The fragile ceasefire between Saudi Arabia and Yemen’s Houthi movement since April 2022 is under stress after the Houthis struck Abha airport on Monday in apparent retaliation for a Saudi airstrike on Sanaa international airport that took place while an Iranian passenger plane carrying a Houthi delegation was en route from Tehran. The aircraft ultimately diverted to Hodeidah, renewing Riyadh’s concern that restoring Tehran–Sanaa flights could facilitate transfers of weapons, technical support or

2026-07-16

The fragile ceasefire between Saudi Arabia and Yemen’s Houthi movement since April 2022 is under stress after the Houthis struck Abha airport on Monday in apparent retaliation for a Saudi airstrike on Sanaa international airport that took place while an Iranian passenger plane carrying a Houthi delegation was en route from Tehran. The aircraft ultimately diverted to Hodeidah, renewing Riyadh’s concern that restoring Tehran–Sanaa flights could facilitate transfers of weapons, technical support or advisers. The episode highlights that the 2022 truce never became a political settlement; Middle East Institute researcher Nadwa Al Dawsari says Iran appears to be testing red lines. Mohammed Al Basha of Basha Report expects attempts next week to reopen Tehran–Sanaa direct flights and a likely Saudi-led coalition response, though both sides have shown restraint so far—the coalition may allow the Houthi plane to land in Hodeidah, Sanaa airport damage is reportedly limited mainly to the runway, and the Houthis struck Abha rather than major international hubs, which reduces immediate escalation risk.