US B-2 stealth bombers struck weapons-storage sites linked to Houthi rebels in Yemen, the latest effort to blunt
attacks by the Iran-backed group that have disrupted commercial shipping in the
Red Sea.
The strikes hit bunkers
containing missiles and other munitions “used to target military and civilian
vessels throughout the region,” US Central Command said Thursday. US Air Force and Navy personnel took part
in the operation and there’s no indication of civilian casualties, it added.
The US and allies have
repeatedly struck the Houthis, who started attacking ships in the Red Sea and
Gulf of Aden after Israel began its war against Hamas in Gaza just over a year
ago. The group is one of a number of militant groups backed by Iran, alongside
Hamas and Hezbollah in Lebanon, who are at various stages of conflict with
Israel.
The Houthis, who
reported no casualties, said US and UK strikes hit the capital Sanaa and the
Saada governorate. The group was
designated a terrorist organization by the US earlier this year.
The use of B-2 bombers
was intended to send a message, according to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin. “This was a unique demonstration of the
United States’ ability to target facilities that our adversaries seek to keep
out of reach, no matter how deeply buried underground, hardened, or fortified,”
he said.
The message may have
been intended for Iran, which has moved much of its nuclear program below ground
in recent years. The B-2 is the only US aircraft equipped to use the Massive
Ordnance Penetrator, a bomb that the airforce says is specifically designed to destroy
“adversaries’ weapons of mass destruction located in well protected
facilities.”
The comments came as
Israel weighs a response to Tehran for the firing of 200 ballistic missiles at
the country more than two weeks ago. The US has been urging Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu’s government to avoid striking oil or nuclear targets.
Iran’s Foreign Minister, Abbas Araghchi, met
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi in Cairo as he continued an intense
round of shuttle diplomacy aimed at stopping Israel’s military operations in
Gaza and Lebanon.
Araghchi has already
visited Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman and Jordan. His stop in Cairo marks the first
time an Iranian foreign minister has visited Egypt in more than a decade,
underscoring the extent to which its current standoff with Israel has drawn
Tehran closer to is Arab neighbors.
Despite numerous strikes on the Houthis, the allies
have been unable to halt its attacks. In a June assessment, American intelligence
officials said Houthi assaults on commercial vessels in the Red Sea led to a
90% decline in container shipping through the area between December and
February.
Israel said it
intercepted a drone that approached its territory from the Red Sea overnight. The
B-2s flew to their targets from Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri. It marked
the first time since January 2017 that the wing-shaped stealth bomber has flown
a combat mission. Back then, two B-2s
flew a 30-hour round-trip mission to bomb an Islamic State training camp in
Libya.
Each B-2 is capable of
carrying as much as 20 tons of bombs, including 80 500-pound GPS-guided
munitions.