Yemeni Rebels Joined the War on Israel. Here’s What the U.S. Can Do https://mosaicmagazine.com/picks/israel-zionism/2023/11/yemeni-rebels-joined-the-war-on-israel-heres-what-the-u-s-can-do/

November 1, 2023 | Jonathan Schanzer
About the author: Jonathan Schanzer, a former terrorism finance analyst at the United States Department of the Treasury, is senior vice president for research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. He is author of the new book Gaza Conflict 2021: Hamas, Israel and Eleven Days of War (FDD Press). Follow him on Twitter @JSchanzer.

On Monday, I mentioned Queen Rania of Jordan’s appearance on CNN, in which, unchallenged by Christiane Amanpour, she heaped all sorts of libels on the Jewish state, while blaming it for Hamas’s brutal attacks on its populace. But if Hamas were to take over the West Bank—one of its goals—it would directly threaten Jordan’s stability, stability Israel has helped to maintain since the 1970s. The pro-Iranian axis, moreover, already endangers Amman from Syria in the north and Iraq in the east. The queen’s rhetoric, in other words, runs directly counter to her country’s interests.Nothing could make that clearer than the cruise missile, launched at Israel by Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels, that landed in the Jordanian desert yesterday. Another Houthi missile aimed at the Negev was intercepted by the Arrow defense system. And lest there be any doubt about the group’s intentions, its spokesman issued a de-facto declaration of war on Jerusalem. Jonathan Schanzer argues that the U.S. should respond by reinstituting the sanctions on the Houthis precipitously dropped in 2021:

The Biden administration’s reversal was completely disconnected from the question of whether the Houthis met the criteria for a terror designation. . . . It is an Iran-funded group that is armed and trained by the regime [and that] has launched more than 1,000 attacks against Saudi Arabia in recent years, and the Saudis have expressed frustration that the Biden White House has been seemingly indifferent to this.

The re-listing of the Houthis, ideally done publicly alongside Saudi officials, would send an unequivocal message to the Iranians and the wider Middle East. The message: the U.S.-Saudi relationship is back on track, and a revitalized U.S.-led regional alliance—one that includes both Israel and the Saudis—is taking shape. Such a move might be exactly what is needed to get those normalization discussions back on track between Riyadh and Jerusalem, whenever this war ends.

Critics of such a move might warn that it would needlessly provoke the Houthis. My response: they appear to be needlessly provoked already. Critics might also argue that re-listing the Houthis would prevent aid from entering Yemen. This is simply not true. Look at how much aid is pouring into Gaza, where a U.S. sanctioned terrorist group has (until now, anyway) maintained control.

Read more on Commentary: https://www.commentary.org/jonathan-schanzer/how-biden-should-handle-missiles-from-yemen/