As the sun set on the Red Sea on March 15, several F/A-18 Super Hornet fighter jets launched from the deck of the U.S. aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman, on their way to strike Houthi targets across western Yemen for the first time in two months.
Those U.S. fighter jets delivered the first salvo in a renewed military campaign against the Houthis—a U.S.-designated terrorist group currently controlling significant portions of the country, including its capital city Sana'a.
Since March 15, U.S. forces have conducted several additional rounds of airstrikes across Yemen.
The casualty assessments cannot be independently verified at this time.
Speaking at a Pentagon press briefing on March 17, U.S. Air Force Lt. Gen. Alexus Grynkewich said initial U.S. estimates indicated recent strikes have inflicted dozens of casualties on legitimate combatants. Grynkewich said U.S. military leaders had seen no indications of civilian casualties, despite the claims from within Yemen.
Houthis Link Standoff to Gaza
The Houthis began attacking vessels through the Middle Eastern waterways shortly after the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas terror attacks on southern Israel. From the start, Houthi leaders claimed solidarity with Hamas, which it sees as representing the Palestinian cause, and vowed they would conduct their attacks as a way to pressure Israel to discontinue its military operations against Hamas’s capabilities in the Gaza Strip.The Biden administration initially deployed U.S. warships to help intercept the Houthi drones and missiles on shipping traffic through the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait and the Gulf of Aden. As the attacks continued, the Biden administration stepped up its military action, ordering direct U.S. strikes on Houthi targets in Yemen.

Despite the earlier rounds of U.S. bombardment, the Houthis continued their attacks until January of this year, when Israel and Hamas entered into the first phase of a cease-fire framework to end the fighting in the Gaza Strip. In addition to halting their attacks, the Houthis also released the crew of the Galaxy Leader after 459 days.
The temporary Gaza cease-fire has faltered in recent weeks as Israeli and Hamas negotiators have disagreed on how the peace process should advance. Israel has supported an extension of the first cease-fire phase to allow more time to work out the details, but Hamas representatives rejected that idea and demanded all parties proceed to the second phase, wherein Israeli forces would withdraw from the Gaza Strip altogether.
Michael Horton, a fellow at the Jamestown Foundation who has studied the Red Sea region, said that the Houthis effectively used the Gaza conflict to rally their base of support.
“It plays very well in Yemen. It’s bought them a lot of support, so I think they'll continue to use it,” Horton said in a phone interview with The Epoch Times.
While the Houthis seek to justify their attacks on commercial ships by tying them to the situation in the Gaza Strip, Heritage Foundation senior policy analyst Daniel Flesch said the Trump administration should not be persuaded to let up.
“We should not let what they have done the last 18 months go unanswered,” Flesch told The Epoch Times.

Trump Raises Stakes For Iran
The Houthis, a predominantly Zaidi Shia Islamist movement, first emerged in opposition to the internationally-recognized Yemeni government. In 2014, the rebel Houthi faction seized Sana'a, leading the then-Yemeni President Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi to resign and flee the Yemeni capital city. Hadi later revoked his resignation and formed a government in exile in the Yemeni port city of Aden.Yemen has remained in a state of civil war since 2014. This Yemeni internal conflict has also become one proxy battle in a broader contest for regional influence between the West-aligned Saudi-led Arab coalition, which is focused on preventing the spread of extremist ideologies, and Iran’s anti-West Islamist regime.
Shortly after Hadi relaunched his government in Aden, Saudi Arabia formed a coalition of Arab Gulf states, including United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Morocco, Jordan, Bahrain, Sudan, and Kuwait, to back Hadi’s government militarily. By 2015, the United States also began supplying arms, intelligence, and logistical support for the Saudi-led military coalition in Yemen.
In a March 17 social media post, Trump indicated that his administration will consider the actions of the Houthis to be inextricably linked to Tehran.
Flesch said the warning to Iran marks a key change in the U.S. approach to the Red Sea standoff.

“The [Trump] administration is coming out forceful and stating clearly, first off, to the Houthis, ‘Continued disruption of international shipping will not stand.’ And more importantly, ‘We see you Iran, and your connection to the Houthis,’” Flesch said.
Battle Plans and Next Steps
In President Joe Biden’s final year in office, the U.S. military cycled four different carrier strike groups into position to intercept Houthi attacks and strike targets in Yemen. The U.S. military also deployed B-2 Spirit stealth bombers to destroy underground weapon storage sites.As Grynkewich discussed the latest U.S. strikes at the March 17 Pentagon press briefing, he faced questions about how these new operations differ from those seen under Biden. The Air Force general said he wouldn’t get into too many specifics due to operational security concerns, but said U.S. forces now have a broader set of targets in Yemen.
Grynkewich said Trump had also delegated authorities down to operational commanders on the scene, lowering the approval requirement for ordering new attacks.
“That allows us to achieve a tempo of operations where we can react to opportunities that we see on the battlefield, in order to continue to put pressure on the Houthis,” he said.
The Houthis control much of northwest Yemen, where nearly 80 percent of the country’s population of 32 million resides.

Horton warned that civilian casualties from intensifying U.S. strikes could drive more Yemenis to support the Houthis. He argued that any viable plan to counter, contain, and defeat the Houthis would have to be driven by Yemenis themselves.