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,se Congressional Research Service
         Inforrning the legislative debate since 1914


Updated March  13, 2025


Yemen: Terrorism Designation, U.S. Policy, and Congress


On January 22, 2025, President Donald Trump signed
executive order (E.O.) 14175 initiating a process for the
redesignation of the Yemeni Shia Islamist group Ansar
Allah (Arabic for the Partisans of God), commonly
referred to as the Houthis, as a Foreign Terrorist
Organization (FTO). On March  4, Secretary of State Marco
Rubio redesignated Ansar Allah as an FTO. The FTO
designation authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury to
impose asset freezing sanctions on the organization and
triggers the application of 18 U.S.C. §3229B, which
criminalizes the provision of material support to designated
FTOs.  E.O. 14175 further outlined a process requiring a
review of some U.S. assistance programs in Yemen and
directed the termination as appropriate of certain U.S.-
funded projects, grants, and contracts with entities found to
have made  payments to Houthi entities or insufficiently
documented  Houthi abuses (see below). The U.S.
Department  of the Treasury has revised general licenses
providing some exceptions for transactions involving the
Houthis. Exceptions for transactions involving the Houthis
for trade in refined petroleum products and
telecommunications have been made more  restrictive.
The Houthis have controlled most of northern Yemen since
2015. Houthi attacks in and around the Red Sea after
October 2023 disrupted regional security and global
maritime commerce.  The group receives material support
from Iran and Russia and has attacked Israel, U.S. vessels,
and (before October 2023) Saudi Arabia and the United
Arab Emirates (UAE). E.O. 14175 and the President's
statement say that U.S. policy is to cooperate with partners
to eliminate Houthi capabilities and operations, as well as
to deprive the Houthis of resources. The Administration has
not specified what additional actions, resources, or
authorities, if any, may be used to achieve those ends.
President Trump previously designated the group as both an
FTO  and an entity subject to sanctions under the Specially
Designated Global Terrorist (SDGT) program in January
2021. President Biden revoked both designations, citing
concerns that they could impede the delivery of
humanitarian assistance or jeopardize efforts to promote
dialogue aimed at establishing ceasefire in the war in
Yemen.  In February 2024, the Biden Administration
redesignated the Houthis as an SDGT, citing
unprecedented attacks against international maritime
vessels in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden.
Congress  and Yemen.  Since 2015, Congress has
considered the effects of conflict and sanctions on regional
security and humanitarian conditions in Yemen. Congress
has provided resources and authorities to support U.S.
policy, including with additional defense funding in 2024 to
support U.S. regional deterrence operations. In the 119th
Congress, several proposals would authorize sanctions on
the Houthis or direct the executive branch to designate the
Houthis as an FTO (H.R. 1848, S. 70, S. 145, and S. 159).

                                           https://crsreport


The Trump  Administration has not said whether it intends
to request additional funds or authorities from Congress in
support of its wider Yemen policy.

The 119th Congress may seek additional information from
the Administration concerning its policy toward Yemen and
the Houthis, its expectations about the reactions and
intentions of Yemeni and other international actors, its
projections of the benefits and costs of different options,
and its plans with regard to U.S. humanitarian assistance in
Yemen.  Congress may consider opportunities to influence
U.S. policy toward Yemen, including via authorization and
appropriations legislation, with regard to U.S. sanctions,
diplomacy, assistance programs, and military operations.
Policy Context
Political-Military Developments. More than 100 Houthi
attacks on Israel and on international shipping and U.S. and
partner naval vessels in the Red Sea region occurred from
October 2023 to January 2025, with the Houthis claiming
their attacks were intended to support Palestinians and
secure an end to Israeli operations against the Palestinian
Sunni Islamist group and U.S.-designated FTO Hamas. In
January 2025, Yemen's representative to the United
Nations (UN) rejected Houthi justifications.
Yemen's  internationally recognized government has
welcomed  the Trump Administration's redesignation of the
Houthis as an FTO. Leaders of Yemen's Southern
Transitional Council (STC) also welcomed the U.S.
decision and reiterated a call for joint international-Yemeni
military operations to counter the Houthis and reduce the
area under their control. The STC has received military aid
from the UAE  and seeks to reestablish southern Yemen as a
separate state, which it was prior to 1990.
In a September 2024 report, the United Nations panel of
experts on Yemen described the transformation of the
Houthis from a localized armed group with limited
capabilities to a powerful military organization, extending
their operational capabilities well beyond the territories
under their control. The panel attributed the Houthis'
evolution to unprecedented transfers of material support
from Iran, Lebanese Hezbollah, and Iraqi armed groups.
U.S. officials have condemned Houthi attacks and the
Houthis' detention of Yemenis with ties to UN or U.S.
government  entities and aid organization. U.S. sanctions
have been levied against additional Houthi operatives and
supporters. U.S. military strikes have targeted Houthi
weapons  and related facilities in Houthi-controlled areas of
Yemen  since January 2024, including a January 8, 2025
strike targeting two underground storage facilities.
Israel has responded to deadly Houthi attacks on its
territory with several strikes in Yemen, including December
2024 and January 2025 strikes targeting Houthi-controlled
ports and a power station and the international airport in

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