Yahya Sari, a military spokesman for the Houthis, said that the group bombed sites in the Saudi depth, including Aramco's facilities in Yanbu, with missiles and drones, which Riyadh considered as an indication of the Houthis' lack of seriousness in reaching a peaceful solution to the conflict in Yemen.

He added - in a statement carried by the group's "Al Masirah" channel - that this operation, which was carried out using 12 drones and three missiles, came in response to what he described as the recent aggression and bombing of the Al-Jawf region in Yemen.

The Houthi spokesman indicated that the missiles "hit their targets with high accuracy."

Riyadh also promised "painful and painful" strikes if the bombing and siege of Yemen continued, as he put it.

This comes after Colonel Turki al-Maliki, a spokesman for the Saudi-Emirati coalition forces, confirmed that the Saudi Air Defense Forces intercepted ballistic missiles fired by the Houthis towards Saudi cities, which is a flagrant violation of international humanitarian law, as he put it.

Al-Maliki did not clarify the number of missiles fired, nor the cities that targeted them, and stressed that they were missiles that were "deliberately and systematically launched to target cities and civilians."

He also accused the Houthis of using the capital, Sanaa, as "a place to collect, install and launch ballistic missiles" on the Kingdom's lands.

Activists on Twitter shared what they said were scenes of intercepting missiles targeting Saudi cities.

On the other hand, Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan considered that the recent Houthi missile attacks indicate that the Houthis are not serious about seeking a peaceful solution.

The minister, during a press conference with his German counterpart Haikou Maas, criticized Iran and accused it of playing a clear role in destabilizing security in the region.

For his part, the German Foreign Minister stressed that the decision to ban arms to Saudi Arabia will continue as long as the war continues in Yemen.

The Yemeni war caused the deaths of tens of thousands, most of them civilians, according to human rights organizations, and a humanitarian crisis "the worst in the world" according to the United Nations.