Yemen Houthis say launched missiles at Israel, US warship

The Iran-backed Houthis said Thursday they targeted an Israeli airport and army site as well as a U.S. warship, soon after Israel reported intercepting missiles launched from Yemen.
The Houthis "targeted Ben Gurion airport... with a ballistic missile... and a military target" south of Tel Aviv, their military spokesman Yahya Saree said.
Earlier Thursday, the Israeli military said it intercepted two missiles launched from Yemen "prior to crossing into Israeli territory" after it activated air raid sirens across multiple areas, including Jerusalem.
Saree said the rebels also "targeted hostile warships in the Red Sea, including the American aircraft carrier (USS Harry S) Truman," which he said was "in retaliation to the ongoing US aggression against our country".
The United States launched what its Central Command called a "large scale operation" involving air strikes against the Houthis on March 15.
Washington vowed to use overwhelming force until they stopped firing on vessels in the key shipping routes of the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden after the rebels threatened to resume attacks over the Gaza war.
The Houthis have since reported near-daily U.S. air strikes on areas under their control.
- Rebels say 2 killed -
Earlier Thursday, the rebels said two people had been killed in overnight air strikes near the rebel-controlled capital Sanaa that they blamed on the United States.
The Houthis' Al-Masirah TV channel reported nearly 20 strikes on Sanaa governorate, both north and south of the capital.
"The American aggression killed two and injured two," the Houthi-run health ministry's spokesman Anis al-Asbahi said on social media platform X.
Al-Masirah also reported strikes early Thursday in Saada, the Iran-backed rebels' northern stronghold which Houthi media had said was hit 17 times the day before.
While the United States does not always report these raids, a United States defense official told AFP on Sunday that American forces were "conducting strikes across multiple locations of Iran-backed Houthi locations every day and night in Yemen".
The latest strikes claimed by the Houthis come with Washington embroiled in scandal linked to the March 15 strikes. The Atlantic Magazine published the transcript of messages accidentally shared with its editor in a chat group of senior U.S. officials on Signal, a commercially available messaging app.
The magazine on Thursday published details of the March 15 attack plans, which it initially withheld, after the White House insisted no classified details were involved.
In response to the U.S. strikes, the Houthis have claimed responsibility for multiple attacks on the Truman carrier group off Yemen's coast, as well as projectiles fired at Israel.
The Houthis began targeting shipping vessels in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden after the start of the Gaza war, claiming solidarity with the Palestinian people, but paused their campaign when a ceasefire in Gaza took effect in January.
Earlier this month, they threatened to renew the attacks in the vital maritime trade route over Israel's aid blockade on the Palestinian territory, triggering the first U.S. strikes on Yemen since President Donald Trump took office in January.

Not a single one of the Houthi rockets targeting sites in Israel has reached its destination, all of them beinbg shot down over Saudi Arabia or Jordan. It also doesn't seem that they have hit a single one of the US ships that they are alleged to have targeted.
The way the US are retaliating on a daily basis it seems that it will not be long before all the Houthi controlled areas of Yemen are returned to the stone age or even earlier and the sooner the better.