this post was submitted on 24 Feb 2024
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A cargo ship that was struck by a Houthi ballistic missile on Monday has created an 18-mile long oil slick in the Red Sea as it continues to take on water, two US officials said Friday.

The M/V Rubymar — a Belize-flagged, UK-registered, Lebanese-owned vessel — was carrying 41,000 tons of fertilizer when it was struck on Monday by one of two ballistic missiles fired from Houthi territory in Yemen.

US Central Command said the ship is currently anchored as it takes on water. “The Houthis continue to demonstrate disregard for the regional impact of their indiscriminate attacks, threatening the fishing industry, coastal communities, and imports of food supplies,” US Central Command said.

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[–] Linkerbaan@lemmy.world -3 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (1 children)

Sophie II is a British-owned ship

Britain is on the no-go list since they started bombing Yemen to defend israel's Genocide. As is America.

Initially they were not on the list. They put themselves on there.

You can't seriously expect Yemen to let through ships from countries actively at war with them right?

Have fun googling the rest of the list yourself.

Saying that what the Houthi's is doing is wrong is actively defending Genocide. I will not retract that statement.

The way that we ended the Apartheid in South Africa is by economic pressure, sanctions and boycotts. No different than what the Houthi's are doing right now.

[–] xor@lemmy.blahaj.zone 6 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (1 children)

What are you quoting? All sources I've read concur that it's Japanese owned (it is owned by Kyowa Shipping, based in Tokyo).

What happened to "I'll tell you how they're secretly linked"? That was the entire purpose of this exercise. You had clearly accepted that targeting unrelated ships is unacceptable, yet failed to actually provide any evidence that the ships, which make up the majority of those attacked, were legitimate targets.

If the houthis were consistently actually targeting Israeli ships then my stance would be different.

Apartheid was not defeated by attacking Japanese ships for a bit of banter, was it, though?

It turns out, entities can claim a different reason for taking an action to their actual goals.

Saying that what the Houthi's is doing is wrong is actively defending Genocide

I've made it extraordinarily clear that my issue is not with the goal of blockading Israeli ships, but with the fact that this is not actually what is happening. If you're not even going to pretend to debate in good faith, then we're done here.

Edit: You know I absolutely do not support Israel's genocide, and actively support BDS actions against it. To argue I'm defending their genocide is what we in the business call "a dick move".