After a
five-day interval, they are making fresh claims including an attack on a US
drone while security monitors are confirming a new attack on a merchant ship.
The
international efforts at protection continue to respond to the launches of
weapons by the Houthi. U.S. Central Command reported downing four uncrewed
aerial systems on May 22 without reporting any specific vessels that were being
targeted.
The previous reports from CENTCOM came on May
18 when the tanker Wind was struck sustaining damage to its steering gear and
the U.S. reported downing one anti-ship ballistic missile.
EUNAVFOR Aspides
highlights its role is mostly for protection reporting that as of May 19, they had escorted 120 vessels in three
months of operation. During that time, they report destroying 12 aerial
drones and one surface drone. They also intercepted four ballistic
missiles.
The Houthis continue to claim success.
The UK
Maritime Trade Organizations and private security firm Ambrey are both
reporting today that a missile impacted the water near an unnamed merchant
ship. The incident took place 98 nautical miles south of Al Hudaydah. The master
of the vessel told UKMTO that the missile struck the water on the port side of
the ship and that they were continuing on course.
Ambrey
cited two incidents. An approach 68 miles from Yemen and a vessel reporting
that an object struck the water 33 miles from Mokha, Yemen. As with the other
report they are saying it was a close miss with additional details not
provided.
Aspides
in its running tally of incidents reports a total since November 2023 of 161
reports as of May 18. This includes both attacks on vessels as well as the
destruction of drones and missiles by U.S. and EU forces.
The
declared leader of the Houthi, Abdul-Malik al-Houthi delivered another of his
speeches 23 May in which he claimed they have identified vessels that have
called in Haifa or Ashdod and sent the vessels warnings that they are not
listed as targets