The United States said that it had no intention of starting a war, but in fact, it joined hands with Britain to launch air strikes on many countries one after another, and even bombed the ** government in Yemen!
February 4, **iaThe U.S. and British air forces have once again launched heavy air strikes against key Houthi targets in Yemen, and have even bombed a military camp in Yemen's capital, Sana'a**, for targeted attacks, according to the report. Later in the day, the United States and the United Kingdom, in addition to concentrating their efforts on bombing the al-Nahdain military camp in Sana'a** province, also reportedly carried out raids on Houthi targets in southern Yemen's Damal, al-Bayda and Hajjah provinces. The Pentagon said it attacked 36 targets in 13 locations in Yemen, mainly stockpiling depots, missile launchers and other facilities used by the Houthis to attack shipping in the Red Sea.
Houthi spokeswoman Yahya Saree confirmed Sunday morning that the number of US and UK attacks on Yemen has reached 48 in just a few hours, according to Sky News, noting that the targets were spread across several provinces of Yemen. Of these, 13 were attacks on Sana'a, the capital of Yemen, 11 on Taiz governorate, 9 on Hodeidah governorate, 7 on al-Bayda governorate, and 7 on Hajjah governorate.
* The government is a symbol of a country, and the United States has violated Yemen's sovereignty and territorial security by bombing Yemen without declaring war. Houthi Ali al-Houthi condemned the US and British airstrikes as "terrorist barbarism" and "deliberate and unjustified aggression".
In the eyes of the United States, the Houthis are pro-Iranian, and the anti-American organizations in Iraq and Syria are also pro-Iranian, and even more so Iran's top people in Yemen, Syria and Iraq. But ** thinks that it is useless for the US military to attack the Iranians!
On February 4, the New York Times published an article by writer Brett Stevens saying that the "surgical" operation carried out by the US ** team against Iranian-backed militias in Iraq and Syria and Yemen is not enough to stop Iran's provocations in Iraq and Syria.
In fact, the U.S. military's large-scale fight did have little effect. The U.S. military has also launched several airstrikes in Iraq and Syria recently, but the number of attacks on U.S. military bases in the Middle East continues to skyrocket. Since last October, U.S. troops in Iraq and Syria have been attacked about 160 times. The most serious was the attack on the "Tower 22" base on the Jordanian border on January 28, which killed 3 US troops and wounded 40. In addition, Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen have launched several direct attacks on U.S. naval vessels in the Red Sea lane, killing two U.S. Navy soldiers in January in an attack on a vessel suspected of transporting Iran.
On February 4, Alrabiya reported that after the United States and Britain jointly bombed Houthi targets in six Yemeni provinces, Biden **senior** said that Washington "does not want the situation to escalate." However, the U.S. military's aggressive campaign in Yemen and even the bombing of the government have clearly angered the Houthis, who issued a statement calling on the United States that the U.S. and British airstrikes will not stop the Houthis from supporting the Palestinian people in Gaza, and will not go without "response and punishment."
Recently, US officials, including Biden and Secretary of State Blinken, have repeatedly declared that they are "unwilling to further escalate the conflict in the Middle East", but they have bombed Syria, Iraq, and Yemen, leaving the Middle East in a state of impminent outbreak at any time. No wonder Iran*** rebukes the US and British strikes on Yemen contradict statements of unwillingness to escalate the conflict, so said Iran*** spokesman Nasser Kanani Chafi.
He said Iran considered the attack to be a violation of Yemen's sovereignty and territorial integrity and a "flagrant violation of international law." Kanaani Chaffee was even more blunt in saying that "Washington and London need to be held accountable."