When Will Annihilating the Houthis Become an Objective—UKMTO Reported the Houthis Sunk Another Ship, the Tutor, in the Red Sea

Still, the fundamental transformer of America—the queer Kenyan puppet/puppeteer behind the screen—is empowering rather than bringing to cessation moslem terrorism on the world stage.

This from newsmax.com.

The question that must immediately be asked—although it will not be until America undergoes a Regime change—is, ‘When will the Houthi’s briefly become U.S. enemy number one?’T

The United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) said on Tuesday:

Yemen’s Houthi militants are believed to have sunk a second ship, the Tutor, in the Red Sea.

According to previous reports from UKMTO, the Houthis, and other sources:

The Greek-owned Tutor coal carrier was struck by missiles and an explosive-laden remote-controlled boat on June 12 and had been taking on water.

UKMTO said in a security update:

Military authorities report maritime debris and oil sighted in the (Tutor’s) last reported location.

The Tutor’s manager could not immediately be reached for comment.

One crew member, believed to be in the Tutor’s engine room at the time of the attacks, remains missing.

The Iran-aligned Houthis have been targeting commercial ships in the Red Sea region since November, in what they say are attacks in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza.

The UK-owned Rubymar was the first ship sunk by the Houthis. It went down on March 2, about two weeks after being struck by missiles.

The UKMTO’s report of the suspected Tutor sinking comes a week after the Houthis seriously damaged that Liberia-flagged ship, as well as the Palau-flagged Verbena, which was loaded with wood construction material.

Sailors from the Verbena abandoned ship when they were unable to contain a fire sparked by the attacks. The Verbena is now drifting in the Gulf of Aden and vulnerable to sinking or further assaults.

Since November, the Houthis have also seized another vessel and killed three sailors in separate attacks.

The Houthi drone and missile assaults have forced shipping firms to divert vessels from the Suez Canal trade shortcut to the longer route around Africa, disrupting global trade by delaying deliveries and sending costs higher.

U.S. and British forces on Monday conducted airstrikes targeting Yemen’s Hodeidah International Airport and Kamaran Island near the port of Salif off the Red Sea in what appeared to be retaliation for last week’s ship attacks.

The Houthis reported having attacked the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower aircraft carrier on May 31.

As previously reported:

  • Houthis reportedly attacked US carrier Eisenhower in Red Sea as retaliation for recent Anglo-American strikes.
  • Improved tension between Houthi rebels, the US and UK due to alleged attacks and escalation of military strikes in Yemen.
  • The Yemen war involves complicated historical context, religious division and Houthis’ opposition to Israel.

However, a DoD spokesperson reported the Houthi claims about targeting the Eisenhower and hitting a destroyer were false.