"If the Houthis cease their attacks, we can consider delisting the designation," a senior administration official said Tuesday on a call with reporters.
It is the next move in the U.S. pressure campaign to weaken the Houthis' Red Sea siege, which the official called "a textbook definition of terrorism."
Three years later, after months of Red Sea attacks, the Houthis have regained their spot on a U.S. terrorist list.
The latest Houthi terrorist label is "one piece of a broader effort" to stabilize global trade in the Red Sea and prevent regional war in the Middle East, the official added.
Since the Houthis began their strikes shortly after the start of the Israel-Hamas war in October, major shipping giants like Maersk have paused Red Sea business activity due to safety concerns.
Persons:
Saleh al, Samad, Abduljabbar Zeyad, Mohammed Hamoud, Joe Biden, Donald Trump, Yemen's Huthi
Organizations:
Reuters, U.S . State Department, The State Department, United Nations, Yemen's Huthi Ansarullah Media, Afp, Getty
Locations:
Saudi, Hodeidah, Yemen, U.S, Sana'a, Israel, Gaza, Red