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Conflicts

US warships come under missile attack off Yemen

October 13, 2016

A US destroyer has come under missile attack from Houthi-rebels in Yemen, US officials said. The Pentagon has said it may retaliate at a time the US is under pressure to drop support for a Saudi-led military coalition.

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US Kriegsschiff USS Mason der US Navy
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/US Navy/T. A. Elberg

Two missiles fired from Houthi-rebel controlled territory in Yemen landed in the water in a strategic Red Sea strait where a US destroyer and a transport dock were operating, the Pentagon said on Wednesday.

The USS Mason, an Arleigh Burke class of guided missile destroyer, and the USS Ponce took defensive measures against the missiles, neither of which struck the ships or caused damage in the Bab al-Mandab Strait.

"The ship employed defensive countermeasures, and the missile did not reach USS Mason," Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook said in a statement.

The incident, the second such missile attack on the US warships in four days, comes after Houthi rebels claimed credit for a missile attack that heavily damaged a United Arab Emirates vessel on October 1.

The United Arab Emirates said the vessel was carrying humanitarian aid, but the Houthis claimed it was a warship.

The United Arab Emirates is a major participant in a Saudi-led coalition against Houthi-rebels and forces loyal to their ally, former President Ali Abdullah Saleh, in a bid to restore power to the internationally recognized president Abd Rabbu Mansour al-Hadi. The rebels regularly launch missiles from northern Yemen into Saudi Arabia.

The Houthis, which the United States and Saudis accuse of receiving support from Iran, denied any involvement on the attacks on the US warships.

US officials said they would respond "at the appropriate time and in the appropriate manner," but the alleged Houthi attacks come as the United States is under pressure to drop support for the Saudi-led coalition over indiscriminate airstrikes and mounting civilian casualties.

The United States provides intelligence, air refueling and other support to the coalition.

Human rights groups have accused the US of being complicit in the destruction and humanitarian crisis in Yemen, causing the White House to say it was reviewing its support for the Saudi-led coalition.

cw/rc (AFP, Reuters)