Israel Levels Yemen’s Main Airport After Strike Near Tel Aviv—Trump Says Houthis Give In

Over the weekend a Houthi ballistic missile struck Israel near Tel Aviv airport. Since then, numerous airlines have suspended service. Both Delta and United are currently suspended until May 11th (American Airlines never resumed service after the October 7 attacks). European carriers like Lufthansa are similarly suspended.

In response, Israel carried out a series of airstrikes targeting Sanaa International Airport in Yemen, which is in Houthi-controlled territory. Israel issued a warning to all in the area prior to the attack, announcing that it was coming, in order to minimize any civilian casualties.

This airport has consistently gone out of service over the past decade. The Saudi air force bombed the terminal and only runway in 2015 and forced the closure of airspace in the area in 2016. The next year Houthis shot a missile into Saudi Arabia, and the Saudis responded by focing closure of the airport and then bombing the facility. The Saudis again performed air strikes on the airport in 2021.

There were no commercial flights at the airport from mid-April 2016 through mid-May 2022. At the end of 2024, Israel struck the airport in response to Houthi attacks on civilians in Israel.

Today the Israel Defense Forces struck the airport, targeting three civilian aircraft, the departures hall, runways, and a Houthi military base. They also targeted infrastructure throughout the Yemeni capital. Yemenia Airways reported that three of its aircraft were destroyed.

The Houthis initially responded by promising ongoing resistance and declaring that Yemeni support for Palestine would continue until the end of hostilities against Gaza. However, Donald Trump announced that American military strikes under Operation Rough Rider against Houthi forces would halt immediately because of Houthi “capitulation,” as the Houthis communicated their intention to cease attacks against commercial and naval shipping in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden.

That announcement will disappoint Israel, which prefers to destroy Houthi military capabilities to ensure security from ongoing missile threats.

About Gary Leff

Gary Leff is one of the foremost experts in the field of miles, points, and frequent business travel - a topic he has covered since 2002. Co-founder of frequent flyer community InsideFlyer.com, emcee of the Freddie Awards, and named one of the "World's Top Travel Experts" by Conde' Nast Traveler (2010-Present) Gary has been a guest on most major news media, profiled in several top print publications, and published broadly on the topic of consumer loyalty. More About Gary »

More articles by Gary Leff »

Comments

  1. The Houthis have launched hundreds of missiles at Israel over the course of a few years.
    Consider what would happen if Taiwan would launch but a single missile at China.
    Taiwan as we know it would not exist an hour later.

  2. What was it that Bukele said: “Oopsie.”

    (Sorry, I couldn’t resist. I don’t even like the self-proclaimed ‘world’s coolest dictator,’ but it was the first thing that came to mind when I read this. I don’t like Netanyahu, personally, either, and think there were some serious lapses in security on October 7, 2023, that must be investigated, and if he has prolonged that war and the needless suffering of the hostages, there should be accountability there, too. And, also, I can admit that the pagers incident was freaking incredible from an operations standpoint. Finally, yeah, the Houthis are no good, so, like, please stop jeopardizing global shipping, k, thanks, bye.)

  3. The solution is simple: implement the ceasefire, and the Houthis’ missiles will stop. The Houthis stopped all hostilities during the brief ceasefire until Israel broke it. It is maddening to see our country waste resources fighting another nation when they could ask its ally, Israel, to abide by the agreement signed via Steve Wykoff and, God forbid, respect international law. This is a perfect recipe for the US to get sucked into another unwinnable Middle-Eastern conflict.

  4. @Ben Rothke — No one is reasonably in-favor of harm to civilians. However, you made a false equivalence with Taiwan above. Taiwan is not a terrorist state like the Houthis in Yemen. Let’s be clear here. Taiwan is our ally, worthy of our defense and support. The Taiwanese are free, independent, peace-loving, productive, creative people, with their own culture and political leadership, unique and separate from the CCP and the Chinese mainland (which should be known as West Taiwan, technically, since the Republic of China was forced out by Mao *wink*). The Taiwanese are deserving of their own sovereignty and self-determination, and for all intents and purposes, they are currently their own country, if we were courageous enough to formally recognize reality. I’ve thoroughly enjoyed my visits to Taipei and look forward to visiting again.

  5. Who flies into Yemen…? LOL (That isn’t running ammo, drugs or both)

    Symbolic counter attack. But, good job anyway.

    Will be quite interesting if the Houthis try to send missiles – symbolically too – over to Saudi Arabia when Trump visits in a week or so.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *