Mohamed al-Falah, a member of Ansarala’s politburo, said the threats of Zionist war criminals were “just a cover to justify aggressive policies that will not erase the history of violence” and warned that those who resort to threats “will be met with similar responses from us in all areas,” al-Masira reported.
In his X-account, al-Falah stressed that Yemen is fully prepared to respond not with publicity stunts and newspaper rhetoric, but with “real measures that turn every hostile act into a political, economic and strategic cost that weighs heavily on substance and destroys the history and future of Zionist war criminals.”
He added that Ansarullah recognizes the Zionist objective of imposing a single pole in the region and suppressing all adversaries, adding that Yemen has not uttered any criminal threats, but rather has declared that it is ready to pay a heavy price for any invasion.
Since the escalation of the genocide in Gaza, Yemeni naval and missile operations have increasingly targeted vessels associated with the Zionist organization and its partners in the Red Sea.
Analysts say the developments in the Red Sea signal a strategic shift in deterrence. Naval operations in Yemen have translated battlefield resilience into economic pressure, forcing Zionist entities to bear the costs of rerouting and emergency supplies. The blockade, they explained, would force the invaders to pay an economic price for their crimes and the siege of Gaza, this time through trade as well as war.
MNA/
