CONTINUED THREAT
Jon Alterman, the director of the Middle East Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said he thinks the recent strikes will “diminish but not end the Houthi threat to shipping”.
“The challenge is making the Houthis conclude that more strikes will hurt their interests. It’s far from clear they’ve reached that conclusion yet,” he said.
Washington still has further options if the attacks go on, including continuing to strike the Houthis as well as targeting sites where Iranian trainers or experts are located, Alterman said.
Mark Schwartz, a retired US Army lieutenant general and current senior fellow at RAND, likewise said he expects the Houthi attacks on shipping to persist.
“I think that they will continue to try to attack maritime vessels. Probably commercial, maybe not so much military vessels that are out there,” Schwartz said, referring to the growing number of warships deployed to the Red Sea to help intercept and deter Houthi drone and missile strikes.
The strikes carried out so far hit military infrastructure, but that could shift to targeting Houthi military leadership if their attacks on shipping continue, he said, while noting that the rebels “are a cellular organisation” and “hide amongst the population” – attributes that can make them difficult to hit.
“BEAR FURTHER COSTS”
The Houthis have been the target of thousands of strikes by a Saudi-led coalition since 2015, but Riyadh is tellingly now angling for a ceasefire and a military exit from the country with the rebels undefeated and still in control of swathes of Yemen.
The Houthis claim they are targeting Israeli-linked vessels in support of Palestinians in Gaza, where Israel is battling militant group Hamas in a highly destructive conflict, but Washington says dozens of countries have ties to the ships that have been attacked.
Elliott Abrams, senior fellow for Middle Eastern studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, said the American and British strikes “seem to be serious attacks on Houthi sites rather than symbolic gestures.”
“There’s a good chance the Houthis will strike again – but at a lower frequency and intensity,” and that “Iran will tell them to cool it”, he added.
The United States has been clear that the Houthis will face further repercussions if their attacks continue.
President Joe Biden said he will “not hesitate to direct further measures”, while Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin warned that the Houthis “will bear further costs if they do not end their illegal attacks”.