The US Retaliates in Yemen

Similar documents
Simulation - The conflict between North Korea and the U.S.

Title Global Chokepoints

Admiral Richardson: Thank you all. Thank you very much.

International Naval Activity and Developments in the Indian Ocean Region in Q1 2012

SHOWDOWN IN THE MIDDLE EAST

Iran Nuclear Deal: The Limits of Diplomatic Niceties

The Global War on Terrorism

Threats to Peace and Prosperity

CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web

2 Articles on Just Published State Department Country Reports on

Activity: Persian Gulf War. Warm Up: What do you already know about the Persian Gulf War? Who was involved? When did it occur?

U.S. AIR STRIKE MISSIONS IN THE MIDDLE EAST

THE WHITE HOUSE. Office of the Press Secretary. For Immediate Release December 5, 2016

Guerrilla fighting in the south and clashes between southern and northern forces along the 38th parallel intensified during

Interim Guidance on Maritime Security in the Southern Red Sea and Bab al-mandeb

Yemen: Civil War and Regional Intervention

A FUTURE MARITIME CONFLICT

Understanding Diplomacy through Wargaming: Rules and Introduction

Update Paper - Battle for Mosul and US strategy for Iraq

Employing Merchant Vessels for Offshore Presence and Launch of US Military Operations

Montessori Model United Nations. Distr.: Upper Elementary Twelfth Session XX March First Committee Disarmament and International Security

Annual Report 2015 Japan's Actions against Piracy off the Coast of Somalia and in the Gulf of Aden

Montessori Model United Nations. Distr.: Middle School Twelfth Session XX March First Committee Disarmament and International Security

Name: Reading Questions 9Y

CHAPTER 8. Key Issue Four: why has terrorism increased?

TFR-028: YEMEN - COMPLEX ATTACK AGAINST CID BUILDING IN ADEN - 05 NOVEMBER The Triton Report is compiled monthly by highly specialised

CHINA S WHITE PAPER ON MILITARY STRATEGY

Axis & Allies Anniversary Edition Rules Changes

Valor in the Pacific: Education Guide

THE REPUBLIC OF LIBERIA LIBERIA MARITIME AUTHORITY

SS.7.C.4.3 International. Conflicts

THE REPUBLIC OF LIBERIA LIBERIA MARITIME AUTHORITY

SYRIA: Another Chemical Weapon False Flag on the Eve of Peace Talks in Brussels

Use of Military Force Authorization Language in the 2001 AUMF

4 Aug 92. Encl: From: Commanding Officer, USS MICHIGAN (SSBN 727) To: Director of Naval History (0-09BH), Washington Navy Yard, Washington, DC 20374

CRS Report for Congress

4. What are the 2-3 most important aspects of this island you think you should know?

THE ATOMIC BOMB DEBATE LESSON 1 JAPANESE AGGRESSION

Senate Armed Services Committee Statement on Counter-ISIL Campaign. delivered 28 October 2015, Washington, D.C.

VFW ELIGIBILITY GUIDE

Indefensible Missile Defense

Coalition Press Conference: Findings on Houthi Ballistic Missile Attacks on the. the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

Monday Warm-Up 9/12 What do you know about September 11, 2001?

Combating Terrorism at Ports

Bell Quiz: Pages

SS.7.C.4.3 Describe examples of how the United States has dealt with international conflicts.

LISCR Notes and Advisories by Date

Hostile Interventions Against Iraq Try, try, try again then succeed and the trouble

F-16 Fighting Falcon The Most Technologically Advanced 4th Generation Fighter in the World

SSUSH23 Assess the political, economic, and technological changes during the Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Clinton, George W.

ERM HUMANITARIAN HEALTH RESPONSE IN YEMEN KAREN HOBDAY, WHO. Photos: Acknowledgements to Dr Ahmed Zouiten

1. INSPECTIONS AND VERIFICATION Inspectors must be permitted unimpeded access to suspect sites.

Chapter 4 The Iranian Threat

THE CANADIAN NAVY - CONTINENTAL MARITIME SECURITY AND BEYOND

Middle Eastern Conflicts

IHS Aerospace, Defence & Security. Missiles: 2013 In Review & Forecast Outlook. Ben Goodlad. February

Intro. To the Gulf War

GLOBAL STRIKE THE INDISPENSABLE CAPABILITY FOR THE 21 ST CENTURY

mm*. «Stag GAO BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE Information on Theater High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) and Other Theater Missile Defense Systems 1150%

LISCR Notes and Advisories by Date

Timeline: Battles of the Second World War. SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance) BATTLE: THE INVASION OF POLAND

Annual Report 2014 Japan's Actions against Piracy off the Coast of Somalia and in the Gulf of Aden

Maritime Opportunities: Turkey 2014

The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution

Work Period: WW II European Front Notes Video Clip WW II Pacific Front Notes Video Clip. Closing: Quiz

Mr. President, You ve been briefed about the presence of Soviet medium-range missiles in Cuba.

The Attack on Pearl Harbor

Issue Briefs. The UN Sanctions' Impact on Iran's Military

U.S.-GCC Relations: Closing the Credibility Gap

Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Jonathan Greenert. National Press Club Remarks. 16 November 2012

Issue 16-04B (No. 707) March 22, THAAD 2. CHINA S CORE KOREA POLICY 3. UN SANCTIONS WHICH ONE NEXT? 5.

THE LESSONS OF MODERN WAR: VOLUME II THE IRAN-IRAQ WAR. By Anthony H. Cordesman and Abraham R. Wagner

Section 6. South Asia

Section 3 Counter-piracy Operations

Pakistan, Russia and the Threat to the Afghan War

Annual Report 2016 Japan's Actions against Piracy off the Coast of Somalia and in the Gulf of Aden

Writing. 6 Teacher Edition. Diagnostic Series. KAMICO Instructional Media, Inc. Instructional Media, Inc.

The Cuban Missile Crisis. October October

CRS Report for Congress

Space Capabilities indispensable at the strategic, operational as well as the tactical level of war.

Nukes: Who Will Have the Bomb in the Middle East? Dr. Gary Samore. WCFIA/CMES Middle East Seminar Harvard University October 4, 2018

DISPATCH FROM THE FIELD MARITIME INTERDICTIONS OF WEAPON SUPPLIES TO SOMALIA AND YEMEN

31 OCTOBER 2010 (U) Explosives Discovered in Packages on Cargo Aircraft Bound for the Homeland

If searched for the ebook Saddam's Attacks on America: 1993; September 11, 2001; and the Anthrax Attacks: A freewheeling and hard-hitting commentary

I. The Pacific Front Introduction Read the following introductory passage and answer the questions that follow.

Iran's Military Forces and Warfighting Capabilities

Yemen: Civil War and Regional Intervention

How Everything Became War and the Military Became Everything: Tales from the Pentagon Rosa Brooks New York: Simon & Schuster, 2016, 448 pp.

Remarks by the Honorable Ray Mabus Secretary of the Navy Address to the Mississippi Legislature Thursday, March 24, 2011

Proposed U.S. Arms Export Agreements From January 1, 2008 to December 31, 2008 Published on Arms Control Association (

UK actions against Islamic State in Iraq and Syria Intelligence briefing #5

Statement of Vice Admiral Albert H. Konetzni, Jr. USN (Retired) Before the Projection Forces Subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee

Charles Altman. Naval Officer Hat Insignia - Donated by Altman 23 June 2006

A European Net Assessment of the People s Liberation Army (Navy)

Chapter 16, Section 3

DIEPPE - BASIC FACTS. Canadians in Battle - Dieppe

Section 6. South Asia

Russia s New Conventional Capability

INSS Insight No. 459, August 29, 2013 US Military Intervention in Syria: The Broad Strategic Purpose, Beyond Punitive Action

Assessing Technologies using Campaign Analysis and War Gaming: The Warfare Innovation Continuum at NPS

Transcription:

The US Retaliates in Yemen Oct. 14, 2016 The war in Yemen could shut down shipping lanes, which the U.S. can t afford. By Jacob L. Shapiro Last Sunday, two missiles were launched at U.S. warships, the USS Mason and the USS Ponce, in the Red Sea. On Wednesday, at least three more missiles were fired at the USS Mason. In both cases the missiles failed to hit their targets. Early Thursday morning, the U.S. retaliated by destroying three radar sites in Houthi and Saleh-loyalist areas in Yemen, according to a statement released by the Pentagon. Anonymous U.S. officials told Reuters that the USS Nitze launched the Tomahawk cruise missiles that hit the radar sites. Reuters reported the sites were located in Ras Isa, on the Red Sea coast. Yemen s civil war made headlines last weekend when airstrikes hit a funeral hall, killing 140 people and injuring more than 500. Saudi Arabia has not publicly acknowledged its role in that attack, and the White House released a statement afterwards saying that its support of Saudi Arabia s 18-month-long campaign to defeat the Houthis would be reviewed. It may seem slightly strange that the U.S., just a week after expressing such displeasure with Saudi Arabia, would carry out cruise missile strikes on the very group Saudi Arabia is seeking to destroy. But it is not strange for the U.S. to take offensive action against a potential threat to a key maritime chokepoint in the region. 1 / 5

(click to enlarge) For the U.S., this is not about the Yemeni civil war. It is about making sure maritime shipping lanes are kept safe and open. The Houthis now control territory on the coast of the Red Sea and the Bab el-mandeb. The Bab el-mandeb is a strait that at its narrowest point is just 18 miles across. It is impossible to traverse from the Mediterranean Sea into the Indian Ocean via the Suez Canal without going through the Bab el-mandeb. According to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development and Egyptian government data, in 2014 roughly 10 percent of all global shipping passed through the Suez Canal. The alternative to the Suez Canal route is to go around Africa. For some perspective, shipping from northern Europe to the Persian Gulf would take roughly 10 to 12 days longer if going around the Cape of Good Hope. The U.S. dispatched three ships to this region at the beginning of October: the USS Mason, the USS Nitze and the USS Ponce. The USS Mason and the USS Nitze are guided missile destroyers, and the USS Ponce is an amphibious transport ship. Just a few days before they arrived, a UAE logistics ship was severely damaged by an attack while operating roughly 40 miles north of the Bab el-mandeb. The UAE ship was supporting Saudi operations, so it makes some sense that the Houthis would target the ship. Even so, demonstrating the capability and will to damage ships passing near the strait must have caught the United States attention. A potential blockage of this strait by militants with access to anti-ship missiles is not acceptable from the U.S. point of view. 2 / 5

The Houthis have repeatedly denied any involvement in the missile attacks on the U.S. ships. They exhibited no such shyness in claiming the attack against the UAE ship, even posting video of the attack on the internet. The Washington Institute analyzed the tape and concluded the Houthi forces likely used a radar-guided anti-ship missile in the attack on the UAE ship, suggesting perhaps it was a variant of the C-802, a Chinese anti-ship missile that the Iranians tried to buy in the 1990s. When the deal fell through, Iran reverse engineered the missile and unveiled it as the Noor missile in 2000 during a series of war games in the Persian Gulf. It is not clear precisely what missiles were used in the attacks against the U.S. ships, but U.S. officials told the Associated Press they were variants of the so-called Silkworm missile, another type of anti-ship missile produced by the Chinese and sold to both sides of the 1980-1988 Iran- Iraq war. Iran, which backs the Houthis, produces anti-ship missiles such as the ones used in the attack on the UAE ship, so it is a reasonable possibility that these were also the same types of missiles used in the attacks against the U.S. ships. Why the Houthis would have attacked U.S. ships is less clear. Perhaps it was a revenge strike for the attack on the funeral hall, or perhaps some Houthi fighters went rogue and decided to take matters into their own hands to punish the Americans. Whatever the case, the U.S. has responded by officially knocking out three coastal radar stations, and unofficially probably knocking out missile storage areas and the firing crews. Shipping sources reported to Reuters at least one additional strike in Taiz province not mentioned in the Pentagon press release. This wasn t just a warning shot: the USS Nitze fired as many Tomahawks as necessary to eliminate the immediate threat of such missiles targeting ships in the Bab el-mandeb. Yemen doesn t get nearly as much media coverage as Syria. This is in part because the casualty numbers are far lower (the U.N. estimates there have been 4,000 civilian casualties in the fighting as of the end of September). It is also because generally speaking, Yemen is of no real strategic importance to anyone except for Saudi Arabia. That will quickly change if militants can reliably get their hands on anti-ship missiles and make crossing the Bab el-mandeb difficult. 3 / 5

(click to enlarge) The Houthis have already demonstrated they don t want to tangle with the U.S. on this with their enthusiastic denial of involvement, and they are in need of more foreign support right now, not less. Iran also doesn t need to give the U.S. any reason to increase support for Saudi-backed forces in Yemen, especially after tensions between the Saudis and the U.S. have come out into the open in this conflict. The U.S. and Iran have a complicated relationship in the Middle East, cooperating in Iraq against the Islamic State, on opposite sides when it comes to the Bashar al- Assad regime in Syria. Iran enjoys the Houthi thorn in the Saudi side but it s not about to let a full-blown conflict with the U.S. erupt as a result of this incident, at least not anytime soon. The more worrying fact is that Yemen has become a haven both for al-qaida and for offshoots of the Islamic State. The Iran-backed Houthis and the Saudi-backed government of Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi are too busy fighting each other to deal with the situation, and Yemen is a lawless place awash in weapons of all kinds. An attack on U.S. naval assets originating from Yemen cannot help but bring to mind the attack on the USS Cole, which al-qaida bombed while it was refueling in Yemen s Port of Aden in October 2000. This has been a trouble spot for decades; it is simply the shape of the threat that changes over time. 4 / 5

Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org) Geopolitical Futures The U.S. is already fairly active in Yemen, especially with drone strikes against select targets. But anti-ship missiles being fired at ships in the Bab el-mandeb is a bigger and more serious threat than usual. The more the U.S. attempts to extricate itself from the region, the more it gets pulled back in. This time it happens to be because a major maritime shipping route has come under direct assault. It is not a threat the U.S. will tolerate and may necessitate a more substantial U.S. presence in the region going forward. 5 / 5