Iran documents its support for Houthis: Terrorist militia's weapons from Tehran

In explicit documentation that Iran funds and supports the Houthi terrorist group in Yemen, Tehran acknowledged its participation in the Yemen war by providing military support to its Houthi allies for the first time after years of denying the repeated accusations directed against it by the internationally recognized Yemeni government and the Saudi-led Arab coalition, thereby prolonging the war.
The assistant commander of the Quds Force for economic
affairs, Rostam Ghasemi, stated that the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps
(IRGC) has provided weapons to the Houthi militia in Yemen and trained its
members.
In an interview with Arab media, Ghasemi revealed the presence
of Iranian officers with the Houthis in Yemen, adding that “what the Houthis
possess in terms of weapons is thanks to Iran's assistance.”
Commenting on these statements, Yemeni Information Minister
Moammar al-Eryani said on Twitter that “the clear confessions of the Iranian
regime’s leaders, the latest of which is the statement of the Assistant
Commander of the Quds Force, Rostam Ghasemi, about Tehran’s role in the coup,
its military support for the Houthi militia, and its involvement in the
fighting alongside the Houthis on the ground - a flagrant violation of
international laws and conventions, and a flagrant challenge to the will of the
international community.”
Eryani explained that “the statements re-highlight Iran’s
destabilizing role in the security and stability of Yemen, its responsibility
for the human tragedy left by the war, Tehran's use of the Houthi militia as a
tool to implement its expansionist agenda, the policies of spreading chaos and
terrorism in the region, and threatening international interests in the Red Sea
and Bab al-Mandeb.”
“The international community, the United Nations and the
Security Council are called upon to fulfill their responsibilities in
accordance with the charters and principles of the United Nations, and to
pressure the Iranian regime to stop its interference destabilizing the security
and stability of Yemen and the region and its role in undermining the efforts
made by brotherly and friendly countries to calm down and resolve the crisis in
a peaceful manner,” he stressed.
It is noteworthy that Tehran has never hidden its support
for the militias in Yemen. Rather, it confirmed through a number of its
officials that. In a statement last September by the spokesman for the Iranian
Armed Forces, Brigadier General Abu al-Fadl Shikaraji, he confirmed, “The
defensive technologies for the production of missiles and marches were put at
the disposal of the Yemenis,” in reference to the Houthis, Tehran's allies who
carried out a coup against the country's legitimate government and took control
of the capital, Sanaa, in 2014.
The commander of the Quds Force, Esmail Ghaani, had admitted
on Tuesday that the former Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani and deputy
commander Mohammad Hejazi, had established together a number of militias in the
region.
Ghaani said that Soleimani and his companion Hejazi
established what he described as “resistance fronts,” referring to the armed
factions and militias supported by Iran in Lebanon, Syria, Palestine, Iraq and
Yemen.
The Iranian confessions came hours after new US accusations
made by Washington's envoy to Yemen, Timothy Lenderking, during which he said
that Iranian support for the Houthis was “significant and decisive.”
Lenderking, who was appointed mid-February as an envoy to
Yemen, said in a briefing to Congress that the Iranian regime “has shown no
indication of its desire for a constructive solution to the Yemeni conflict,
and we would welcome any role if they are ready for that.”
There was no comment from the Houthi militia, which has always
boasted that the military development taking place in its ranks is the result
of pure Yemeni experiences, although its leader, Abdulmalik al-Houthi, had
previously expressed special expressions of thanks and praise for the support
provided by Iran to them, without disclosing his identity and whether it was
militarily, informally, or financially.
Earlier, a report prepared by United Nations experts and
presented to the Security Council confirmed that Iranian entities were involved
in sending weapons to the Houthi militia in Yemen.
“There is an increasing amount of evidence proving that
individuals or entities from inside Iran are involved in sending weapons and
their components to the Houthis,” said a report by independent experts
monitoring the Yemen sanctions regime.
It is worth noting that Reuters quoted four sources,
including an unnamed diplomat, that Iran promised to use its influence to stop
the Houthi attacks on Saudi Arabia and requested in return that Riyadh support
the nuclear negotiations during talks it had earlier this month with the Saudi
side in Baghdad, and a second round is scheduled to take place soon.