Sirens sound in the Dead Sea, Hotis fire ballistic missile in the West Coast region, Yemen
IDF announced that the missile was intercepted.
A ballistic missile was fired into Israel on Saturday night, with sirens sounding in the Dead Sea and part of the West Coast.
IDF announced that the missile was intercepted.
Hotis vows to continue firing on Israel
Hushis claimed to target his Palestinian 2 treble missile last Tuesday night, but there was no evidence that it was hypertension. Hypersonic weapons usually refer to missiles that are operated at hypersonic speeds at Mach 5. While ballistic missiles may reach hypersonic speeds, they follow known trajectories rather than manipulation.
Husseth's Al-Masirah media said: “In the official statement, [Houthi] The troops confirmed the operation [Tuesday night] Its goal was achieved accurately, causing widespread panic among Zionist settlers, and millions of shelters and airport operations were completely suspended. ”
Houthi supporters held a banner showing images of Iranian officials killed in an Israeli air strike during a protest in Sanaa, Yemen on June 13.
Hussis also issued a statement, “emphasizing that these actions are part of Yemen's ongoing support for the Palestinian people and their rejection of ongoing genocide. It reaffirms the determination of the Yemeni people to the national and religious responsibility of the Palestinians.”
Hushis said they will continue to support Hamas, continue to use “treble and ballistic missiles” and will target Ben Gurion Airport and Eilat.
They also said they were proud of their confrontation with Israel's wider region.
These “operations” include “destroying air traffic at LOD airports” [Ben-Gurion] And prevent Israeli ships from sailing the Red Sea to the Umm al-Rashrash port [Eilat] In the south occupied Palestine. ”
The report also said that since the Hamas massacre on October 7, Huthis has not only issued a statement of solidarity, but has also taken direct action.
“These operations range from missile strikes targeting key military devices in occupied areas to high-impact naval operations that undermine Israel's linked transport through the Red Sea,” it said.
Seth J. Frantzman contributed to the report.