
The continued escalation of attacks against the port city of Hodeida in Yemen by 
the U.S.-Saudi-Emirati coalition confirms that the American calls for a 
cease-fire are nothing but empty talk. The recent statements are trying to 
mislead the world. Saudi leaders are reckless and have no interest in diplomacy. 
The United States has the clout to bring an end to the conflict — but it has 
decided to protect a corrupt ally.
Any observer of the crimes committed in Yemen by Saudi Arabia — a campaign that 
has been accompanied by disinformation and a blockade of journalists trying to 
cover the war — can offer an account of the indiscriminate killing thousands of 
civilians, mostly through airstrikes. Their attacks have led to the greatest 
humanitarian crisis on earth.
The brutality of the Saudi regime was reflected in the murder of the journalist 
Jamal Khashoggi. And it can be seen in the military escalation and airstrikes in 
Hodeida and other cities, in defiance of all international warnings.
The blockade of the port city is meant to bring the Yemeni people to their 
knees. The coalition is using famine and cholera as weapons of war. It is also 
extorting the United Nations by threatening to cut their funds, as if it were a 
charity and not a responsibility required under international law and Security 
Council resolutions.
The United States wants to be viewed as an honest mediator — but it is in fact 
participating and sometimes leading the aggression on Yemen.
We are defending ourselves — but we don’t have warplanes like the ones that bomb 
Yemenis with banned ammunition. We can’t lift the blockade imposed on Yemeni 
imports and exports. We cannot cancel the air embargo and allow daily flights, 
or end the ban of importing basic commodities, medicines and medical equipment 
from any place other than the United Arab Emirates, as it is imposing on Yemeni 
business executives.
And the list goes on. These repressive practices are killing and destroying 
Yemen.
Yemen was not the one who declared the war in the first place. Even Jamal 
Benomar, the former United Nations envoy to Yemen, said we were close to a 
power-sharing deal in 2015 that was disrupted by the coalition airstrikes. We 
are ready to stop the missiles if the Saudi-led coalition stops its airstrikes.
But the United States’ calling to stop the war on Yemen is nothing but a way to 
save face after the humiliation caused by Saudi Arabia and its spoiled leader, 
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who has ignored Washington’s pleas to clarify 
Khashoggi’s murder.
Moreover, Trump and his administration clearly prefer to continue this 
devastating war because of the economic returns it produces — they drool over 
those arms sales profits.
We love peace — the kind of honorable peace defended by our revolution’s leader, 
Abdulmalik al-Houthi. We are ready for peace, the peace of the brave. God 
willing, Yemenis will remain the callers of peace and lovers of peace.