Yemen’s Houthi rebels are led by an enigmatic leader whom many say they have never laid eyes on in person.
Abdul Malik al-Houthi, 44, took over as leader of the terror group after his brother, Hussein, was killed in 2004, according to the Middle East Eye.
Over the past two decades, al-Houthi transformed the once-ragtag group — which is made up of mostly Zaydi Muslims, a branch of Shia Islam — into an Iran-backed militia that controls most of Yemen.
Most recently, the Houthis have stoked fears of a region-wide war in the Middle East by attacking shipping vessels in the Red Sea during the Israel-Hamas war and prompting the West to launch retaliatory strikes, including Thursday.
This week’s attack by the US and UK struck five regions of Yemen under Houthi control, killing at least five people and wounding six others.
Abdul-Malik al-Houthi is the mysterious, ruthless leader of the Houthi rebels. REUTERSA senior Houthi official, Hussein al-Ezzi, vowed that the US and Britain would “pay a heavy price” for the strikes.
Under al-Houthi’s direction, the rebel group has spent the last 10 years battling Yemen’s Saudi-led coalition in a proxy war that has killed tens of thousands of people and decimated the nation’s economy.
The Houthis boast a massive weapons arsenal and tens of thousands of fighters.
Despite Iran’s repeated denials that the group receives support from Tehran, those familiar with the region consider the Houthis part of Iran’s so-called “axis of resistance” along with the Palestinian Hamas and Lebanese Hezbollah terror groups — but note that al-Houthi is not as reliant on Iran’s support as Hezbollah.
Satellite photos capture the damage before and after airstrikes at a northern facility along the coast in Yemen. Satellite image ©2024 Maxar Technologies/AFP via Getty Images
Shelters in Hodeida, Yemen, before and after airstrikes. Satellite image ©2024 Maxar Technologies/AFP via Getty Images“[Al-Houthi] managed to transform a rural militia mostly engaged in insurgency tactics into one of the most resilient non-state armed groups of the region,” Ludovico Carlino, principal analyst for country risk, Middle East and North Africa at HIS Markit, told Reuters.
Peter Salisbury, a senior analyst for the International Crisis Group, added, “[Al-Houthi] is less beholden to the Iranians than Hezbollah is.
“In other words, he is not told to do x, y and z and he does it.”
Al-Houthi — whose family traces its lineage to the Prophet Mohammad — is known for rarely staying in one place and never meets with the media.
Yemeni supporters of the Houthis shout anti-Israel and anti-US slogans during a march in solidarity with the Palestinian people. AFP via Getty ImagesForeign officials who have dealt with the Houthis since the start of the conflict in Yemen have never met him face to face, a source familiar with the situation told Reuters.
Those looking to meet with al-Houthi are taken to safe houses in the stronghold of Sanaa, where he only appears by screen in secure rooms.
But al-Houthi’s inscrutable reputation belies the brutality at the core of his regime, experts say.
The Houthis have been attacking ships on the Red Sea. Houthi Movement via Getty ImagesIn late 2017, the Houthis assassinated former Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh after he decamped to the Saudi-led opposition.
The group runs a strict military state to maintain its grip on the country.
“The Houthis also rely on a very brutal internal intelligence apparatus, suppressing any kind of dissent,” Carlino explained.
With Post wires






