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Iran attempting further arms deliveries to Houthis, says Pentagon
A second interception in less than three months of what Washington said were Iranian arms points to Iranian hand to deliver weapons to Yemen's Houthi rebels. (File photo)

Tehran continues to deliver weapons to Yemen's Houthi rebels, the US military said Wednesday, following a second interception in less than three months of what Washington said were Iranian arms.


“The seizure is consistent with a historical pattern of Iranian smuggling of advanced weapons to the Houthis in Yemen,” said Captain Bill Urban of US Central Command, which is responsible for US forces in the Middle East, during a briefing at the Pentagon on the latest interdiction.


Both interceptions were in the Gulf region and involved dhow vessels that were sailing without a flag, the first occurring on November 25 and the second on February 9.


Urban presented photos of the seized cargo and said the weapons came from Iran and were intended for the Houthis.


In the latest seizure, the USS Normandy found 150 “Dhelavieh,” Iranian-made copies of the Russian Kornet anti-tank guided missile and three Iranian-designed and manufactured “358” surface-to-air missiles, he said.


The weapons seized in November included the same type of missiles plus a large number of spare parts for cruise missiles.


The United States assessed “with high confidence” that the weapons “were being illicitly smuggled to the Houthis in Yemen in contravention of multiple UN Security Council Resolutions,” Urban said.


The crew arrested in the latest shipment were Yemeni and were delivered to the Yemen coast guard, he said.


Iran has repeatedly denied providing military assistance to the Houthi rebels, who have seized much of the country’s north and took control of Sanaa in 2014.


source: AFP