U.S. Launches 38 Airstrikes Across Yemen’s Capital and Five Provinces

American warplanes launch 34 strikes across multiple provinces, including Sanaa, Saada, and Hodeidah, as part of a renewed campaign targeting Houthi capabilities.

Watan-Media outlets affiliated with the Ansar Allah movement (Houthis) reported that U.S. warplanes intensified their airstrikes on Thursday night into Friday, targeting Yemen’s capital and the provinces of Sanaa, Saada, Amran (north), Hodeidah (west), and Al-Jawf (northeast) with 34 airstrikes. This came just hours after four strikes hit the Jarban area in Sanhan District, Sanaa Province.

According to Al-Masirah TV, the Houthi-affiliated channel, “The American aggression targeted Sanaa International Airport with two strikes, the command center in Al-Tahrir District in central Sanaa with one strike, Al-Asayid area in Al-Safra District in Saada with five strikes, and Al-Salim District in the same province with two strikes.”

U.S. Airstrikes Hit Multiple Houthi Sites Across Yemen
New American strikes on Yemen after a qualitative Houthi strike

U.S. Airstrikes Hit Multiple Houthi Sites Across Yemen

It added: “The American aggression targeted Al-Luhayyah District in Hodeidah province in western Yemen with three strikes, Al-Jabal Al-Aswad in Harf Sufyan District in Amran with eight strikes, Al-Humaydat District in Al-Jawf with three strikes, and Sarf area in Bani Hashish District in Sanaa with one strike.”

The Houthi-run SABA News Agency reported that U.S. warplanes carried out 19 strikes on the areas of Al-Lubda, Al-Amshiyya, Habasha, Al-Aadi, Al-Abla, and Al-Jabal Al-Aswad.

Local sources said one strike targeted the military camp in the Al-Sawad area, south of Sanaa Province.

Al-Masirah also reported that a civilian was injured in Bani Hashish District due to a U.S. airstrike, and that civilian homes were damaged following the strike on the command center in central Sanaa.

The United States resumed its airstrikes on Houthi-controlled areas in Yemen on March 15, as part of a second round of attacks that, according to the U.S. administration, aim to target the capabilities of the Houthis.

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