Houthi missile targets Tel Aviv airport as Israel mulls strike on Iran ...Middle East

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Houthi missile targets Tel Aviv airport as Israel mulls strike on Iran

Conflict between Israel and the Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen has escalated again with a missile strike on Tel Aviv as fears grow that an attack on Iran itself could be imminent.

Houthi militants claimed a ballistic missile attack on Tel Aviv on Friday that disrupted flights to the city’s main airport, following Israeli air strikes on Yemen on Thursday, as a slow-burning conflict continues, with some Israeli officials calling for strikes against Iran.

    The Israel Defence Forces (IDF) said a missile was shot down by air defences around 4am local time, as arrivals to Ben Gurion airport were briefly suspended. Air raid sirens sounded across much of the country, sending millions to bomb shelters, with 18 minor injuries reported.

    The Houthi group, which receives funding and training from Iran, claimed: “The missile succeeded in reaching its target despite the enemy’s censorship, and the operation resulted in casualties and the cessation of navigation at the airport.”

    The attack followed a wave of Israeli strikes what it claimed were Houthi-linked targets in Yemen on Thursday that killed six and injured dozens more. The main airport in Yemen’s capital, Sana’a, was hit, narrowly missing the World Health Organisation chief, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, and several power stations.

    Damage to Sana’a International Airport in Yemen’s capital after Israeli air strikes (Photo: Mohammed Hamoud/Anadolu/Getty)

    The Houthis have increased drone and missile attacks on Israel throughout the war in Gaza, in alliance with other members of the Iran-led “Axis of Resistance” that includes Hamas, Hezbollah, and Iraqi militias.

    Another Houthi missile strike on Tel Aviv last Saturday injured dozens. The group said yesterday it could “expand the target bank in occupied Palestine to include more vital facilities”.

    Israel has responded with increasing force and is signalling that it is gearing up for a sustained campaign against the Yemeni group.

    “We are just getting started with them,” said the Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, after Thursday’s strikes. Defence Minister, Israel Katz, suggested that Israel would use the decapitation strategy employed against Hamas and Hezbollah. “We will hunt down all Houthi leaders,” he said.

    But Israel is unlikely to be able to degrade the Yemeni group as effectively as it did Hamas and Hezbollah, according to Professor Kobi Michael, an Israeli military analyst at the Institute for National Security Studies and Misgav Institute think tanks.

    “They are located across a very large area in mountains and deserts so their locations are not easy to detect,” he told The i Paper. “We don’t have intelligence as good as we have with regard Hezbollah, Syria, Iran, or Hamas. And we are talking about a distance of 1,200km, so the circumstances are pretty complicated.”

    Israel is likely to lean on the US-led alliance, which includes the UK, which is already engaged in a military campaign against the Houthis over their attacks on Red Sea shipping, Dr Michael said, and to try to impose a maritime blockade to cut off the group’s weapons supply lines.

    Mossad chief David Barnea has reportedly advised the Prime Minister to strike Iran (Photo: Amir Cohen/Reuters)

    Israel is also said to be mulling options to respond to the Houthis through strikes against their patron, Iran. Mossad chief, David Barnea, has advised Netanyahu to “go for the head, Iran,” according to reports in several Israeli news outlets that cited official sources.

    The Israeli MP and former war cabinet minister Benny Gantz said this week that Israel should “target Iran directly,” adding that “the solution to putting an end to [Houthi] attacks lies in Tehran”.

    Israeli hawks such as the former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett have argued that the damage inflicted by Israel on Iran’s allies during the war in Gaza have created a unique opportunity for an overwhelming military campaign against the regime.

    Israel also claims to have inflicted damage on Iran’s air defences and military installations during an exchange of fire in October.

    Dr Michael believes an attack could be imminent. “Netanyahu is willing to attack Iran and he understands that this is a very narrow window of opportunity,” he said, suggesting that president-elect Donald Trump would prefer Israel to strike before his inauguration on 20 January.

    Head of WHO at Yemen airport during deadly Israeli strikes

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    But Sina Toosi, an Iran specialist at the Center for International Policy think-tank in Washington, said an attack on Iran could backfire.

    “An Israeli attack on Iran is possible but fraught with significant risks for both Israel and the US,” he said. “Despite setbacks in its regional alliances, Iran retains formidable capabilities, including a robust arsenal of ballistic missiles and drones, along with the capacity for asymmetric retaliation across multiple fronts.”

    “Israel’s struggle to decisively neutralise Hezbollah in the recent conflict underscores these risks. Despite Israel’s devastating attacks on Lebanon, Hezbollah’s missile and drone strikes continued unabated, even escalating in the days before the ceasefire, targeting central Israel and Tel Aviv.

    “A military strike on Iran would likely yield similar results — failing to achieve a decisive victory while provoking severe Iranian retaliation and potentially accelerating Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.”

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