- Saudi Arabia's missile interceptors may have "failed catastrophically" in their attempts to shoot down several missiles headed toward the capital of Riyadh over the weekend, one expert said.
- One person died and two others were injured from shrapnel, according to a news outlet based in the United Arab Emirates.
- Yemen's Houthi rebel group has launched dozens of missiles in recent months.
- The latest launches coincided with Saudi crown prince's visit to the US.
Saudi Arabia's missile interceptors may have "failed catastrophically" in their attempts to shoot down several missiles headed toward Riyadh over the weekend, according to one expert.
Seven ballistic missiles launched from the Yemeni Houthi rebel group were intercepted on Sunday, according to the Saudi Press Agency. The National, an English news outlet based in the United Arab Emirates, reported that one person died and two others were injured by shrapnel over Riyadh.
#BREAKING: Footage sent to Al Arabiya shows moment anti-defense missiles from #Saudi Patriot batteries fired to intercept apparent #Houthi missile over #Riyadh.
— Al Arabiya English (@AlArabiya_Eng) March 25, 2018
Follow updates here: https://t.co/s4TdYoXf6epic.twitter.com/0GkBiOvZl3
New angle suggests this is actually a spectacular failure of a #Saudi interceptor and not the missile fired at #Riyadhpic.twitter.com/TejVbA8fh3
— Strategic Sentinel (@StratSentinel) March 25, 2018
Jeffrey Lewis, the director of the East Asia Nonproliferation Program at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies, said on Twitter that in video footage released of the missiles, it appeared one defense system "failed catastrophically" while another "pulled a u-turn" and exploded over Riyadh.
Lewis said it was "entirely possible" that the defense-system failure rather than the missiles themselves led to any casualties or injuries.
"Will have to see where debris fell, impact points, and where people were killed/injured before we can make educated guesses," Lewis tweeted.
The militant group has been protesting Saudi Arabia's role in Yemen's bloody civil war and has engaged in an increasingly violent border conflict with the kingdom since 2015. Experts say Sunday's barrage could be the largest number of ballistic missiles fired at once by the rebel group since the war escalated four years ago.
Haven’t analyzed all the videos yet, but it looks like one interceptor failed catastrophically (left) and another pulled a u-turn and exploded in Riyadh (right). Not a good day for Saudi missile defenses. pic.twitter.com/4xtgTQwGSM
— Jeffrey Lewis (@ArmsControlWonk) March 26, 2018
The Houthis have launched dozens of missiles in recent months, including one in November at Riyadh's King Khalid International Airport. Saudi Arabia has said it downed that missile, while the Houthis say it reached its target.
The latest strikes coincided with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's visit to the US, signaling that they may have been a display of disapproval by the Iran-backed rebels.
On Thursday, US Defense Secretary James Mattis urged the crown prince to pursue "urgent efforts" for a peaceful solution to Yemen's civil war.
SEE ALSO: The Saudi Crown Prince's visit to the US will focus on changing his image rather than policy
Join the conversation about this story »
NOW WATCH: I spent a day with Border Patrol agents at the US-Mexico border