A rescue operation got underway on July 10 to search for more than a dozen crew members who have gone missing after Houthi terrorists sank a ship in the Red Sea.
“After killing their shipmates, sinking their ship and hampering rescue efforts, the Houthi terrorists have kidnapped many surviving crew members of the Eternity C,” the embassy wrote in a post on social media platform X.
“We call for their immediate and unconditional safe release.”
The crew of the Eternity C included 22 sailors—21 Filipinos and one Russian—as well as a three-member security team.
“The United States has been clear,” the statement said. “We will continue to take necessary action to protect freedom of navigation and commercial shipping from Houthi terrorist attacks, which must be condemned by all members of the international community.”
In the footage released by the Houthis, a member of the group can be heard purportedly offering those on board, via radio, the opportunity to flee the sinking vessel.
According to the statement, the attack was “carried out with an unmanned boat and six cruise and ballistic missiles” and resulted in the “complete sinking of the ship.”
“Following the operation, a group of special forces from the naval forces moved to rescue a number of the ship’s crew, provide them with medical care, and transport them to a safe location,” the Houthi statement reads, without providing details on the condition of the crew members or their nationalities.
The terrorist group, which controls much of Yemen, is a self-described arm of Iran’s “Axis of Resistance” and has been firing at Israel and targeting shipping in the Red Sea since the start of the 2023 conflict between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, in what the group has described as solidarity with the Palestinians.
Also known as Ansar Allah, the Houthis are a Zaidi Shia movement that unseated Yemen’s internationally recognized government from the capital, Sanaa, in 2014. They currently control an area encompassing about 80 percent of the country, home to 32 million people.
The group was redesignated a foreign terrorist organization by the U.S. State Department in March, after the Biden administration removed the designation in 2021.







