Dilandu
I'm dissatisfied, which means, I exist.
Erm. Sea traffic.It isn't that easy to sneak things into northern Yemen.
Key enabling parts - sure, but bulky weapon system deliveries - nah.
Erm. Sea traffic.It isn't that easy to sneak things into northern Yemen.
Key enabling parts - sure, but bulky weapon system deliveries - nah.
Sea traffic coming to Hodeidah is being boarded and inspected for almost 10 years at this point.Erm. Sea traffic.
You realize, that you have full-scale anti-ship missile here?It usually looks like this:
It's one of the luckiest intrcepts in a decade. And here for 1 disassembled missile(very light one, btw), there are 5 engines and >dozen sensor kits for something. You can't disassemble ballistic missile this way. Especially, god forbid, solid fuel one.You realize, that you have full-scale anti-ship missile here?
The Houthis are able to build some of their own missiles, and some of them even perform quite well. In addition to Iran, we also believe that certain missile components were smuggled from Europe. As a side note, in my eyes their military command structure is more like ····· USSR? The construction of their army is destined to show that their combat effectiveness is not as simple as ordinary people think. The Soviets had a strong presence in the region, and perhaps it was during that time that the Houthis learned how to build missiles.OK. Where are the Houthis getting their weapons from? Who is paying for all of it? The U.S. is taking out weapons, storage and radar. And will continue bombing until all anti-ship activity stops.
You would have to ask the Houthis.
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Yemen’s Houthis ‘will not stop’ Red Sea attacks until Israel ends Gaza war
US launches maritime coalition to counter attacks the rebel group says are a response to Israeli ‘crimes’ in Gaza Strip.www.aljazeera.com
Houthis are part of the Iranian axis. IRGC has the expressed ambition to achieve hegemony in the region and beyond.Houthi claimed that they started those attacks to force Israel to stop military actions in Gaza. Most likely, though, that Iran just called the Houthi massive debts (Iran supported them with funs, weapons and intelligence against Saudi-led coalition in Yemen) and ordered Houthi to attack international shipping in an attempt to salvage the situation in Gaza (which definitedy turned out NOT how Iran wanted)
Who can other than Netanyahu?Something else the Europeans likely can't do.
Who can other than Netanyahu?
Weird correlation between the ceasefire in Gaza and Houthi attacks;Houthis are part of the Iranian axis. IRGC has the expressed ambition to achieve hegemony in the region and beyond.
Blocking the Red Sea is exactly part of the deterrence balance Iran tries to create and directly mimics on a miniature scale Iran's threat to block gulf energy trade should it be attacked, as a sort of "nuclear option".
Like with all wars, a casus belli is preferable. The war in Gaza is that kind of casus belli, but it's not related to Israel's method or very act of prosecuting a war in Gaza. In fact the Houthis launched their attacks in October of 2023, while Israel only started operations in Gaza in November.
Culturally speaking, Houthi, IRGC, and general Iranian sentiment toward pretty much every Palestinian factions and Palestinians in general, is much more easily described as deeply negative than a positive one.
From a data standpoint, the only correlation between Houthi attacks and Israeli military action is an inverse one - with Houthi attacks gradually reducing as Israel and the rest of the Red Sea coalition intensify attacks.
Therefore the assertion that a sudden end of the Israel-Gaza war would also end Houthi hostility, is counter-factual.
The correlation isn't weird. The Iranian axis in some ways went all in on October 7th but hesitated a lot along the way. Bringing in Hezbollah and the Houthis proved a fatal mistake for Iran.Weird correlation between the ceasefire in Gaza and Houthi attacks;
Very true.It's not only about ships, but also about missile stockpile depletion. Extrapolating from European cruise missile supplies, and taking into account the SAM attrition rate in Red Sea, several month of intense operations would probably reduce European navies air defense to autocannons only.
I mean, I'm sure it'd be possible to play Liar of Arabia again and find some tribe with beef with the Houthis.Indeed. That’s why a better idea would be to form an indigenous anti-Houthi alliance, give them all the support they need, and crush the Houthis permanently.
Broad-brushstrokes there, I know. Getting such alliances to play nice with each other, and forgiving the occasional madman intent on just revenge is difficult.
As if that's what caused the Houthis to start shooting at ships.Or you know, get Israel to end their Gaza war.
You'd have to rule it until the end of times, and the question will be how you would keep yourself from doing the same stuffBut once you arm that tribe up enough to deal with the Houthis, how do you keep them from doing the same stuff?
I mean, I'm sure it'd be possible to play Liar of Arabia again and find some tribe with beef with the Houthis.
But once you arm that tribe up enough to deal with the Houthis, how do you keep them from doing the same stuff?
Pointless picture.This type of humiliation did not occur in colonial times, but now we are more understanding.
That never even stopped.I mean, I'm sure it'd be possible to play Liar of Arabia again and find some tribe with beef with the Houthis.
That would be nice indeed.Or you know, get Israel to end their Gaza war.
Correction - they don't lack the power, they just lack the will/stomach/guts/balls.This is the whole point; Europeans are at the mercy of the foreign policy of the US and Israel. They can't even deal with the blowback of the actions of others because they lack the power to do so.
I'm tempted to say that these days Israel is pretty much related to almost everything...How are Israel and Gaza related to the Houthi attacks in the Red Sea?
Correction - they don't lack the power, they just lack the will/stomach/guts/balls.
If Europe *REALLY* were serious about a united emergency strategy, between all the in one way or another allied nations on the continent I am *ABSOLUTELY* convinced they could stand up and mobilize enough hardware and manpower for an effective and decisive campaign.All the will etc in the world doesn't mean anything if you lack the bombs to drop, the planes to drop them, carriers (& bases) to fly them from and the people in uniform to make it all happen. You're right about the Europeans not having the balls, but that's so long established that they now lack the muscle even they they grew a pair.
Sea and Land invasion, in Red sea, by themselves, with Iran and Saudis being against that(no, Saudi stance from 2018 and from 2025 is not the same)?If Europe *REALLY* were serious about a united emergency strategy, between all the in one way or another allied nations on the continent I am *ABSOLUTELY* convinced they could stand up and mobilize enough hardware and manpower for an effective and decisive campaign.
If Europe *REALLY* were serious about a united emergency strategy, between all the in one way or another allied nations on the continent I am *ABSOLUTELY* convinced they could stand up and mobilize enough hardware and manpower for an effective and decisive campaign.
That's a gross misunderstanding of MENA politics.I'm tempted to say that these days Israel is pretty much related to almost everything...
This is the first step.What do great powers capable of projecting power also usually do when they take security seriously? They use soft power. Lots of different countries around - Saudi Arabia, UAE, Djibouti, Egypt, Ethiopia, Somaliland, even Israel (longest route but still shorter than taking off from Akrotiri). All can be convinced, some more easily than others, to permit basing of aerial and naval power.
This is the sort of easy and wrong understanding (Houthi as just an Iranian lapdog, DPRK is Chinese lapdog, Ukraine is American lapdog), which will at some point kill some of us here.Understanding that Iran is very actively spreading its "Islamic Revolution" and that Houthis are one part of its proxy network, is a crucial step in combating the Houthis, as we can derive from that, that if the Houthis are not purged from western Yemen via a combined ground operation, they should at least be cut off from their arms supplier Iran.
In practice, Iran controls pretty much everything related to the Houthis. The oil trade is their political lifeline. The weapons are their physical lifeline.This is the sort of easy and wrong understanding (Houthi as just an Iranian lapdog, DPRK is Chinese lapdog, Ukraine is American lapdog), which will at some point kill some of us here.
Almost all countries, recognized or not, are not lapdogs. No mules of gold can equal position of absolute authority, however small. Countries can be very dependent, but almost every significant attempt to strain the leash will weaken it.
The only exception is countries with leadership literally appointed from outside, with their true sovereignty coming from foreign power.
I.e. at most some french not-a-colonies - and that's one big reason they fail from a wrong glance if french bayonets are a moment too late.
IRGC(Iran really) can get houthis to act for perceived common good. Or they themselves can do it, perhaps with Iranian support.
Order them around - and what will happen for a no? Will Iran bite?
With all due respect, main oil supplier to Houthi areas is UAE, and Iran (by tankers) isn't even in the top 3.In practice, Iran controls pretty much everything related to the Houthis. The oil trade is their political lifeline. The weapons are their physical lifeline.
External support? Especially against a half-Merc force with government sitting abroad?They managed to secure control over some of Yemen through this external support but overall they're really not in a position to be picking fights.
Yes, they long since found out why Americans don't have free healthcare.Attacking Red Sea shipping is picking a fight with the biggest opponent you can imagine, and a lot of other ones.
The campaign starting in October 2023 is no coincidence. That was when Iran's proxies struck.
Except that Israel is an outsize factor/influencer/dominator in US world politics at large.That's a gross misunderstanding of MENA politics.
Very nominally.Well, more than a century after Lawrence of Arabia, Saudi Arabia is still a nominal Western ally, and is not firing missiles at places and things deemed to be Western/global interests.
And Saudi Arabia is the theological/ideological base for AQ, ISIL/DAESH, and HAMAS.Understanding that Iran is very actively spreading its "Islamic Revolution" and that Houthis are one part of its proxy network, is a crucial step in combating the Houthis, as we can derive from that, that if the Houthis are not purged from western Yemen via a combined ground operation, they should at least be cut off from their arms supplier Iran.
It was not developed under close state supervision with specific goal to bomb the WTC, though.Very nominally.
Guess where the theology and ideoligy of Al Qaeda was developed?
Given that shadow fleets routinely disguise as belonging to other nations, how exactly did you gather this information?With all due respect, main oil supplier to Houthi areas is UAE, and Iran (by tankers) isn't even in the top 3.
"Blockade" can mean many things. For a fact, under this blockade, ships were still docking in Hodeidah and Ras Isa, and planes were still landing in Sanaa.Ability of Iran to deliver weapons there is also small, as was explained before. It's just basic geography.
Saudi coalition tried close blockade from land and sea, it didn't stop/seriously affect weapons production.
Ok and? One benefits more absolutely. One benefits more relatively. That's literally a feature in every alliance ever. What's your point?And if anyone is dependent in this couple specifically in oil part, it's Iran. Houthi threat indirectly prevents squeezing sanctions on its oil trade.
So inconsequential that Houthis are still regularly firing Iranian ballistic missiles and drones over a year and a half in?Result was, this help was small enough to pass through anyway, and inconsequential enough to not matter.
Arab nations don't act out of such emotions. If you think any of them have any sympathy to Hamas, you're very much mistaken.Granted, most Arab nations (governments) avoided it as best as they could, but basic premise stands. But it's still basic truth that general Arabic population isn't exactly full of Israel lovers, and thr poorer, the more religious country - the more zealous the hate is.
Terrorism as a way to gain popularity among civilians is a method that did not stand the test of time in the middle east.Attacking Israel (and America) is in Houthi basic motto, and, unlike Iran, their leadership didn't really have much opportunity (and decades of popular demand) to just get things comfortable.
It brings them direct legitimacy and popularity. Especially as opposed to southern government, which never can do anything by itself.
Oh my dog we're in the "(((their))) lobby" again?Except that Israel is an outsize factor/influencer/dominator in US world politics at large.
Very nominally.
Guess where the theology and ideoligy of Al Qaeda was developed?
At the cost of how much more time to delivery and how much more fuel burned?If European nations re-route their ships as many are already doing, do we need to waste money and ammo on a country in which we have zero interest?
Are you talking about the first reroute or the one that'll come right after everyone picks up on the west being pushovers?If European nations re-route their ships as many are already doing, do we need to waste money and ammo on a country in which we have zero interest?
What "other reroute"? Ships are already just saying F it and going around Africa.Are you talking about the first reroute or the one that'll come right after everyone picks up on the west being pushovers?
And how stable and peaceful you think Africa is? Not long til some tribes there get their hands on some drones or helicopters and start doing more serious piracy, forcing ships to steer away from land and ports along the way?What "other reroute"? Ships are already just saying F it and going around Africa.
Going east through Malacca/SCS/Pacific/Panama Canal is probably not an option timewise.