comes amid heightened regional tensions, with markets closely watching whether the conflict could again disrupt key maritime trade routes. How big is the risk to global energy markets? Iran…
Strategic sea lanes could be a little more disturbed in the Middle East. Yemen's Houthis rebels, Iran's allies, claimed a missile attack on Israel on Monday, 8 June. They also decreed a ban on Israeli navigation in the Red Sea.
Houthis join Iran war, threatening Red Sea trade amid Hormuz closure
Yemen's Houthis declared a ban on Israeli shipping in the Red Sea and claimed a missile strike on Israel, with the Bab el-Mandeb and Hormuz blockades now simultaneously threatening roughly a third of the world's seaborne oil and gas.
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