![]() Yemen: Is the Scandal UN whistleblower Craig Mokhiber writes: “The US is illegally bombing a poor country and slaughtering civilians in order to defend a genocide committed by an oppressive foreign regime and Democrats are more upset about the fact that the perpetrators leaked their Signal group chat about it.” Shireen Al-Adeimi writes: “With all the noise about the Signal leak, is anyone in Congress or the media concerned that actually bombing Yemeni people and Yemen’s infrastructure is unconstitutional? Anyone?” The Atlantic’s editor-in-chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, was the outlet for the leaks. He was a major conduit for false claims about alleged Iraq WMDs used to justify the 2003 invasion. He was also a guard in an Israeli prison long-criticized for abuse and torture. According to the Yemen Data Project, more than 55% of US strikes hit non-military targets US Killed 25 Civilians in First Week of (March 26, 2025) — US airstrikes on Yemen killed at least 25 civilians and wounded 28 others in just the first week of the Trump administration’s renewed bombing campaign against the Houthis, according to the Yemen Data Project (YDP). The YDP released a report on Tuesday analyzing 38 strikes on Yemen the US launched from March 15 to March 21 and found that 55% of the bombings hit non-military targets. The report said the US attacks marked the heaviest and deadliest week of bombing in Yemen since the final months of the US-backed Saudi-UAE air war on the country in early 2022. The report found that more civilians were killed in the first week of the Trump administration’s bombing campaign than were killed in the 12 months of US- UK strikes on Yemen that were conducted under the Biden administration from January 2024 to January 2025. The YDP report said the deadliest US strike in the first week of President Trump’s bombing campaign hit a residential area in Yemen’s northern Saada province, killing 10 civilians, including four children. Another 11 civilians were injured, including two children. Graphic from the Yemen Data Project report on US airstrikes in Yemen from March 15 to March 21 The YDP said 21 out of the 38 recorded US strikes hit non-military, civilian targets. “Civilian targets hit included: a medical storage facility, a medical center, a school, a wedding hall, residential areas, a cotton gin facility, a health office, Bedouin tents, and Al-Eiman University,” the report reads. Only one of the strikes was confirmed to hit a Houthi military target, and in 16 of the strikes, the target couldn’t be identified. The YDP recorded US strikes every night in Yemen between the hours of 7 pm and 6 am from March 15 to 21, and the US has continued daily strikes on the country this week. The US began bombing Yemen on March 15, a few days after the Houthis, officially known as Ansar Allah, announced they would re-impose a blockade on Israeli shipping in response to Israel’s violation of the Gaza ceasefire deal. Since the US started the airstrikes on Yemen, the Houthis have launched attacks on US warships in the region and began firing missiles at Israel in response to Israel restarting its bombing campaign on Gaza. President Trump is threatening the Houthis with “annihilation,” but the year-long US bombing campaign launched by President Biden did not stop the Yemeni group, and a brutal US-backed Saudi-led war on Yemen from 2015 to 2022 also failed to remove them from power. The Houthis have maintained that a ceasefire in Gaza and an end to the Israeli blockade would be the only way to stop their attacks. |
Trump Bombing Yemen for Israel
Jehan Hakim / Yemeni Alliance Committee
https://accuracy.org/release/trump-bombing-yemen-for-israel/
(March 17, 2025) —Drop Site News reports in “With Massive Airstrikes on Yemen, Trump Intensifies Undeclared War Against the Poorest Country in the Arab World” that: “Dozens of civilians were killed in US bombings across Yemen as Trump vows to unleash ‘overwhelming lethal force’ to stop the Houthi naval blockade targeting Israel’s war on Gaza. …
“US warplanes struck Sana’a and seven other provinces in Yemen in what US defense officials described as the beginning of a large-scale military campaign against the Houthis. Also known as Ansar Allah, the group took control of large swaths of northern Yemen, including the capital city, in 2014. …
“A Houthi spokesperson and chief negotiator, Mohammed Abdussalam, denounced what he called Trump’s ‘false and misleading’ characterization of the Houthi naval operations. ‘The maritime embargo declared by Yemen in support of Gaza is limited only to Israeli navigation until humanitarian aid is delivered to the people of Gaza, according to the ceasefire agreement between the Palestinian resistance and the enemy entity,’ he said. No US commercial ships or military vessels have been attacked since December, before Trump was sworn in.”
The Guardian reports: “US says airstrikes against Houthis in Yemen will continue indefinitely” and “Houthis and US both vow escalation after wave of deadly American airstrikes in Yemen.”
AntiWar.com reports “Yemen: US Airstrikes Kill 53, Including Women and Children” and also reports: “The commander of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) vowed on Sunday that Iran would respond ‘decisively’ to any threat or act of aggression following President Trump’s warning to Tehran over Yemen.”
Related
“Biden Threatens Houthis in Yemen as They Try to Force Israeli Ceasefire.” Jelhan Hakim