Weekly Opinion Editorial
ECONOMICS DRIVE ACTION
by Steve Fair
On Saturday, Houthis, an Iran-backed group, launched attacks on U.S. naval and commercial ships in the Red Sea. The naval destroyer USS Carney shot down 14 attack drones launched by Houthi. The goal of Houthi’s attacks were to disrupt the commercial shipping lanes. It worked because Maersk, the world’s largest shipping company, halted all shipping through the area. The Pentagon has moved significant naval presence off the coast of Yemen to support a potential U.S. response to the attacks.
The Houthi movement emerged in Yemen in the 1990s as an opposition group
made up primarily of Shia Muslims. Due
to their intimidation type tactics, the Houthi movement is considered to be the
Yemeni mafia. The Houthis goal is to
govern all of Yemen and support movements against the U.S., Israel and Saudi
Arabia. After the Israel-Hamas war broke
out, Houthis started firing missiles at Israeli cities from their position in
northern Yemen. Houthis has stated they
will continue to attack Israel until it is destroyed. Three observations:
First, in
2021, President Biden de-listed Houthis from a sanctions list against terrorist
groups. President Trump, as he was
leaving office, placed Houthis on the Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) list. Biden’s removal upset Saudi Arabia and with
reason. Houthis has launched more than
1,000 attacks on Saudi in recent years.
The group gets their funding and training from Iran. Houthis should have never been removed from
the FTO list, but Biden wanted to send a message and play hardball with Saudi
in the early days of his administration.
He thought he could negotiate with the Iranians- a foolish belief. Back in March, the Iranians agreed to stop
funding Houthis in their attacks on Saudi, but they never lived up to the
agreement. Houthis should be immediately
put back on the FTO/sanctions list. The
removal has been part of the reason they got the funding they needed to launch
the attacks. Forty bipartisan U.S. House
members sent a letter to Secretary of State Anthony Blinken calling for Houthis
to be re-classified as an FTO and legislation has been put forward calling for
sanctions against Yemen.
Second, the
Biden administration has told Israel they would handle Houthis. But clearly there is a reluctance to strike
back at Houthis. Biden appears more
concerned about his shaky agreement with Yemen and Iran than dealing with
terrorists. U.S. military leaders have
warned retaliation against Houthi remains an option, but until Biden recognizes
that negotiating with terrorists is foolhardy, Houthis will continue to lob missiles
and launch attack drones. Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu has allegedly told President Biden they will hit Houthis
since the US appears unwilling to do so.
Third, economics
will ultimately drive action. The Red
Sea is a major global trade artery. If
Houthis is successful at slowing/stopping the flow of ships, supply and demand
will kick in. Oil, grain and consumer
goods pricing will move up. 2024 is an election year and Biden can ill
afford to have more inflation or ‘supply chain’ issues when he is on the
ballot.
Since President
Biden took office, prices have increased +17.4% and wages have increased
+13%. Only President Carter had a higher
inflation rate- +26.2%- at this point in his presidency. Because money is the driver, expect Biden to
reverse his boneheaded decision to remove Houthis from the FTO list to keep the
shipping lanes open and prices down.
The Houthis slogan is, “Death to America, death to Israel, curse the Jews and victory to Islam.” That, in itself, should have been reason enough to keep them on the FTO list.
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