The Houthi group in Yemen revealed that it had found weapons sent by a US charitable organization to the frontlines in Yemen.

The group confirmed targeting military sites in Saudi Arabia, and called on citizens and residents to stay away from those sites.

The Houthi military spokesman, Yahya Sari, told a press conference this afternoon that they had found weapons that the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) sent to the Yemeni fighting fronts.

Surei accused the agency of taking charitable work as a cover for its intelligence and military activities, pointing to the American regime's support for the aggression against Yemen, as he put it.

He added that all the sites targeted by the Houthis in Saudi Arabia are military targets or of a military nature, and they have a role in the aggression against Yemen.

Sari called on Saudi citizens and residents to stay away from the military headquarters and what he described as the wrongdoers, because they have become among the goals of the Houthis, stressing that "the talk about targeting our brothers in Asir or we find or other is not true, and we are keen on them."

The Houthis had announced last week that the air force had carried out a large operation with a large number of "Qasef 2K" planes that targeted the operation and control room at Najran Airport (south of Saudi Arabia), arms stores and aircraft stands at King Khalid Air Base in Khamis Mushayt (southwest) and military targets Other.

For his part, spokesman for the Saudi-Emirati coalition, Turki Al-Maliki announced that the coalition forces intercepted and destroyed 4 drones launched by the Houthis, and that other planes were intercepted and destroyed in the Yemeni airspace, without mentioning the location of the destruction.

Last Wednesday, the Saudi-Emirati coalition fighters resumed violent raids on areas in the capital, Sana'a, which have been under the control of the Houthi group for nearly 6 years.