-- Shares Facebook Twitter Reddit Email This article originally appeared at TomDispatch . In mid-June, the Associated Press announced that the U.S.
Navy had been engaged in the most intense naval combat since the end of World War II, which surely would come as a surprise to most Americans. This time, the fighting isn’t taking place in the Atlantic or Pacific Oceans but in the Red Sea and the adversary is Yemen’s — yes, Yemen’s! — Shiite party-militia, the Helpers of God ( Ansar Allah ), often known, thanks to their leading clan, as the Houthis. They are supporting the Palestinians of Gaza against the Israeli campaign of total war on that small enclave, while, in recent months, they have faced repeated air strikes from American planes and have responded by, among other things, attacking an American aircraft carrier and other ships off their coast.
Their weapons of choice are rockets, drones, small boats rigged with explosives and — a first ! — anti-ship ballistic missiles with which they have targeted Red Sea shipping. The Houthis see the U.S.
Navy as part of the Israeli war effort. The "Gate of Lamentation" In a sense, it couldn’t be more remarkable, historically speaking. Modest numbers of Yemenis have managed to launch a challenge to the prevailing world order, despite being poor, weak and brown, attributes that usually make people invisible to the American establishment.
One all-too-modern asset the Houthis have is the emergence of micro-weaponry in our wor.