The strikes targeted an alleged weapons shipment arriving from the UAE for an Abu Dhabi-backed faction fighting for control of the countryâs south
A Saudi-led coalition has carried out what it called a âlimited airstrikeâ on a key seaport in Yemen, targeting an alleged weapons shipment intended for UAE-backed separatists.
In a statement carried by Saudi state news agency SPA on Tuesday, the Coalition to Restore Legitimacy in Yemen â a Saudi-led alliance formed to fight Houthi rebels in 2015 at the request of Yemenâs internationally recognized government â said the strike targeted weapons and combat vehicles unloaded from ships arriving from the UAE. The military supplies were allegedly bound for the Southern Transitional Council (STC), which is seeking self-rule in the south.
According to the statement, two ships arrived from the UAE port of Fujairah over the weekend without government authorization and entered Mukalla â the only seaport in Yemenâs southern Hadramout governorate. The vessels allegedly disabled their tracking systems and unloaded large quantities of military equipment intended âto support the STC.â At the request of Presidential Leadership Council head Rashad al-Alimi, coalition air forces carried out a strike on the unloaded supplies early Tuesday, saying it caused no casualties or collateral damage.
An infographic titled âSaudi-led coalition launches âlimitedâ airstrike against 2 ships at Yemenâs Mukalla portâ on December 30, 2025.
Š Getty Images / Elif Acar/Anadolu
The STC separatists initially fought within the Saudi-led coalition that intervened in Yemen after the outbreak of civil war in 2014 but later pivoted toward seeking self-rule in the south.
Since 2022, they have controlled much of southern Yemen as part of a power-sharing arrangement and seized large swathes of territory, including in the strategically important Hadramout and Mahrah provinces, both of which border Saudi Arabia. The Houthis hold northern Yemen, including the capital Sanaa, having driven the Saudi-backed government south. Tuesdayâs strike follows reports that Saudi Arabia has recently launched air attacks on separatist positions in Hadramout.
The UAEâs foreign ministry did not immediately comment. Alimi declared a 90-day state of emergency in Yemen, imposing a 72-hour air, sea, and land blockade, and canceled a security pact with the UAE after the strike. In a televised address, he ordered the STC to hand territory over to Saudi-backed forces, branded the separatist advance an âunacceptable rebellion,â and demanded that UAE forces withdraw from Yemen within 24 hours.
Saudi Arabia warned that the UAEâs backing of the separatists poses a âthreat to the Kingdomâs national security, as well as to security and stability in Yemen and the wider region,â while urging Abu Dhabi to comply with Yemenâs demand to withdraw its forces.
#Statement | Pursuant to the statement issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on 25/12/2025 corresponding to 5/7/1447 regarding the Kingdomâs concerted efforts, working with the brotherly United Arab Emirates, to end and contain the escalatory steps taken by the Southern⌠pic.twitter.com/lTyU0gLgpf