The United States loses drones in Yemen as a violent reaction of civil toll fuels in Trump’s air campaign.
Yemen’s armed group demolished seven Reaper Us drones for a value of more than $ 200 million in recent weeks, marking the most significant material loss so far in the Washington campaign against combatants.
The drones were destroyed between March 31 and April 22, according to defense officials, since the hutis intensify efforts to attack the United States planes that operate on Yemen.
Three of the drones were lost last week, suggestions in the ability of hutis to attack American airplanes at great altitude.
The drones, each that cost around $ 30 million, carried out surveillance or attack missions when they crashed in water or land. A defense officer said the strikes occurred on March 31 and April 3, 9, 13, 18, 19 and 22, according to the Associated Press news agency.
Boxes of civilians killed in parts of Yemen controlled by Houthi were reported since March 15 after the president of the United States, Donald Trump, ordered daily attacks against the group.
The spokesman of the central command, Dave Eastburn, said Thursday that US forces have achieved more than 800 goals, destroying command centers, weapons deposits and aerial defenders, and killing Hutíes fighters and leaders. This statement could not be verified independently.
Another American official, who speaks under anonymity, said that drone losses are under investigation, but they are probably the result of a hostile fire, the AP reported.
The hutis have mainly directed to Israeli, American and British ships that pass through the Bab Al-Mandeb Strait in protest against the Israel War in Gaza. The group has said that the attacks would stop if Israel agreed to a high permanent fire.
Civil death toll assembly
The Trump administration seems to have changed the infrastructure to point only to figures deliberately beaten within the Hutí movement.
The strategic change occurs in the middle of civil losses on the increase in the campaign led by the United States, Chordination to Airwars, a monitoring group based in the United Kingdom.
Airwars estimates that between 27 and 55 civilians were killed in March duration of US strikes. The group believes that the toll in April, already considerably higher, thought that the full figures remain unfeeding.
Earlier this month, an American air strike went to Puerto Ras Isa, also in Hodeidah, killing at least 80 people and wounding more than 150.
This was followed by another attack on Monday, which killed 12 people and wounded more than 30 in the capital of Yemen, Sanaa.
The concerns are growing in Washington for the human cost of the campaign.
Senators Chris van Hollen, Elizabeth Warren and Tim Kaine wrote to the Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseeth, questioning whether the administration is abandoning their responsibility to reduce civil damage, participulate after the reports arose the high civil death.