Monday, January 29, 2024

OOPS
Israel-Hamas war: US failed to stop drone after mistaking it for its own
WW3.0 

Harriet Barber
THE TELEGRAPH
Mon, 29 January 2024 

The US failed to prevent a deadly attack on American troops in Jordan because it was unable to identify an incoming enemy drone, officials said.

The UAV used in Sunday’s attack by Iran-backed militants approached the Tower 22 outpost at the same time a US drone was also returning to base, the US officials told the Wall Street Journal.

Three American troops were killed and dozens of others wounded in the assault.

The Iran-backed Islamic Resistance in Iraq umbrella group claimed responsibility for the attack.

A US defence official told the Wall Street Journal Washington was yet to find evidence that Iran directed the strike. Tehran has publicly denied doing so.


Houthi Rebels Claim to Have Attacked U.S. Navy Sea Base USS Pulle

Lewis B. Puller
USS Lewis B. Puller under way with escorts (USN file image)

PUBLISHED JAN 30, 2024 12:43 AM BY THE MARITIME EXECUTIVE

 

The U.S. military has denied claims of a Houthi missile attack on the sea base USS Lewis B. Puller, a special-ops platform currently operating off Yemen. 

"In vindication to the oppressed people of Palestine, and within the response to the American-British aggression against our country . . . [Houthi forces] have launched a suitable naval missile towards the US Naval 'Lwis B Puller' vessel [sic] in the gulf of Aden," said Houthi spokesman Yahya Saree in a social media statement Monday. "The burning of Israeli, American and British ships will continue until the blockade on Gaza ends."

A U.S. official denied that the Puller had been attacked by Houthi missiles and said that there had been no reported attempt. 

Saree noted that the Puller has been involved in supporting U.S. military operations against Houthi interests. The vessel was the platform used to launch the ill-fated boarding of a dhow off Somalia on January 11. This action resulted in the seizure of Iranian-made missile components, according to defense officials, but it cost two U.S. Navy SEALs their lives

Over the past three months, Yemen's Houthi rebels have repeatedly attacked merchant ships and naval vessels in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. Just last Friday, the group targeted and hit the LR2 tanker Marlin Luanda, which was under charter to Trafigura and carrying a cargo of Russian naphtha. One cargo tank was ruptured in the strike, and the resulting fire took a day to put out. 

In November, the group seized a car carrier, the Galaxy Leader, as it transited the Red Sea. The vessel remains anchored under guard near Hodeidah. Negotiations over the release of the ship's crew are under way. 

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