Houthis

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"The Houthis are a Yemeni militia group named after their founder, Hussein Badreddin al-Houthi. They represent the Zaidi branch of Shia Islam and emerged in the 1980s in opposition to Saudi Arabia's religious influence in Yemen. With an estimated 20,000 fighters, their official name is Ansar Allah. The group controls most of the west of Yemen and oversees the Red Sea coastline.

Vanessa Feltz speaks with the former UK ambassador to Yemen, Edmund Brown and lecturer in political science Arash Azizi."

Date
January 12, 2024
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"Houthi rebels have promised to retaliate for airstrikes carried out by the US and UK in Yemen. Washington and London say they hit the targets to protect international shipping from Houthis attacks. Counter extremism expert Hans-Jakob Schindler says there is no alternative to using force to keep traffic flowing in the Red Sea."

Date
January 12, 2024
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January 12, 2024 CEP Staff

CounterPoint Brief: Retaliatory Strikes Launched Against Houthi Targets

Yesterday, a U.S.-led coalition launched retaliatory strikes against Iran-backed Houthi rebel targets in Yemen in an effort to weaken the group’s ability to conduct its campaign against commercial shipping in the Red Sea. Together with British forces...

Thursday, Jan 11, 2024

CEP Webinar: How the Houthis Control Telecommunications in Yemen | Ari Heistein

Presentation: Ari Heistein, Author of the CEP report series, Yemen Specialist and Defense Technology Professional

On January 11, 2024, CEP hosted a webinar to present a new, in-depth report concerning a major source of Houthi intelligence and revenue: telecommunications in Yemen.

The Houthis may have appeared unsophisticated to outside observers when they took Sanaa in 2014. However, since then they have had a very deliberate approach toward information technology. The Houthis have made it a priority to control all Internet and cellular communications companies in their territory, providing unfettered access to private communications, the creation of an “information bubble” to indoctrinate the Yemeni public, and a source of considerable revenue in an otherwise bleak Yemeni economy.

CEP’s report on Yemeni telecommunications documents Houthi efforts to control, shape and surveil the Yemeni information space. The terror group has undertaken significant measures to this end, from major transactions with multinationals via straw companies to imprisonment of senior officials to force their compliance with Houthi demands. As it stands, there are no real alternatives in Yemen to the telecommunications companies other than those under Houthi control.

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Thursday, Jan 11, 2024

CEP Webinar: How the Houthis Control Telecommunications in Yemen | Edmund Fitton-Brown

Discussant: Amb. Edmund Fitton-Brown, Senior Advisor, Counter Extremism Project (CEP)

On January 11, 2024, CEP hosted a webinar to present a new, in-depth report concerning a major source of Houthi intelligence and revenue: telecommunications in Yemen.

The Houthis may have appeared unsophisticated to outside observers when they took Sanaa in 2014. However, since then they have had a very deliberate approach toward information technology. The Houthis have made it a priority to control all Internet and cellular communications companies in their territory, providing unfettered access to private communications, the creation of an “information bubble” to indoctrinate the Yemeni public, and a source of considerable revenue in an otherwise bleak Yemeni economy.

CEP’s report on Yemeni telecommunications documents Houthi efforts to control, shape and surveil the Yemeni information space. The terror group has undertaken significant measures to this end, from major transactions with multinationals via straw companies to imprisonment of senior officials to force their compliance with Houthi demands. As it stands, there are no real alternatives in Yemen to the telecommunications companies other than those under Houthi control.

Remote video URL
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"Hans Jacob-Schindler, director of the Counter Extremism Project, said it was unlikely the attacks would stop anytime soon.

'They do not care who owns the ships, they just need to keep the attacks going to cause diversion to disrupt transport routes to Israel,' he told The National."

Date
December 21, 2023
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Wednesday, Dec 13, 2023

CEP Webinar: Houthi Procurement & Terror Finance | Amb. Edmund Fitton-Brown

This CEP webinar examined two elements of the growing Houthi threat: defense procurement and terror finance. It also considered more broadly how the Houthis’ “quantum leap” in a single decade are a cautionary tale with respect to Tehran’s broader regional strategy for developing the Iran Threat Network (ITN).

Date: December 13, 2023

Presentation:
Amb. Edmund Fitton-Brown
Counter Extremism Project (CEP)

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Wednesday, Dec 13, 2023

CEP Webinar: Houthi Procurement & Terror Finance | Dr. Raz Zimmt

This CEP webinar examined two elements of the growing Houthi threat: defense procurement and terror finance. It also considered more broadly how the Houthis’ “quantum leap” in a single decade are a cautionary tale with respect to Tehran’s broader regional strategy for developing the Iran Threat Network (ITN).

Date: December 13, 2023

Presentation:
Dr. Raz Zimmt
Research Fellow, Israel’s Institute for National Security Studies (INSS)

Remote video URL
Wednesday, Dec 13, 2023

CEP Webinar: Houthi Procurement & Terror Finance | Ari Heistein

This CEP webinar examined two elements of the growing Houthi threat: defense procurement and terror finance. It also considered more broadly how the Houthis’ “quantum leap” in a single decade are a cautionary tale with respect to Tehran’s broader regional strategy for developing the Iran Threat Network (ITN).

Date: December 13, 2023

Presentation:
Ari Heistein
Author of the CEP report series
Yemen Specialist and Defense Technology Professional

Remote video URL

Daily Dose

Extremists: Their Words. Their Actions.

Fact:

On October 7, 2023, Hamas invaded southern Israel where, in the space of eight hours, hundreds of armed terrorists perpetrated mass crimes of brutality, rape, and torture against men, women and children. In the biggest attack on Jewish life in a single day since the Holocaust, 1,200 were killed, and 251 were taken hostage into Gaza—where 101 remain. One year on, antisemitic incidents have increased by record numbers. 

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