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MORALLY VOID

US blasts cruel Chinese Navy sailors for IGNORING desperate SOS alerts from besieged ships attacked by Houthi terrorists

US Secretary of the Navy, Carlos Del Toro, said that China has 'moral responsibility' to defend sailors under attack

THE US blasted China for ignoring sailors’ SOS calls in the Red Sea.

US Navy boss Carlos Del Toro slammed Beijing for “doing nothing” as merchant ships face missile attacks from Iran-backed Houthi rebels.

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Despite UK and US strikes, Yemen's Houthi rebels have continued to launch assaults on cargo ships in the Red SeaCredit: EPA
Carlos Del Toro, US Secretary of the Navy, today slammed the Chinese military for standing down in the Red SeaCredit: Rex
He told The Sun that China has 'moral responsibility' to respond to distress calls from sailors under attackCredit: Getty

Del Toro said: “Chinese vessels have heard these calls for assistance and have done nothing.

“What that says about the morality of Chinese ships underway, I will leave for others to decipher.”

He said Iran-backed Houthi rebels were “favouring the passage of Chinese and Russian” vessels as they blast other cargo ships with cruise and ballistic missiles.

Beijing has reportedly pressured Iran to rein in its Houthi allies behind the attacks.

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Speaking to journalists after a speech at the Royal United Services Institute in London, he added: “Every country’s navy has a moral responsibility to respond to the SOS calls of merchant mariners when they are being attacked, in this case attacked by the Houthis.

“It is a moral responsibility that is shared by all sailors who operate on the high seas.”

Del Toro urged President Xi Jinping to “think about the impact of doing nothing”.

He said: “China trades with the entire world and a threat to the free flow of goods is a threat to the Chinese economy.

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“They have done nothing to protect sailors.

“They should think about the broader impact that will have on the Chinese economy.”

But US National Security Adviser, Jake Sullivan, is expected to tell Beijing to do more when he meets China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi for two-days of talks starting in Thailand today.

Both the US and China have naval bases in Djbouti, a tiny country in the horn of Africa, which is the only place in the world to host the world's two most powerful militaries.

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Del Toro revealed America had spent almost £1.3bn on missiles, other weapons and “added operations” since it launched Operation Prosperity Guardian to respond to Houthi attacks in December.

The Royal Navy’s HMS Diamond is also in the region and has has shot down Houthi missiles and drones with its anti-aircraft machine gun and world-beating Sea Ceptor missiles.

Del Toro said protecting the free flow of trade was “why we exist as a navy”.

It comes as the Iran-sponsored Houthis made an unexpected visit to Moscow on Thursday to discuss increasing "pressure" on the US and Israel to end the war in Gaza.

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The rebel delegation met with Vladimir Putin's cronies soon after they held alleged secret terror talks with al-Qaeda to plot intensified attacks against the West.

Spokesman Mohammed Abdel Salam said the talks were aimed at getting Russia to increase pressure on the US to "stop the aggression on the Gaza Strip and deliver humanitarian assistance there rather than militarise the Red Sea".

During the rare meeting, Moscow "strongly condemned" the joint US and UK strikes against Houthi military bases across Yemen.

They blasted the aerial attacks as "capable of destabilising the situation on a regional scale".

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In turn, the Houthis reportedly raised concerns about the Western interventions in the Red Sea and called for closer coordination with Russia to address the situation.

It marks yet another dramatic escalation in the crisis that since November has been threatening to ignite an all-out war across the region, which has become a powder keg due to Israel's ongoing war with Hamas.

Russia's chilling meeting with the Houthis came soon after Yemeni reports that Houthi leaders allegedly held secret terror meetings with al-Qaeda to plot a wave of "suicide attacks" against the West.

At meetings held in both Yemen's capital Sanaa as well as Hodeidah, the Houthi Red Sea port stronghold, the group reportedly tried to "persuade" their Islamist terrorist allies to join their fight in the Red Sea.

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The militia group has disrupted £1trillion of world trade and sent global shipping prices soaring
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