Houthi officials said
The ceasefire agreement between Yemen’s Husseus and the United States does not include Israel’s box office, indicating that its transportation attacks undermine global trade and that the challenged world powers will not stop completely.
President Donald Trump announced on Tuesday that the United States would stop bombing Iran's unanimous Hushis in Yemen, saying the group had agreed to stop attacking U.S. ships.
After Trump announced the news, Oman said it had mediated a ceasefire agreement to stop attacks on U.S. ships.
Since January, there have been no reports of attacks on the Houthi shipments in the Red Sea region.
“The agreement does not include Israel, form or form,” Houthi negotiator Chief Mohammed Abdulsalam told Reuters.
“As long as they announce their quit smoking [of U.S. strikes] They are actually committed to this and our position is self-defense, so we will stop. ”
While tensions between the United States and Husses may have eased, a resilient force that has endured years of severe leadership bombing in the Yemeni civil war, the agreement does not rule out attacks on any other ships or targets linked to Israel.
The United States has launched a strike against Hossis this year to stop attacks on Red Sea shipping. Rights activists raised concerns about civilian casualties.
“They said, 'Please don't blow us up again, and you won't attack your ship,' Trump said in an Oval Office meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney on Tuesday.
“I will accept their words. We will stop bombing Houthi immediately.”
The United States has reached more than 1,000 goals
The Houthi have been firing in Israel and the Red Sea since Israel's deadly attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.
The U.S. military said it has reached more than 1,000 targets since it began operations in Yemen on March 15, known as Operation Rough Rider. The U.S. military said the strike killed “hundreds of Houthi Fighters and numerous Houthi leaders.”
Tensions have been high since the beginning of the Gaza war, but since Sunday's Houthi missile landed near Israel's Ben Gurion airport, prompting Israel's Israeli air strikes at the port of Hodida in Yemen.
The Israeli military conducted an air strike at a major airport in Yemen on Tuesday, the second attack on the Hotti rebels in two days after tensions surged between the group and Israel.
Under the administration of former U.S. President Joe Biden, the United States and Britain have retaliated against air strikes against Houthi targets to maintain a critical Red Sea trade route, which is about 15% of global transport traffic.
After Trump took over the U.S. presidency in January, he decided to significantly intensify air strikes on Hotis. Houthis said they will resume attacks on Israeli ships crossing the Red Sea, Arabian Sea, Bab Mandambo Strait and the Gulf of Aden.
On April 28, suspected of U.S. air raids attacked an immigration center in Yemen, and Houthi TV said 68 people were killed.