On Tuesday morning, Houthi-affiliated media reported renewed US airstrikes on the Majzar district in Marib and the Al-Mahjar area in the Harub village in the Al-Husn district in Khawlan, Sana'a.
In an earlier report, Al Masirah TV reported that "the US aggression targeted Al Tuhayta District in Al Hudaydah Governorate (west) with 25 airstrikes" since Monday morning, without details of any human losses.
Earlier on Monday, the Houthi group announced that 12 people were killed and 30 injured in US airstrikes on a market in the Farwa residential neighborhood in Sanaa on Sunday evening. The group also said that the United States has launched approximately 1,000 airstrikes on Yemen since March 15.
On Sunday, the group said the United States was preparing for a ground military operation in Yemen, warning that such a move "threatens to destabilize the situation."
For its part, Washington announced Monday evening that the aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman is continuing its airstrikes against Houthi positions in Yemen, following the group's announcement of an attack on two American aircraft carriers in the Red Sea.
"The USS Harry S. Truman (CVN-75) continues 24/7 airstrikes against Iranian-backed Houthi positions," CENTCOM said, without providing further details.
From mid-March until Sunday, hundreds of US airstrikes were recorded in Yemen, killing 217 civilians and wounding 436 others, most of them children and women, according to official Houthi data that does not include casualties from the group's forces.
The raids come after US President Donald Trump ordered his military to launch a "major offensive" against the Houthi group, before threatening to "completely eliminate" them. However, the group ignored Trump's threat and resumed bombing sites inside Israel and ships in the Red Sea heading there, in retaliation for Tel Aviv's resumption of its war of extermination against Palestinians in Gaza on March 18.