
© unknownSaudi war ships
Yemen's Houthi rebel government has threatened to sink Saudi coalition warships and oil tankers unless Riyadh lifts its blockade which threatens the lives of millions in the war-torn country.
"Battleships and oil tankers of the aggressor and its movements will not be immune from the fire of Yemeni naval forces if directed by the senior leadership," Al Masirah news
cited the country's navy and coast guard as saying Sunday.
Earlier, Brig. Gen. Sharaf Ghalib Luqman, a military spokesman for the Houthi rebels,
said that
"systematic crimes of aggression" and the "closure of ports" compels the Houthi forces "to target all sources of funding" of the aggressor. He added the country is ready to "respond to the escalation of the Saudi-US aggression promptly."
The threat of a military response to the ongoing blockade was made after Houthi leader Maj. Gen. Yousef al-Madani met leaders of the naval, coastal defense and coast guard forces Saturday. That same day, Houthi leader Abdel-Malek al-Houthi
posted a message on Facebook assuring that "international navigation will remain safe as it was before, "making clear that "only those who attack our country" will be targeted.
The Saudi-led military coalition announced last week that it was temporarily shutting all of Yemen's land border crossings as well as its air and sea ports in response to a ballistic missile that targeted Riyadh on November 4. The kingdom accused Houthis of firing an Iran-supplied rocket at the Saudi capital, and responded with bombing raids on the Yemeni capital, Sana'a. Iran has denied allegations that it supplies weapons to the Houthis, but concedes it backs the rebels' cause.
Comment: A year later, the scheme - so far - has worked.