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L'institut Canadien de Recherches sur le Judaisme

Analysis

Are Yemen’s non-Houthi Groups Seeking US Support to Attack the Houthis?

Map of division in Yemen as of March 10, 2012 (after the transition of power away from President Saleh). Map is limited to information from English-language media, and therefore may be incomplete. The Al Houthis are a Zaidi Shiite rebel group, while Ansar al-Sharia and Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) are two related violent Islamic fundamentalist groups.- Source: Wikipedia
Map of division in Yemen as of March 10, 2012 (after the transition of power away from President Saleh). Map is limited to information from English-language media, and therefore may be incomplete. The Al Houthis are a Zaidi Shiite rebel group, while Ansar al-Sharia and Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) are two related violent Islamic fundamentalist groups.- Source: Wikipedia

AlJazeera, May 4, 2025

“Both the Yemeni government and the Southern Transitional Council have competitively sought to present themselves as the solution to the US’s need for a partner on the ground against the Houthis in Yemen.”

Anti-Houthi factions in Yemen could be vying for US support to attack the movement’s territory, analysts and experts told Al Jazeera, following intensified air strikes on Houthi targets by the United States.

The war in Yemen has largely been frozen for the last three years. Still, groups aligned with the Yemeni government have started signalling that they could launch operations against areas controlled by the pro-Iranian Houthis, including the crucial port of Hodeidah.

A similar campaign on Hodeidah, a critical entry point for food and goods on the Red Sea coast, seemed imminent in 2018, only to be aborted after intervention from the United Nations and the international community, who feared a humanitarian disaster in Yemen.

But experts and analysts expressed doubt that an attack by anti-Houthi groups on their domestic rival would be successful, despite some likening it to the offensive that unseated another Iran ally, former Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, in late 2024.

“Pro-ROYG [Republic of Yemen Government] voices have been asserting that ground operations against the Houthis – in Hodeidah and potentially elsewhere – are imminent,” Hannah Porter, an independent Yemen analyst, told Al Jazeera.

“My impression so far is that these comments are just meant to garner external support from the US or Saudi [Arabia] for a takeover of Hodeidah.”

Vying for US support

The Houthis, or Ansar Allah as they are officially known, marched into and took over the Yemeni capital Sanaa in 2014. Soon after, a Saudi Arabian-led coalition intervened on behalf of Yemen’s internationally recognised government to fight the Houthis.

Anti-Houthi forces achieved some success in the early years of the war, but the failed Hodeidah campaign seemed to slow their momentum, and the Houthis have largely been on top militarily since then. …SOURCE

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