Attacks by Yemen's Houthi rebels on merchant shipping in the Red Sea, the Indian Ocean, the Gulf of Aden, and the Arabian Sea continue apace. The Iran-backed Houthis are very well equipped with multiple attack drones and with anti-shipping cruise and ballistic missiles. These weapons are based mainly on old Chinese-designed weaponry, reverse-engineered and modified by Iranian technicians.
This ongoing threat has resulted in the provision of protection to these vessels becoming a major commitment for US, UK, and EU naval forces. Navies are therefore having to shift much of their operational focus from conventional blue water operations to countering long-term asymmetrical threats in the littoral, with tactics and armament needing to be adapted accordingly.
Attacks on shipping, launched from inland by well-equipped irregular forces, are problematic to defend against. The Houthis' weapons and radar systems are very mobile and therefore difficult for even intensive aerial surveillance to keep track of.
Numerous strikes by US and British warplanes against missile launching and sensor systems within Yemen have therefore had only limited success. Such operations have also been subject to political restrictions.
Some conventional sea warfare doctrines have long recommended the following tactics to facilitate the protection of merchant vessels in shipping lanes. Neither of them, however, are well-suited to the countering of projectiles launched from well inland:
Existing surveillance and fire control radars mounted on escort vessels have reportedly been effective in enabling the destruction of many incoming projectiles. Since October 2023, at least 100 attacking drones and missiles have been downed. Most were shot down by SM-3, SM-6. Aster, Sea Viper, and Sea Ceptor, ship-launched, air defence missiles, some by gunfire, and some by air-to-air missiles launched from naval fighter-bombers and helicopters.
Missiles are very expensive, though, with a weapon such as Aster reportedly costing upwards of US$1.3 million per piece and in short supply. Therefore, more cost-effective methods of interception and destruction have been sought out, with some existing projects being brought forward by way of an influx of new funding:
In order to cope with the growing demands of asymmetrical sea warfare, system enhancement programmes are in hand, including the installation of multiple vertically-launched Patriot missiles on US Navy escorts, as well as major upgrades to the performance and lethality of Aster and Sea Viper systems on EU and UK frigates and destroyers.
Analysts believe that rapid technological advance is resulting in the surging availability of cheap and effective anti-shipping weaponry, and that it is certain that asymmetrical threats to shipping, particularly from non-state actors operating with the covert backing of anti-western national alliances, are certain to multiply. Areas that could potentially be vulnerable in future to this type of warfare include the Arabian Gulf, the North African coast, and the Baltic.