Authored by Dave DeCamp via AntiWar.com,
President TrumpĀ has eased restrictions on US airstrikesĀ and special operations raids in areas outside of countries officially considered combat zones by the US, giving US military commanders the freedom to launch attacks without permission from the White House.
The order reverts back to the policy of the first Trump administration, doing away with restrictions President BidenĀ added to US drone strikesĀ and raids outside of Iraq and Syria, the only two countries the US officially considers combat zones.
Bidenās rules required permission from the White House to target militants outside Iraq and Syria unless they were high-ranking commanders. But the rule had a major loophole: Strikes could be ordered if they could be framed as “self-defense.”
In Somalia, the US almost always claims its airstrikes are launched in defense of the US-backed Mogadishu-based government.
Trumpās rules give commanders the ability to target any militants belonging to organizations the US considers terrorist organizations without White House approval. The easing of the restrictions was confirmed by Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth,Ā who shared aĀ CBS NewsĀ report about the stepĀ on X and wrote, āCorrect.ā
The news comes amid an uptick in US airstrikes inĀ SomaliaĀ andĀ Syria. US officials toldĀ CBSĀ that al-Shabaab in Somalia, which the US targeted three times in recent weeks, and the Houthis in Yemen were discussed as potential targets by the Trump administration.
So far, there have been no known US airstrikes against the Houthis under the new Trump administration. From January 2024 to January 2025, President Biden waged a bombing campaign against the Houthis in defense of Israeli and international shipping. The attacks failed to deter the Houthis and only escalated the situation in the Red Sea.
Correct. https://t.co/A9ep6cbEw9
ā Pete Hegseth (@PeteHegseth) February 28, 2025
The Houthis, officially known as Ansar Allah,Ā have stopped attacks on IsraelĀ and on shipping in the region in response to the Gaza ceasefire deal. But those attacks could restart as Israel appearsĀ poised to restart its genocidal war.
Tyler Durden
Mon, 03/03/2025 – 20:05