Newsletter Thursday, November 14

A US Navy commander who oversaw most of the Dwight D. Eisenhower Carrier Strike Group’s eight-month deployment in the Red Sea said officers had suggested more aggressive strikes on the Houthis, but that high command declined them.

“There are definite strategies that were put forward, but our National Command Authority decided that those — I would call more aggressive postures and more aggressive strikes — was not something we wanted to challenge,” Miguez said in the interview published on Monday.

“We all know Iranian-backed groups like the Houthis, where that threat’s emanating from,” he said. “That is the calculus that’s handled at echelon zero, at the National Command Authority, at NSA, and everybody else.”

“Those are things that I don’t dabble in,” he added.

Miguez told Carroll that the carrier strike group launched seven dedicated attacks on Houthi targets during its twice-extended deployment from October 2023 to June 2024.

The group, which includes the aircraft carrier Ike, was previously reported to have launched more than 500 munitions to hit the Yemeni rebels directly and intercept their drones and missiles as they attacked commercial ships in the strait.

Since the Eisenhower group departed, the Theodore Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln carrier strike groups have moved into the Middle East as regional tensions continue to soar.

Miguez indicated that he believes the US should adopt a more aggressive posture with the Houthis.

“Moving forward, we are going to have to continue to deal with this,” he said. “It will be up to our National Command Authority to probably be more aggressive with out strike groups and all of our assets, not just Navy.”

The Houthis have said that they only target ships linked with Israel over the war in Gaza. But the group has also launched attacks on vessels from other countries that have no apparent ties to Tel Aviv.

More recently, the rebel group attacked a Greek-flagged oil tanker that caught fire and was left drifting in the Red Sea.

Miguez said that to stop the attacks, the US needs to marshal all of its resources more aggressively, including diplomacy and economic policy.

“If we can get that focus with a whole-of-government approach, I think that’s what’s going to result in a freedom of navigation in that critical strait, which impacts about 20% of global commerce,” he said.

Miguez was appointed Navy Chief of Legislative Affairs in July.

Since leaving command of the Eisenhower carrier strike group, he’s been vocal about the US needing to train more to fight drones after seeing how extensively the Houthis used them in the Red Sea.

The Pentagon’s press service did not immediately respond to a request for comment sent outside regular business hours by Business Insider.



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