U.S. foreign policy is anchored on its strategic national interests, not world opinion, no matter how strident.
Egypt, arguably most affected by Houthi attacks, may be pressured to assist the U.S. and U.K. diplomatically.
The conflict in Yemen's Red Sea region presents a microcosm of broader geopolitical dynamics.
The only route out of this inexorable hour-by-hour escalation is to bring the Gaza war to an end.
Led by the U.S., Germany and U.K., a number of Western nations and their allies suspended their crucial funding to UNRWA.
The all-out war Tehran is steadily provoking should be waged only from outside its borders, because the mullahs' defeat should come from within.
There is, however, a lesser possibility of the U.S. dragging Iran directly into the conflict.
The deaths of three U.S. soldiers in Jordan this weekend will prompt retaliation. But what then?
The White House decision to relist the rebels as a specially designated global terrorist group and call the move a “pliable form of economic pressure” looked frankly ridiculous.
The strikes carried out by the U.S. in response to the Red Sea attacks by the Houthis did not deter the Yemeni militiamen.
Houthi Red Sea operations are designed to put pressure on the U.S. and Western powers to secure a ceasefire in Gaza.
[T]he U.S. ... has little chance of success. It is impossible to defeat Houthis with air strikes.