After weeks of air strikes, the U.S. and Yemen’s Hossis agreed to a Oman-mediated deal to halt the trade attacks.
The group's chief negotiator announced that the ceasefire agreement between Houthi in Yemen and the United States did not include any action against Israel.
Mohammed Abdulsalam told Reuters news agency on Wednesday that there was no attack on Israel in the agreement introduced by Oman in "any way, form or form".
The deal was announced for hours when Israeli fighter jets targeted Yemen’s Sanaa Airport. Airport Director Khaled al-Shaief told Al Masirah on Wednesday that “about $500 million in losses were caused by Israeli aggression”.
U.S. President Donald Trump announced the deal, who said the attack on Yemen will take effect immediately after the group agreed to stop targeting ships in the Red Sea.
"There have been a recent discussion and contact...the efforts have led to a ceasefire agreement between the two sides for the purpose of downgrade," Omani Foreign Minister Badr Albusaidi said in a statement on Tuesday.
He added: "Neither side will target each other... to ensure freedom of navigation and the smooth flow of international commercial transport in the Red Sea".
Since Israel began a war against Gaza after Israel attacked southern Israel in October 2023, Huthis united with Israel and the ships in the Red Sea to catch fire with the Palestinians.
Husseth paused the attack during a brief ceasefire in Gaza earlier this year, but it was reblocked shortly after Israel decided to put a complete blockade of the enclave in early March.
The group also threatened to restart its attack on shipping, which has been suspended since January, triggering a response from the U.S. military in the form of recent air strikes.
But Trump said in announcing the deal on Tuesday that Houthis “don’t want to fight anymore.”
He added: "We will respect that, we will stop the bombings and they surrender."
“They said they will no longer blow up the ships, and that’s what… we are doing.”
But Abdulsalam told Houthi's news outlet Al Masirah TV that any U.S. action will respond after the deal.
"If the American enemy resumes attack, we will resume strikes," he said.
He added: “The real guarantee of the agreement is the dark experience of the United States in Yemen.”
Houthi political leader Mahdi al-Mashat also said the attack on Israel “will continue” and “grow beyond what the Israeli enemy can bear”.
On Sunday, Houthis' ballistic missile strikes at Ben Gurion International Airport hit the airport, wounding eight people, damaging roads and a vehicle and forcing air traffic to stop.
The Israeli military confirmed that its defense system failed to shoot down the projectile, despite several attempts to intercept it, adding that an investigation was underway.