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| Yemeni Navy and Coastal Defence Forces | |
|---|---|
| القوات البحرية اليمنية والدفاع الساحلي | |
Logo of the Yemeni Navy | |
| Active | 1990–present |
| Country | |
| Allegiance | Yemen |
| Branch | Navy |
| Type | Navy |
| Role | Intelligence assessment Maritime patrol Maritime safety Maritime search and rescue Maritime security operations Minesweeping Naval warfare |
| Part of | Yemeni Armed Forces |
| Naval Headquarters | Aden |
| Colors | Black,white andgold |
| Anniversaries | 22 May 1990 |
| Equipment | 2corvette 8Missile boat 15patrol craft 3Minesweeper 5landing craft |
| Engagements | |
| Commanders | |
| Chief of Staff of the Yemeni Navy | Vice Admiral Abdullah Salim Al-Nakhei[1] |
| Chief of Staff of the Yemeni Armed Forces | Lieutenant GeneralSagheer Hamoud Aziz |
| Insignia | |
| Flag of the Yemeni Navy | |
| Yemeni Armed Forces |
|---|
| Leadership |
| Military services |
TheYemeni Navy, officially theYemeni Navy and Coastal Defence Forces, is the maritime component of theYemeni Armed Forces. The navy was created in 1990 whenNorth andSouth Yemen united.
The Yemeni Navy was initially a very small and virtually non-existent force, as it lacked a sufficient naval fleet and struggled to enforce the smuggling of drugs that entered Yemen by sea. In 2006, however, Yemen purchased 10Bay-class patrol boats which became very effective at stopping drug trafficking to Yemen.The navy's Bay-class patrol boat fleet are currently being operated by theYemeni Coast Guard.
In 1990, on theYemeni unification, the Navy of South Yemen was merged into the Navy of North Yemen. Of the 11,000 sailors/seamen and 2,700 officers in the PDRY Navy, half were forced into compulsory retirement. The South Yemeni Navy also consisted of 5Osa-class missile boats, 8T43-class minesweepers and 1Ropucha-class landing ship, all of which were transferred to the Yemeni Navy.
The navy's major bases are located inAden andHodeidah. There are also bases onSocotra,Mukalla andPerim island, which maintain naval support equipment. There is also a naval fortress under construction in Hodeidah.
During theHanish Islands conflict, Yemen prepared its navy for an assault on theHanish Islands and onEritrea. Eritrea accidentally destroyed a Russian ship, thinking it was a Yemeni ship. The invasion, however, never happened since Eritrea made agreements with Yemen which involved Eritrea taking over the islands. Yemen, however, later took over Zuqar Island, which created further tensions with the Eritrean government but did not lead to another war.
Since the outbreak of the civil war in Yemen in March 2015, at least some elements of the Navy are known to have sided with theHouthi-dominatedSupreme Revolutionary Committee and the loyalists of formerPresidentAli Abdullah Saleh. The Yemeni Navy issued a statement in October 2016 that any Saudi ships intruding in Yemen's territorial waters would be destroyed. The Yemeni Navy reportedly attacked two Saudi warships and theEmiratiHSV-2 Swift off theRed Sea coast. Because of this, the Royal Saudi Air Force attacked the naval base at Al Hudaydah and destroyed two of Yemen's three Chinese-made fast missile craft. The Yemeni Navy, allegedly supported by Iranian advisors, repaired and smuggledNoor anti-ship cruise missiles and their launchers and coupled them with maritime radars and they were used to target coalition ships. The Noor missile or the originalC-802 were named "Al Mandab-1", claiming it as an original Yemeni design and production. The Saudi tanker shipBoraida was targeted without reporting damage.[2] In October 2016, with US Navy vessels patrolling the area in support to their Saudi allies, Yemeni forcesfired about a dozen cruise missiles at them on three different days. In response,USS Nitze launched fiveTomahawk cruise missiles and knocked out three Yemeni maritime radar sites.[3] The Saudi Air Force also flew airstrikes and destroyed another Yemeni Radar station. Since then, lacking shore-based battery radars, the Yemeni Navy begun deploying speedboats and the remaining fast missile craft to approximately track Saudi coalition shipping.

| Class | Type | Ships | Origin | Quantity | Status | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Corvette | ||||||
| Tarantul I | Corvette | no. 124 | 2 | Derelict 2024 | ||
| no. 125 | Discarded 2001 | |||||
| Missile boat | ||||||
| Osa | Missile boat | 8 | 5 transferred from former South Yemen Navy. | |||
| Fast attack craft | ||||||
| Type 037 | Missile boat | no. 126 | 3 | Derelict 2024 | ||
| no. 127 | Derelict 2024 | |||||
| no. 128 | Ran aground 1997 | |||||
| Sana'a | Patrol craft | United States | 2 | |||
| Yemen Ministry of Defense 37.5 meters | Patrol craft | 10 | ||||
| Minesweeper | ||||||
| Natya | Minesweeper | no. 201 | 1 | Derelict 2024 | ||
| Yevgenya | Minesweeper | 5 | ||||
| Landing craft | ||||||
| Polnocny-class landing ship | Landing craft | Al Wadia | 3 | Discarded 1993 | ||
| Siri | Derelict 1996 | |||||
| ex.[SDK-45] | Destroyed 1986 | |||||
| Bilqis | Derelict, capsized 2017 | |||||
| Saba class | Landing craft | Saba | 4 | |||
| Abdulkori | ||||||
| Himyer | ||||||