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The US Navy says it can't stop the Houthi attacks (Read 360 times)
Laugh till you cry
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The US Navy says it can't stop the Houthi attacks
Aug 9th, 2024 at 2:47pm
 
Humpty Dumpty has fallen.

All the King's horses and all the King's men couldn't put Humpty together again.

Uncle Sam is being worn out by all the conflicts and chaos Genocide Joe Biden fomented.

Is the giant bone weary and in danger of being captured and hog tied by the Middle Earth Lilliputians?

The giant US Navy can't keep deploying to Middle Earth, undeploying back to the US and redeploying, repeatedly ad infinitum. Is this the weakness of the US military that has finally been exposed?

Is every deployment accompanied by equipment failures that depletes the force? The USAF is similarly affected.

Some of these forces crap out and break down without firing a shot and return to base limping and deflated.

https://www.businessinsider.com/us-navy-cant-stop-houthi-attacks-red-sea-shippin...

Quote:
The US Navy says it can't stop the Houthi attacks on shipping with force alone

Jake Epstein Aug 8, 2024, 11:40 PM GMT+7

The US Navy has spent months battling the Houthis in a conflict that shows no signs of ending.

A top admiral said it will take more than military action alone to stop the Houthi attacks.
Vice Adm.

George Wikoff said the solution will require a different kind of effort.

The US Navy's counter-Houthi mission will not be enough on its own to stop the Iran-backed rebels from attacking vulnerable merchant ships, the admiral overseeing operations in the Middle East said this week.

Vice Adm. George Wikoff, the commander of US Naval Forces Central Command, said that it will take more than force and firepower to deal with the Houthis. Rather, Washington and its allies must come up with an alternative way to apply pressure on the group.

"The solution is not going to come at the end of a weapon system," Wikoff said Wednesday at an event hosted by the Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank. "It's going to be the international community."

For over eight months, US forces have been working to defend key shipping lanes in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden from relentless Houthi attacks. The rebels have been using one-way attack drones, naval drones, and anti-ship missiles to threaten commercial vessels and American warships deployed in the region.

US warships and aircraft have expended hundreds of munitions to regularly intercept Houthi missiles and drones and to strike the rebels in Yemen, targeting assets like weapons, launchers, and radar sites.

Top US officials have repeatedly said that these efforts are intended to strip the Houthis of their ability to conduct attacks. But as of this week, the rebels continue to launch missiles and drones at the surrounding waters.

"We have certainly degraded their capability. There's no doubt about that," Wikoff said. "However, have we stopped them? No."

"Our mission remains to disrupt their ability and try to preserve some semblance of maritime order while we give an opportunity for policy to be developed against the Houthis," he added.

Wikoff said it has been difficult to find a center of gravity for the Houthis that the US can hold at risk over time, making it a challenge to apply a classic deterrence policy in this scenario.

Right now, he said, the idea is for the Navy to maintain the status quo to allow other areas of government and the international community to kick in and pressure the Houthis to stop their attacks.

"This is a global problem — the entire globe is impacted by this problem," he said. "We can certainly try with some warships and some sailors and some folks trying their best to preserve maritime security. But this is going to require a global solution."

"The more players on the field that can get involved in the diplomatic and that piece of this, the better off I think we'll be in terms of the odds of success," Wikoff added.

Wikoff's assessment echoes similar remarks made by US officials that the military action taken so far has been unable to stop the Houthis.

His comments also follow warnings from experts and officials that the Houthi conflict is unlikely to end soon, raising questions about the long-term sustainability of the US naval presence in the region and the growing financial costs of the operations.

Earlier this year, Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines told lawmakers that the Houthi threat is likely to stay active for some time because, among other reasons, the rebels recieve external assistance from Iran while also locally producing their own weapons.

Wikoff said that although Iran continues to back the Houthis, the rebels are "diversifying" where they receive support from and are domestically developing their own capabilities.

"We do believe there's an Iranian relationship here that's well-known and well-documented," he said. "But our assessment right now is — and we're certainly trying to deny that capability to make it in — we do believe that the overall supply of the Houthis is far more complex."
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« Last Edit: Aug 9th, 2024 at 8:37pm by Laugh till you cry »  

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Sir Grappler Truth Teller OAM
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Re: The US Navy says it can't stop the Houthi attacks
Reply #1 - Aug 10th, 2024 at 12:25am
 
What do you expect?  Wall to wall warships on standby?
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lee
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Re: The US Navy says it can't stop the Houthi attacks
Reply #2 - Aug 10th, 2024 at 1:12pm
 
Well if Walz gets his way the US navy will be running on Algae fuel.
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Laugh till you cry
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Re: The US Navy says it can't stop the Houthi attacks
Reply #3 - Aug 10th, 2024 at 1:23pm
 
Sir Grappler Truth Teller OAM wrote on Aug 10th, 2024 at 12:25am:
What do you expect?  Wall to wall warships on standby?


... stuck in a sea of sh1t like that in Grappler's head?
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tallowood
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Re: The US Navy says it can't stop the Houthi attacks
Reply #4 - Aug 10th, 2024 at 1:52pm
 
US Navy can do but at present there is no political will to hit Houthi sponsor and weapons supplier - ayatolah's regime in Iran.
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ישראל חיה ערבים לערבים
 
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Laugh till you cry
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Re: The US Navy says it can't stop the Houthi attacks
Reply #5 - Aug 10th, 2024 at 2:18pm
 
tallowood wrote on Aug 10th, 2024 at 1:52pm:
US Navy can do but at present there is no political will to hit Houthi sponsor and weapons supplier - ayatolah's regime in Iran.


Perhaps the USN will Hannibalize Tallowood and end his misery.

Even Yahweh is p1ssed with Tallowood's pathetic performance.
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Please don't thank me. Effusive fawning and obeisance of disciples, mendicants, and foot-kissers embarrass me.
 
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tallowood
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Re: The US Navy says it can't stop the Houthi attacks
Reply #6 - Aug 10th, 2024 at 2:45pm
 
...
LTYC has still not cleaned himself so he will continue to be smelly crappy farting jihadist wanker despised even by sex jihad girls.
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