Trump: Houthis say they don’t want to fight anymore, following IAF strikes
President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that the US will stop bombing the Houthis in Yemen after claiming that the Iran-aligned group agreed to stop interrupting important shipping lanes in the Middle East.
.@POTUS: “The Houthis have announced that — they don’t want to fight anymore. They just don’t want to fight, and we will honor that, and we will stop the bombings. They have capitulated… They say they will not be blowing up ships anymore.” pic.twitter.com/GTd4UhNMK9
— Rapid Response 47 (@RapidResponse47) May 6, 2025
The comments came during an Oval Office meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, when Trump announced that the Houthis have said that they no longer want to fight, but did not elaborate on the message.
“They said please don’t bomb us anymore and we’re not going to attack your ships,” Trump said.
There was no immediate response from the Houthis.
Trump added that he plans to make a major announcement in the coming days before his departure for the Middle East, but he declined to say what the topic would be.
The announcement would be very positive and could come Thursday, Friday, or Monday, Trump added.
Trump’s administration has been negotiating trade deals with a number of countries.
The US President will visit Saudi Arabia in mid-May, where he is expected to hold a summit with Gulf leaders. The visit will be Trump’s first official foreign trip since taking office in January.
Trump hosts Carney in Washington amid trade tensions
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney arrived for White House talks with Donald Trump on Tuesday in a bid to reset a relationship he says has been undermined by the US president’s tariffs and talk of annexation.
Carney’s Liberal Party won the April 28 election on promises to tackle Trump and create a new bilateral economic and security relationship with the United States. It will be his first in-person meeting as prime minister with Trump.
Shortly before Carney arrived, Trump posted a message on social media.
“I look forward to meeting the new Prime Minister of Canada, Mark Carney. I very much want to work with him, but cannot understand one simple TRUTH — Why is America subsidizing Canada by $200 Billion Dollars a year, in addition to giving them FREE Military Protection, and many other things? We don’t need their Cars, we don’t need their Energy, we don’t need their Lumber, we don’t need ANYTHING they have, other than their friendship, which hopefully we will always maintain. They, on the other hand, need EVERYTHING from us! The Prime Minister will be arriving shortly and that will be, most likely, my only question of consequence.”
Carney, a 60-year-old ex-central banker with no previous political experience, was elected Liberal leader in March to replace Justin Trudeau, who had a poor relationship with Trump.
“It’s important to get engaged immediately … and I’m pleased to have the opportunity for quite a comprehensive set of meetings,” Carney told a press conference on Friday, adding he expected the talks to be difficult yet constructive.
Carney doesn’t anticipate ‘white smoke’ from meetings
He played down the idea of immediate breakthroughs.
“Do not expect white smoke out of that meeting,” Carney said, referring to the signal the Vatican sends to indicate a new pope has been chosen.
Canada is the US’ second-largest individual trading partner after Mexico, and the largest export market for US goods. More than $760 billion in goods flowed between the two countries last year, and while Canada has run a trade surplus of more than $60 billion in the last two years, most of that stems from its status as the largest foreign supplier of oil to the US
Ahead of the meeting, the US Commerce Department reported on Tuesday Canada’s goods trade surplus with the US narrowed to a five-month low in March, the month when Trump’s hefty tariffs on imported steel and aluminum took effect. Canadian exports to the US plunged by $3.7 billion, the second-largest drop on record.
Canadian data showed the drop in US exports was almost compensated by an increase to the rest of the world, as Canadian companies sought new markets.
Trump in March imposed a 25% tariff on all steel and aluminum imports and then slapped another 25% tariff on cars and parts that did not comply with a North American free trade agreement.
On Sunday, Trump said he would put a 100% tariff on all movies produced outside the US, without giving details, in a potential blow to Canada’s film industry.