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US forces have carried out a second phase of air strikes in response to the deaths of three American troops in Jordan last weekend, this time in Yemen where Iranian-backed Houthis have wreaked havoc on commercial shipping.
The US hit targets in Yemen on Saturday, according to a US official, a day after it struck Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps targets in Iraq and Syria.
Iran and Iraq warned earlier on Saturday that the strikes could trigger greater instability across the region.
US President Joe Biden is trying to deter the continued targeting of American service members while avoiding being pulled into a full-on regional war. Since mid-October, Iranian-backed groups have launched more than 160 attacks on American troops in Iraq, Syria and Jordan.
Last weekend’s attack in Jordan was the first that led to the deaths of American forces since the war between Israel and Hamas began, raising the risk of escalation.
The US said it struck 85 targets at 7 sites on Friday. The Iraqi government said on Saturday that 16 people, including civilians, were killed in the attacks. The Syrian military said “many civilian and military martyrs” were killed, but did not provide any other details.
The US has also become more involved in the Red Sea, where Iranian-backed Houthis have launched more than 39 attacks on commercial and military vessels transiting the crucial waterway.
The US has already conducted more than 12 strikes there to deter the Houthis from launching more attacks, which the rebel group says will continue so long as Israel is attacking Gaza.
The most recent Houthi strike, which officials described as opportunistic, took place earlier Saturday when the US military hit six anti-ship cruise missiles it said were preparing to launch against ships in the Red Sea.
Washington blamed last weekend’s drone attack on the Islamic Resistance in Iraq, a shadowy umbrella group believed to include Kataib Hizbollah, an Iraqi Shia militia, as well as other militants that have claimed responsibility for the attacks against US troops in Iraq and Syria.
The IRI is part of Iran’s so-called Axis of Resistance, which includes the Houthis in northern Yemen and Hizbollah in Lebanon.
This is a developing story . . .
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