Houthis launch major attack on Saudi Arabia’s Abha Airport, rattling oil markets and geopolitical risk calculus
The worst Houthi strike on Saudi soil in years reignites Middle East conflict fears, with potential ripple effects across energy prices and risk-sensitive assets including crypto.
Iran-backed Houthi forces fired ballistic missiles and drones at Abha International Airport in southern Saudi Arabia on July 13, marking the most significant escalation in the Yemen conflict since a UN-brokered truce temporarily cooled hostilities back in 2022. Saudi air defenses intercepted the projectiles, and no casualties were reported.
The strike came in direct retaliation for Saudi-led airstrikes on Sanaa International Airport, which the Houthis say targeted an Iranian Mahan Air flight carrying a Houthi delegation. The Yemeni government, for its part, claimed the Sanaa strikes were necessary to block the Iranian aircraft.
What happened and why it matters beyond the Middle East
Houthi military spokesman Brig. Gen. Yahya Saree publicly claimed responsibility for the Abha attack, framing it as a proportional response to the Sanaa airport bombing. The Houthis also issued a warning to commercial airlines to avoid Saudi airspace until further notice.
The UN Security Council convened an emergency session to address the escalation.
The crypto connection: indirect but real
There was no immediate crypto market reaction to the Abha attack. Bitcoin didn’t flash crash. Ethereum didn’t suddenly become a safe haven. No major crypto analysts rushed to connect the dots on social media in the hours following the strike.
What investors should actually watch
The other thing worth monitoring is how this affects the broader Iran-Saudi relationship. The two countries had been on a tentative path toward normalization, brokered partly by China in 2023. A full-blown proxy war relapse would unwind that diplomatic progress and reintroduce a risk premium across the entire Gulf region.