Iran’s help has transformed Yemen's Houthi rebels into a potent military
force, UN experts say
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[November 04, 2024]
By EDITH M. LEDERER
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Yemen’s Houthi rebels have been transformed from a
local armed group with limited capabilities to a powerful military
organization with support from Iran, Iraqi armed groups, Lebanon’s
Hezbollah militants and others, U.N. experts said in a new report.
The Iranian-backed Houthis have exploited the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza
and worked to enhance their status in Iran’s self-described “Axis of
Resistance” to gain popularity in the region and beyond, the experts
monitoring sanctions against the Houthis said in the 537-page report to
the U.N. Security Council.
To support Iranian-backed Hamas militants, whose surprise attacks in
southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, sparked the war in Gaza, the Houthis
have been attacking vessels in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden,
disrupting global shipping in a key geopolitical area.
Despite Houthi claims that they would target ships linked to Israel, the
panel said its investigations revealed the rebels have been targeting
vessels indiscriminately.
Its analysis of data from the International Maritime Organization, the
U.S. and the United Kingdom revealed that at least 134 attacks were
carried out from Houthi-controlled areas against merchant and commercial
vessels and U.S. and U.K. warships in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden
between Nov. 15, 2023, and July 31, 2024.
“The group’s shift to actions at sea increased their influence in the
region,” the U.N. experts said. “Such a scale of attacks, using weapon
systems on civilian vessels, had never occurred since the Second World
War.”
In their attacks, the experts said, the Houthis used a new and
previously undisclosed ballistic missile, the Hatem-2.
The five-member U.N. panel includes experts on arms, finance, regional
affairs, international humanitarian law and armed groups. The experts
hail from India, Egypt, Switzerland, Belgium and Cabo Verde.
Confidential sources told the panel that the Houthis are coordinating
operations with al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula and strengthening ties
to the al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab militant group in Somalia.
The Houthis have been engaged in a civil war with Yemen’s
internationally recognized government, backed by a Saudi-led coalition,
since 2014, when they took control of the capital Sanaa and most of the
north. Hopes for peace talks to end the war vanished after the Oct. 7,
2023, attacks.
The U.N. experts said the Yemen conflict, which started as an internal
fight and expanded into a regional confrontation, “has now escalated
into a major international crisis.”
According to the experts, the number of Houthi fighters is estimated at
350,000 now, compared with 220,000 in 2022 and 30,000 in 2015.
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Houthi supporters raise their machine guns during an Anti- U.S and
Israel rally in Sanaa, Yemen, Friday, Nov. 1, 2024. (AP Photo/Osamah
Abdulrahman)
“The panel observes the transformation of the Houthis from a
localized armed group with limited capabilities to a powerful
military organization, extending their operational capabilities well
beyond the territories under their control,” the report said.
The experts said the transformation has been possible due to the
transfer of military materiel and training provided by the Iranian
Revolutionary Guard’s elite Quds Force, Hezbollah and Iraqi
specialists and technicians.
Military experts, Yemeni officials and even officials close to the
Houthis indicated that the rebel group couldn’t produce complex
weapons systems such as ballistic missiles, cruise missiles,
surveillance and attack drones, portable air defense systems, and
thermal sights, which they have used without foreign support, the
U.N. experts said.
“The scale, nature and extent of transfers of diverse military
materiel and technology provided to the Houthis from external
sources, including financial support and training of its combatants,
is unprecedented,” the experts said.
The panel said it observed similarities between multiple military
items used by the Houthis and those produced and operated by Iran or
its allies in the Axis of Resistance, which includes Hezbollah and
Hamas and armed groups in Iraq and Syria.
It said joint operations centers have been set up in Iraq and
Lebanon with Houthi representatives “aimed at coordinating joint
military actions of the Axis of Resistance.”
Inside Yemen, the panel said the Houthis have been intensifying
military operations against the government. “The internal military
situation is fragile, and any internal or external trigger could
lead to the resumption of military confrontations,” it said.
The Houthis also have been recruiting large numbers of Yemeni youths
and children as well as exploiting Ethiopian migrants, forcing them
to join the fight against the government and engage in trafficking
narcotics, it said.
“Exploiting high illiteracy rates, particularly in tribal areas,
they have reportedly mobilized boys as young as 10 or 11, often
despite parental opposition,” they said. “Recruitment sermons and
weekly classes on jihad are reportedly delivered in schools.”
Child recruitment reportedly increased after the war in Gaza started
and the U.S. and U.K. airstrikes in Yemen, the experts said. Yemen’s
government said it received 3,298 reports of child recruitment in
the first half of 2024, with youngsters reportedly used as human
shields, spies and in combat — and for planting landmines and
explosives, reconnaissance and as cooks.
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