Iran playing ‘very, very negative role’ in region: US Yemen envoy

A Houthi fighter brandishes a rocket launcher in front of a depiction of the Galaxy Leader cargo ship, which was seized by the Houthis, Sanaa, Yemen, Feb. 7, 2024. (Reuters)
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Updated 07 February 2024
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Iran playing ‘very, very negative role’ in region: US Yemen envoy

  • Tim Lenderking condemned Iran’s support for the militia and said that the US is ‘determined’ to rally international pressure on the Houthis to de-escalate
  • Lenderking: ‘The sense we have is overwhelming that Iran is pushing on an open door here with the Houthis — aiding, abetting, sharing intelligence, helping them target ships’

AL-MUKALLA: Hostilities in the Red Sea risk exploding Yemen’s civil war, the US envoy to Yemen has said, warning that anti-Houthi forces could exploit tensions and restart their campaign against the militia.

Tim Lenderking condemned Iran’s support for the militia and said that the US is “determined” to rally international pressure on the Houthis to de-escalate.

In a pre-recorded interview at a virtual panel hosted by the Middle East Institute on Tuesday, Lenderking said: “The sense we have is overwhelming that Iran is pushing on an open door here with the Houthis — aiding, abetting, sharing intelligence, helping them target ships, determining which are the more lucrative targets.”

He added: “Again, we see the very, very negative role that Iran is playing in the region by fanning this conflict.”

Since November, the Houthi militia has fired dozens of drones and missiles at commercial and naval vessels in the Red Sea, the Gulf of Aden and Bab Al-Mandab, as well as seized a commercial ship, in what the group claims is an act of solidarity with Palestine, and an attempt to force Israel to lift its siege on Gaza.

The militia has resisted calls within Yemeni and internationally to end its Red Sea campaign, despite being warned that the supply of crucial goods and humanitarian aid to the country could dry up.

On Wednesday, US Central Command said that the Houthis fired six anti-ship ballistic missiles toward the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden a day earlier.

Three missiles were aimed at the Marshall Islands-flagged MV Star Nasia in the Gulf of Aden.

One of the missiles exploded near the ship, causing minor damage but no injuries, while another landed in the sea and a third was shot down by USS Laboon, a US destroyer that was dispatched to the Red Sea in December as part of Operation Prosperity Guardian.

The remaining three missiles, thought to be targeting the UK-owned cargo ship MV Morning Tide in the Southern Red Sea, exploded in the water.

Lenderking said that Houthi drone and missile attacks on ships have halted the UN-brokered peace process in Yemen and have exacerbated the country’s already dire humanitarian crisis. He warned that countries would avoid supporting salary payments, a key term of the proposed peace road map, in Houthi-controlled areas as long as resources were used to attack international shipping.

“What the Houthis are doing is hurting peace in Yemen and it’s going to hurt more and more average Yemenis who are already under a great deal of stress and strain because of the war, because of the damaged infrastructure, because of the lack of humanitarian supplies.”

Lenderking began his trip to the region on Wednesday by meeting Rashad Al-Alimi, chairman of Yemen’s Presidential Leadership Council, in Riyadh. They discussed US financial assistance to the Yemeni economy, the consequences of Israel’s war in Gaza and UN-led peace efforts in Yemen, according to the official Yemeni news agency, SABA.

In Sanaa, the Houthis denied the US charge of compromising international maritime traffic security, claiming that hundreds of ships had sailed through the Red Sea since the start of the campaign without issue, while just a few had avoided the route.

Abdul Wahab Al-Durra, the Houthi minister of transportation, told a gathering of businessmen in Sanaa on Tuesday that from Nov. 19 to Dec. 19 last year, 2,128 ships crossed the Suez Canal from the Red Sea, with only 55 changing route to the Way of Good Hope, accusing the US-led Operation Prosperity Guardian of endangering international navigation in the Red Sea.


Emirati volunteers arrive in Al-Arish for Gaza humanitarian projects

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Emirati volunteers arrive in Al-Arish for Gaza humanitarian projects

  • Aid logistics center in Al-Arish includes floating hospital
  • ‘Our goal ... is to represent the UAE in the best possible way,’ says volunteer

LONDON: The second cohort of UAE youth volunteers arrived in Al-Arish, Egypt, on Sunday to take part in humanitarian efforts aiding Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

Ten young Emiratis are taking part in the Youth Social Missions Program, which aims to prepare them for responsibilities during humanitarian crises and promote a culture of volunteerism and social responsibility aligned with UAE values.

The UAE is operating a humanitarian aid logistics center in Al-Arish, which includes a floating hospital, where volunteers will learn about the medical and humanitarian aid services offered to the injured from Gaza.

They will tour UAE desalination plants in Al-Arish to learn about water security for Gaza and visit the Rafah border crossing to observe aid delivery and coordination. The UAE humanitarian initiative is part of Operation Chivalrous Knight 3.

“Our goal in this experience is to represent the UAE in the best possible way and to convey the message that the UAE’s generosity knows no bounds,” Fatima Mohammed Al-Shehhi, a member of the second cohort, told the Emirates News Agency.

Hamid Abdullah Al-Ansari, another volunteer, said: “We are taking part in this experience to learn about the humanitarian and volunteer work provided by the UAE, and to try — even in a small way — to ease the suffering of our brothers and sisters in the Gaza Strip.”

The multi-year program was launched by the Federal Youth Authority last August to empower Emirati youth to engage in global humanitarian, developmental and cultural missions, according to WAM.

Since late 2023, Al-Arish has been a crucial hub for the UAE to provide aid to the Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip, facilitating land, sea and air assistance through a corridor.