Houthi activists in Yemen claim responsibility for recent attacks on American warships in the Red Sea.
The terrorist group said in a statement published on Tuesday by Jerusalem Post that they had attacked the aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman and several American warships in the Red Sea.
Early Wednesday, the Houthis said they had targeted an American ship and Israeli military locations using drones.
Fox News Digital contacted the Ministry of Defense to comment.
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The Houthis in Yemen claimed the responsibility of the alleged recent attacks on American warships. (Gerard Bottino / Sopa Images / Lightrocket via Getty Images)
The Houthis said earlier that they had attacked the Truman and his warship in response to American attacks against Yemen, but did not propose any evidence to support their claim.
The American army had shot down several Houthi drones shortly before the group’s complaint.
This occurs after several officials of the Trump administration discussed the plans for a next military strike against the Houthis in a group group on the encrypted messaging service signal in which they wrongly added Jeffrey Goldberg, the editor -in -chief of the Atlantic, who declared that they had received a request to join the group on March 11 of what seemed to be the national security councilor of President Michael Waltz.
The group, entitled “Houthi PC Small Group”, presented Trump’s senior officials discussing what turned out to be an attack to come against the Houthis, because many criticize the group cat as a massive national security violation and note that senior officials are not supposed to discuss detailed military plans outside of special secure installations or protected communication networks.
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The Houthis claimed to have attacked the aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman and several American warships in the Red Sea. (Gerard Bottino / Sopa Images / Lightrocket via Getty Images)
Goldberg reported that 18 people were listed in the group, including Waltz, Vice-President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, CIA director John Ratcliffe, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard and the Chief of Staff of the White House Susie Wiles.
The article noted that officials discussed “war plans”, and Goldberg said that he had chosen not to publish some of the very sensitive information he saw in the reported cat, including precise information on arms packages, targets and the calendar, due to potential threats to national security and military operations.
The publisher also said that Ratcliffe was putting the names of an CIA infiltrated agent in the reported cat.

The Houthis said they had targeted an American ship and Israeli military locations using drones. (AP)
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The White House has confirmed that the group cat “seems authentic”, although administration officials, including Hegseth, sought to minimize concerns and to discredit Goldberg as a journalist.
“I heard how characterized it was. No one sent war plans, and that’s all I have to say about it,” HegSeth said on Monday.
Hegseth criticized Goldberg as “a deceptive and highly discredited journalist, who has made a job of a hoax repeatedly, to include it, I don’t know, the hoax of Russia, Russia, Russia, or the beautiful people on both sides or supremes and covers and losers. So this guy is garbage.”