Houthi Prime Minister Ahmed Ghaleb Al-Rahwi was reportedly killed today in an Israeli airstrike on Sana'a, Yemen. Multiple sources, including security officials and outlets close to the Al-Rahwi tribe, confirmed his death following the strikes. Pages close to the Al-Rahwi tribe published condolence statements. Al-Rahwi, who had been tasked by the Houthis with forming the government in August 2024, was a politician from Abyan governorate residing in Sana'a. Two sources in Sana'a confirmed to "South24" that Al-Rahwi was killed in the strike. "South24" also reported unconfirmed news that another strike targeted the house of second-tier Houthi leader Jamal Zubarah, south of Sana'a. Residents in Sana'a reported slow internet service and interruptions since this morning. The Houthis have not immediately announced the deaths of officials but denied Israeli claims of targeting a meeting of their leadership, stating that Israel had failed militarily and in terms of security. Israel's Channel 12 reported increasing assessments that today's airstrikes also eliminated Houthi Defense Minister Muhammad al-Atifi and Chief of Staff Muhammad al-Ghamari. A source stated that the "IDF landed ten weighing tone of tone per bomb" in a structure where the Houthi Defense Minister, Chief of Staff, and almost all the General Staff and Government Command were present. There were also unconfirmed reports that Al-Rahwi was eliminated shortly after meeting with Jackson Hinkle. In related news, Lebanese authorities posted photos of a large arms collection recovered from Palestinian camps, including dozens of 107 mm rockets, RPG-7 launchers, heavy machine guns, and RPO-A Shmel rocket launchers. Separately, Iranian officials reacted to European leaders reimposing UN sanctions, with threats that "Our missiles reach not only France but also Germany." The report from freebeacon.com stated that Tehran is rebuilding its ballistic missile arsenal after U.S. and Israeli strikes. Meanwhile, the deputy chairman of Iran's Majlis Commission announced an urgent plan to exit the NPT, which is expected to be uploaded to the parliament's system tomorrow for review and approval next week.