The siege was a major engagement in the Northwest theater of the War of 1812 that tested U.S. frontier defenses and shaped subsequent American and British operations in the region.
On April 28, 1813, British forces under Maj. Gen. Henry Procter, allied with Shawnee leader Tecumseh, commenced the siege of Fort Meigs on the Maumee River in Ohio against American defenses.
The siege was a major engagement in the Northwest theater of the War of 1812 that tested U.S. frontier defenses and shaped subsequent American and British operations in the region.
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In response to recent attacks on commercial vessels attributed to Iran-linked networks, the president ordered U.S. Navy escort operations for merchant ships transiting the Red Sea and Gulf of Oman and directed commanders to take defensive military measures to protect American forces and vessels.
The president directed the Department of Defense to increase naval patrols and reposition carrier strike and escort vessels to the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden to deter attacks on international commercial shipping.
Following Houthi attacks on commercial vessels, the Pentagon announced deployment of additional U.S. destroyers, mine-countermeasure vessels and patrol aircraft to the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden to escort merchant shipping and protect navigation lanes.
U.S. forces carried out targeted strikes against Houthi-controlled facilities and vessels linked to attacks on commercial shipping and U.S. or allied maritime assets in the Red Sea corridor.