The attack could signal the end of Riyadh’s truce with the Houthis and broaden the US war against Iran, the outlet has said
US President Donald Trump has given Saudi Arabia the green light for a renewed military operation against Yemen’s Houthi movement, Axios has reported, citing US officials.
The report follows the most serious escalation between Saudi Arabia and the Houthis in years, which according to the outlet, could mark the collapse of an unofficial truce between the parties and risk widening the conflict between the US and Iran.
Sanaa International Airport, which is controlled by the Yemeni group, was struck on Monday as an Iranian aircraft reportedly carrying a Houthi delegation home from the funeral of former Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei approached the capital. The plane was forced to divert to the Red Sea port city of Al Hudaydah.
The Houthis accused Riyadh of launching the strike and declared that their ceasefire with Saudi Arabia was over. The group subsequently fired ballistic missiles and drones at Abha International Airport in southwestern Saudi Arabia and warned airlines against using Saudi airspace.
Read more Iran strikes back after Trump restarts war (PHOTOS, VIDEOS)According to Axios, Riyadh sought Washington’s backing several days before the strike. The Saudi ambassador met US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Thursday, and Rubio spoke with the Saudi foreign minister. Trump then held a phone call with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who requested and received his backing for the operation, a US official told the outlet.
The Saudi-backed Yemeni government later claimed responsibility for the operation and denied that Riyadh had been involved. Several media reports, however, attributed the attack to Saudi Arabia, which has not officially acknowledged carrying it out.
Sanna was seize by the Houthis, an Iran-aligned Shiite movement, in 2014, prompting a Saudi-led military intervention the following year. A UN-brokered truce introduced in April 2022 formally expired after six months but largely halted direct cross-border hostilities.
READ MORE: Yemen’s Houthis side with Iran: Who are they and how much firepower do they have?
The latest escalation also threatens a broader regional thaw. Saudi Arabia and Iran restored diplomatic relations in 2023 under a China-brokered agreement, while Riyadh has publicly maintained neutrality during the recent US-Iran confrontation and reportedly rejected US requests to use its territory for military operations against Iran.
In March, the Houthis entered the broader regional conflict by launching missile attacks against Israel in support of Iran.
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