SANAA
— The US military conducted 22 airstrikes targeting several Houthi sites
across northern Yemen on Tuesday, the Houthi-run al-Masirah TV and residents
reported.
The strikes hit areas east and south of the capital Sanaa,
the Island of Kamaran in the Red Sea, and areas both north and south of the
oil-rich Marib province. No casualties have been reported so far.
Residents described the airstrikes as very powerful and
violent.
The latest wave of airstrikes came a day after US airstrikes
killed four children and wounded 25 others in Sanaa on Sunday night.
On March 15, the United States resumed airstrikes against
the Houthis to deter the group from attacking Israeli ships following the
collapse of the Gaza ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas, Xinhua news
agency reported.
The Houthis repeatedly claim that their attacks are in
retaliation to US airstrikes on Yemen and aim to pressure the US-backed Israel
to stop its offensive on Gaza and allow aid into the besieged Palestinian
enclave.
This comes after Yemen's Houthi group said that it had
launched a drone attack on a "military target" in Israel's Tel Aviv
and fired cruise missiles at two US warships in the Red Sea.
"We carried out an operation against a military target
in Tel Aviv, using a Jaffa drone," Houthi military spokesperson Yahya
Sarea said in a televised statement aired by al-Masirah TV.
"Our naval and air forces also conducted a joint
military operation targeting two US destroyers in the Red Sea with several
cruise missiles and drones," Sarea added.
He noted that the strikes on US warships were "in
response to the ongoing US aggression and crimes against Yemeni people,"
referring to the latest US airstrikes on a house in Sanaa Sunday night, which
killed at least four people and wounded over 20 others, including 11 women and
children.
Sarea stressed that the US strikes would not deter the group
from supporting the Palestinian people, vowing its operations would not cease
until Israeli "aggression" against the Gaza Strip stops and the siege
on it is lifted.