Iran denies aiding Yemen’s Houthi rebels after U.S. strikes and a threat from Trump
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CAIRO — Iran on Sunday again denied aiding Yemen’s Houthi rebels after the United States launched a wave of airstrikes against them and President Trump warned that Tehran would be held “fully accountable” for their actions.
The Houthi-run Health Ministry said the weekend strikes killed at least 31 people, including women and children, and wounded more than 100. The rebels said one strike hit two homes in northern Saada province, killing four children and a woman. The rebel-run Al-Masirah TV showed images of what it said were the bodies.
The Houthis have repeatedly targeted international commercial shipping in the Red Sea and launched missiles and drones at Israel in what the rebels have called acts of solidarity with the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, where Israel has been at war with Hamas, another Iranian ally.
The U.S. airstrikes were one of the most extensive attacks against the Houthis since the war in Gaza began in October 2023.
Trump’s national security adviseor, Michael Waltz, on Sunday told ABC that the strikes “actually targeted multiple Houthi leaders and took them out.”
The Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen say a series of airstrikes hit the capital, Sana, on Saturday evening.
The Houthi attacks had stopped when a fragile Israel-Hamas cease-fire took hold in Gaza in January, but the rebels last week said they would renew them against Israeli vessels sailing off Yemen after Israel cut off the flow of humanitarian aid to Gaza this month.
There have been no Houthi attacks reported since then.
The U.S. and others have long accused Iran of providing military aid to the Houthis. The U.S. Navy has seized Iranian-made missile parts and other weaponry it said were bound for the militant group, which controls Yemen’s capital, Sanaa, and the country’s north.
Gen. Hossein Salami, head of Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard, denied his country was involved in the Houthis’ attacks, saying it “plays no role in setting the national or operational policies” of the militant groups it is allied with across the region, according to state-run TV.
A letter President Trump wrote to Iran’s supreme leader in an attempt to jump-start talks over Tehran’s rapidly advancing nuclear program has arrived in Tehran.
Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, writing in a post on X, urged the U.S. to halt the strikes and said Washington cannot dictate Iran’s foreign policy.
Trump on Saturday vowed to use “overwhelming lethal force” until the Houthis cease their attacks on shipping along the vital maritime corridor.
The Houthis had targeted more than 100 merchant vessels with missiles and drones, sinking two and killing four sailors, during their campaign targeting military and civilian ships between the start of the war in Gaza and this January.
The United States, Israel and Britain previously hit Houthi-held areas in Yemen, but Saturday’s operation was conducted solely by the U.S. It was the first strike on the Houthis under the second Trump administration.
Magdy writes for the Associated Press. AP writer Amir Vahdat in Tehran contributed to this report.