US Navy seizes Iranian arms shipment bound to Houthis in Yemen
The US navy succeeded recently in seizing an Iranian arms shipment that was on its way to Yemen on board of a fishing boat that did not carry any flags in the northern part of the Arabian Sea.
The seizure of the shipment is
considered a new blow to the terrorist Houthi militia, one that can contribute
to clipping the nails of the Iran-backed militia.
The US Fifth Corps said the shipment
contained 1,400 AK-47s and 226,000 ammunitions.
It added that the US Navy and Coast
Guard seized the weapons during the flag verification process.
Smuggling line
The US Corps noted that the ship did
not belong to any country and that it had exited Iran and entered international
waters through a line that was historically used to smuggle weapons illegally
to the Houthis in Yemen.
It added in a statement that the
direct or indirect supply, sale or transfer of weapons to the Houthis violates
United Nations Security Council resolutions and US sanctions.
It said the five-member crew of the
boat identified itself as Yemeni.
The crew members will be returned to
Yemen, the corpse said, noting that the fishing boat that carried the weapons
had sunken.
Challenge
The transfer of arms to the Houthis violates
Security Council charters and US sanctions.
In a related development, Yemeni
Information Minister Muammar Al-Eryani described the US Navy's announcement about
the seizure of a new Iranian weapons shipment that was on its way to the
terrorist Houthi militia as a 'blatant challenge' from the Iranian side to the
will of the international community.
The Iranian official explained that
the Iranian regime's continued smuggling of weapons to the Houthi militia
embodies an extension of its continuous aggression against Yemen since the coup.
He said these actions come within
the framework of implementing Iran's destructive agenda and its expansionist
project in the region.