SAWT BEIRUT INTERNATIONAL

| 11 December 2024, Wednesday |

US Formally Lifts Houthis’ Terror Designation

 

The rebel group, engaged in a long-running war with a Saudi-led military coalition trying to restore the former Yemeni government to power, has stepped up its attacks on Saudi Arabia proper as the Biden administration moved to revoke its terror designation.

The US State Department has called on Yemen’s Houthis to halt their offensive on a major Yemeni government stronghold in northern Yemen, urging the militia to cease all military operations, ‘other destabilizing actions’, and to turn to negotiations.

“The United States urges the Houthis to halt their advance on Marib and cease all military operations and turn to negotiations. The Houthis’ assault on Marib is the action of a group not committed to peace or to ending the war afflicting the people of Yemen,” the State Department said in a statement Tuesday.

The Houthis launched a major military offensive on Marib, the pro-Saudi Yemeni government’s last major northern stronghold, earlier this month.

Earlier, Mark Lowcock, United Nations undersecretary general for humanitarian affairs, tweeted that a direct assault on the city “would put two million civilians at risk, with hundreds of thousands potentially forced to flee – with unimaginable humanitarian consequences”.

Separately, the Treasury Department announced Tuesday that the US has formally removed the Houthis from its list of global terrorist entities.

“Today, on February 16, 2021, the US Department of State has revoked the Ansarallah designations which has resulted in Ansarallah no longer being blocked pursuant to Global Terrorism Sanctions Regulations, 31 CFR part 594, the Foreign Terrorist Organizations Sanctions Regulations, 31 CFR part 597, or Executive Order 13224, as amended,” the Treasury said in a statement, using another name for the Houthis.

The Houthis have been at war with a Saudi-led coalition looking to restore the government of ousted Yemeni President Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi to power since March 2015, with Riyadh and its allies devoting considerable military resources to the operation and blockading Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen. Hadi fled to Saudi Arabia in early 2015 after a popular uprising.

Nearly six years on, the coalition has made little progress, with the Yemeni capital of Sanaa remaining under Houthi control, and the militia launching dozens of drone and missile strikes at sites inside Saudi Arabia itself. On Sunday, the Houthis claimed to have attacked and hit two major Saudi airports using drones. The Saudi-led coalition reported that at least one of the drones was safely and intercepted and destroyed.

The Biden administration announced its plans to revoke the Houthis’ terror designation last week, specifying however that it would keep three senior Houthi leaders on its terror list, and impose new sanctions on some members of the group. The Trump administration designated the Houthis as terrorists in its final days, leading to fears that the move could threaten critical deliveries of international humanitarian aid to the war-torn nation, which even before the conflict was one of the poorest countries on earth.

In early February, the White House froze the proposed sale of some $760 million in guided munitions to Saudi Arabia, with the move widely interpreted as a sign of the end of direct US support for Riyadh’s six-year-long war in Yemen. Iran, which has provided the Houthis with moral support throughout the war, said the US decision, “if not a political manoeuvre, could be a step towards correcting past mistakes.”

Last week, the State Department emphasized that despite its plans to lift the terror designation, the US would “certainly keep up the pressure on the [Houthi] leadership,” and provide unwavering support for Saudi Arabia’s “ability to defend itself on its territory against threats.” At the same time, the Biden administration has promised to step up diplomatic efforts to resolve the Yemen conflict through negotiations.

The war in Yemen is feared to have killed over 233,000 people, both in fighting and as a result of the humanitarian crisis caused by the conflict and the coalition’s blockade. The UN estimates that some three quarters of the country’s population is in dire need of food and basic medical aid.

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  • Sputnik