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What are the Houthis and their allies, Iran in Yemen?

Yemen's Houthi group fired missiles on Saudi Arabia, accusing it of bombing a Saudi airport that was under their control. This broke a four-year ceasefire in the conflict between Saudi Arabia and the Iran-aligned movement. This move marks the end of the de-escalation period and is a sign that Iran may now use its Houthi allies in order to shut down the Bab el-Mandeb entrance to the Red Sea. It would be the second 'global /shipping chokepoint disrupted since the Strait of Hormuz.

WHO ARE HOUTHIS? Abdul Malik al-Houthi is the leader of Yemen’s Houthis. He is a highly secretive figure who has transformed mountain fighters wearing sandals into an army of tens and thousands of people that challenged Israel and Western allies following the Gaza War.

Houthis is a military, religious and political movement that is led by the Houthi Family and is based in north Yemen. They are Shi'ite Muslims who belong to the Zaydi Sect.

After the "Arab Spring", the Houthis expanded their power, and built stronger ties with Iran.

The group took advantage of the instability in the country and captured the Yemeni capital Sanaa, in 2014.

Saudi Arabia led an Arab coalition in a military operation to try to remove the group.

The Houthis showed significant missile and drone capability, by attacking vital infrastructure and oil installations in Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates.

The U.N. brokered an?2022 ceasefire between warring parties in Yemen after years of fighting which led to the worst humanitarian crisis on the planet.

History

The Houthi family, in the far north of Yemen, set up, in the late 1990s a religious revival for the Zaydi Shi'ite sect, which had once ruled Yemen, but whose northern heartland was now impoverished.

As tensions with the government increased, the guerrillas fought with the national armies and briefly with Sunni Saudi Arabia on the border.

HOUTHI ASSASSINS

The Houthis, claiming to be in support of the Palestinians, began shooting at international ships in the Red Sea after the attack by Hamas on Israel on October 7, 2023. Israel responded by airstrikes on Houthi targets after the Houthis fired missiles and drones. The U.S. launched its own strikes against the Houthis.

Houthi strikes disrupted international trade, forcing shipping around South Africa in order to avoid being hit.

Links with Iran The Houthis are building ties to Iran but the depth of this relationship is not known. Both the coalition and Iran deny that Iran is arming or training the Houthis. The coalition claims that Hezbollah, a Hezbollah-backed group in Lebanon, is also helping the Houthis. This accusation they reject.

Yemen experts claim that the Houthis are primarily motivated by domestic issues, despite sharing a political affinity to Iran and Hezbollah.

The U.S. claims that Iran armed, funded and 'trained the Houthis' with Hezbollah.

The Houthis deny that they are Iranian proxy forces and claim to develop their own weapons.

WAR IN YEMEN

Sanaa, which was captured by the Houthis in late 2014, was the beginning of the war. Saudi Arabia, concerned by the growing influence Shi'ite Iran had along its border with Saudi Arabia, intervened at the top of a Western-backed alliance in March 2015 to support the Saudi-backed Government.

The Houthis took control of much of the northern part and other major population centres while the internationally recognized government was based in Aden.

(source: Reuters)