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US Navy ship targeted in failed missile attack from Yemen: US military

JEDDAH: The Houthi militias, which are backed by Iran, have — for the third time in less than a week — attacked US Navy in the strategic Bab Al-Mandab Strait, one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes.
Saturday night’s attack came after the first one on Monday, Oct. 10. At that time, the US Navy said it was unsure if it was being targeted or if the attack was a mistake.

The second attack — on Wednesday, Oct. 12 — prompted the US military to respond with verbal warnings and limited strikes on Thursday. Three radar sites in Houthi-held Yemeni territories near Ras Isa, north of Mukha and near Khoka, were taken out.

Pentagon Press Secretary Peter Cook said at the time that “the limited self-defense strikes were conducted to protect our personnel, our ships and our freedom of navigation.”

However, the Houthi militias — a radical religious group whose primary slogan is “Death to America” — remained undeterred and waged a third attack on Saturday night, firing a number of missiles at the USS Mason and other US ships in the Red Sea.

“The Mason once again appears to have come under fire from cruise missiles fired from Yemen,” Adm. John Richardson, chief of US naval operations, told reporters on Sunday.

The Mason was in international waters when multiple incoming surface-to-surface missiles were detected by the ship’s crew about 3:30 p.m. EDT. No damage was reported to the vessel or other ships accompanying it.

A US official was quoted as saying by news agencies that an additional radars could have been used in the latest attack.

Saturday night’s attack has eliminated all doubts that the attacks were a mistake or that the Houthis wanted to avoid a confrontation with the US.

In fact, the only one who seems to be avoiding a full-fledged confrontation is the US, thereby emboldening the Houthi militias — as rightly explained by Ali Khedery, formerly the longest serving US official in Iraq who is now based in Dubai.
Khedery blamed the recurrent attacks on America’s lack of robust responses to such grave provocations.
Nonsense if houthis had that much of antiship missile already they sanked all KSA and Co. Navy.

This nonsense news have become boring. These guys even could not show remain of a single missile. They could not even target a single launcher. And from such attack only one benefits and its the incompetent alliance.
 
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Forget ISIS, America Is the Real Threat to the World

The Untold History of the United States,
Jake Anderson

September 21, 2015

(ANTIMEDIA) Many people thought Oliver Stone’s days of rankling the establishment were over. Many people were wrong. His 2012 book and TV series, The Untold History of the United States, suggests the iconic filmmaker is renewing efforts to challenge the mainstream narrative regarding American exceptionalism, economic imperialism, and our government’s “nefarious involvement” in the Middle East.

To complete the 10-part documentary series and 750 page book, Stone collaborated with World War 2 scholar Peter Kuznick. The controversial filmmaker says that in assessing American history since the 1930s, it’s our involvement in the Middle East that really grabbed his attention.

“We’ve destabilized the entire region, created chaos. And then we blame ISIS for the chaos we have created,” Stone said.

According to Stone, the U.S. government’s destabilizing role actually goes back much further than ISIS. His new series pinpoints moments of American intrusion in the region as far back as the 1930s and follows it all the way to the CIA-backed Iranian coup in 1953, support for Afghanistan-based, anti-Soviet Union militants in the 1980s, George H.W. Bush’s Iraq invasion of 1990, and present-day efforts in Iran, Syria, and other countries.

Stone etched his way into the hearts and minds of the American public in the mid-to-late 1980s with two films depicting powerful experiences from the Vietnam War.

Platoon and Born on the 4th of July represent Stone’s confusion over his own service in the war, for which he earned a Bronze Star and a Purple Heart.

Stone’s JFK famously questioned the mainstream narrative of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, endearing the filmmaker to conspiracy theory circles for decades with a fictional account of a lawyer bringing the U.S. government to trial for its role in the assassination.

In recent years, Oliver Stone has received less acclaim for films like World Trade Center, which failed to question the mainstream narrative of 9/11, and W., which gave relatively gentle treatment to George W. Bush’s presidency.

Stone’s 2012 series, The Untold History of the United States, is a return to the intellectual form of one of his earliest successes, Salvador, which was strongly critical of the U.S.-supported right wing military of the Salvadoran Civil War. The last episode in the series is called Bush & Obama: Age of Terror. It covers the following subjects:

· The Project For A New American Century, a neoconservative think tank that called for a Pearl Harbor-type event to catalyze military action in the Middle East

· The tyranny of neoconservatives who pushed us to war with Iraq using faulty intelligence

· The rushing through of the Patriot Act, which stripped Americans of a wide variety of civil liberties while bestowing legal precedent to the new surveillance state

· The national brainwashing and fear-mongering of the War on Terror

· Invading Afghanistan to defeat some of the same terrorists the U.S. armed and trained two decades earlier

· Unconstitutional torture and interrogation tactics at Guantanamo Bay

· The mainstream media’s facilitation of war through propaganda and corporate collusion

· Obama selling out to J.P. Morgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, General Electric, and Big Pharma

· The $700 billion financial bailout paid for by workers, pensioners, homeowners, small businessmen, and students with loans

· The rise of CEO compensation amid the collapse of the middle class

· Obama’s failure to deliver hope, change, or transparency, his prosecution of government whistleblowers, his fortification of Bush’s national security state (though he repudiated the unilateralism of Bush, he doubled down on troops and, according to Stone, “lacked the courage of a John F. Kennedy”)

· Obama’s targeted drone strikes on Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Yemen, Libya, and Somalia (includes a breathtaking clip of his remark to troops: “Unlike the old empires, we don’t make these sacrifices for territory or for resources….We do it because it’s right.”

Stone says his documentary series is an alternative approach to American history, one he hopes will fight the “educational crime” of exposing today’s schoolchildren to the propaganda of standard textbooks and television programs.

On this note, Stone doesn’t mince words:
“American exceptionalism has to be driven out of our curriculums. We’re not under threat. We are the threat.”

This article (Oliver Stone: Forget ISIS, America Is the Real Threat to the World) is free and open source. You have permission to republish this article under a Creative Commons license with attribution to Jake Anderson and theAntiMedia.org.
 
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Nonsense if houthis had that much of antiship missile already they sanked all KSA and Co. Navy.

This nonsense news have become boring. These guys even could not show remain of a single missile. They could not even target a single launcher. And from such attack only one benefits and its the incompetent alliance.

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-yemen-security-iran-idUSKCN12K0CX

By Yara Bayoumy and Phil Stewart | WASHINGTON

Iran has stepped up weapons transfers to the Houthis, the militia fighting the Saudi-backed government in Yemen, U.S., Western and Iranian officials tell Reuters, a development that threatens to prolong and intensify the 19-month-old war.

The increased pace of transfers in recent months, which officials said include missiles and small arms, could exacerbate a security headache for the United States, which last week struck Houthi targets with cruise missiles in retaliation for failed missile attacks on a U.S. Navy destroyer.

Much of the recent smuggling activity has been through Oman, which neighbors Yemen, including via overland routes that take advantage of porous borders between the two countries, the officials said.

That raises a further quandary for Washington, which views the tiny Gulf state as a strategic interlocutor and ally in the conflict-ridden region. A senior U.S. administration official said that Washington had informed Oman of its concerns, without specifying when.

"We have been concerned about the recent flow of weapons from Iran into Yemen and have conveyed those concerns to those who maintain relations with the Houthis, including the Omani government," the official told Reuters.

Oman denies any weapons smuggling across its border, and its officials could not be reached for comment. Yemeni and senior regional officials say the Omanis are not actively involved with the transfers, but rather turning a blind eye and failing to aggressively crack down on the flow.


In an interview with Saudi newspaper Okaz last week, Omani Foreign Minister Yousef bin Alwi said:

"There is no truth to this. No weapons have crossed our border and we are ready to clarify any suspicions if they arise."


The Iran-allied Houthis gained a trove of weapons when whole divisions allied to former Yemen President Ali Abdullah Saleh sided with them at the start of the war last year. But Saudi Arabia and Yemen’s exiled government say they also receive substantial amounts of weapons and ammunition from Iran. Tehran views the Houthis as the legitimate authority in Yemen, but denies it supplies them with weapons.

Some Western officials have been more skeptical of the view that the Houthis are receiving large-scale support from Iran.

The U.S. and Western officials who spoke to Reuters about the recent trend in arms transfers said it was based on intelligence they had seen but did not elaborate on its nature. They said the frequency of transfers on known overland smuggling routes had increased notably, though the scale of the shipments was unclear.

Even U.S. officials warning of Iran's support for the Houthis acknowledge intelligence gaps in Yemen, where the U.S. posture has been sharply reduced since the start of the conflict. The sources all declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the issue.

"We are aware of a recent increased frequency of weapons shipments supplied by Iran, which are reaching the Houthis via the Omani border," a Western diplomat familiar with the conflict told Reuters.

Three U.S. officials confirmed that assertion.

One of those officials, who is familiar with Yemen, said that in the past few months there had been a noticeable increase in weapons-smuggling activity.

"What they're bringing in via Oman are anti-ship missiles, explosives..., money and personnel," the official said.

Another regional security source said the transfers included surface-to-surface short-range missiles and small arms.

A senior Iranian diplomat confirmed there had been a "sharp surge in Iran's help to the Houthis in Yemen" since May, referring to weapons, training and money.

"The nuclear deal gave Iran an upper hand in its rivalry with Saudi Arabia, but it needs to be preserved," the diplomat said.

Washington's Gulf allies have warned that U.S. President Barack Obama's rapprochement with Tehran through the landmark nuclear deal signed last year will only embolden Iran in conflicts in Syria, Lebanon, Yemen and elsewhere.



U.S. LOOKING INTO MISSILE ORIGIN

The increase in transfers comes as the civil war drags on and threatens to pull the United States deeper into a conflict that has killed 10,000 people and which pits two regional powers, Saudi Arabia and Iran, against each other. A U.N.-brokered 72-hour ceasefire went into effect on Wednesday.

Since the beginning of the war, the Houthis have used short-range Scud missiles, and the United Nations says they have also used surface-to-air missiles, improvised to operate as surface-to-surface rockets against Saudi Arabia.

But a suspected Houthi missile attack against a United Arab Emirates vessel in a strategic Red Sea shipping lane this month, as well as the attempted strikes against the U.S. warship, raise worries about the rebels' capability to launch bolder attacks.

The Houthis have denied attacking the USS Mason.


Two officials said the United States was looking into whether components of the missiles, including the warhead, might have benefited from Iranian parts or come from Iran but acknowledged the assessment was so far inconclusive.

General Joseph Votel, the commander of the U.S. military's Central Command, said he suspected an Iranian role in arming the Houthis and noted that Iran was one of the possible suppliers of the kinds of shore-based missile technology seen in Yemen.

"I do think Iran is playing a role in some of this. They do have a relationship with the Houthis," he told a forum in Washington.

A senior Western diplomat told Reuters that Iran's role in helping the Houthis had increased substantially since March 2015, when the Saudis intervened to restore President Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi to office.

The diplomat said there was concern Oman had not tackled Iranian smuggling as strongly as it should have done.

"In my mind, the level of Iranian arms smuggling probably doesn’t get the attention it deserves.”

Washington has generally shied away from being too publicly critical of Muscat, especially as it played a historic role in brokering the nuclear deal.

A senior Yemeni official told Reuters there had been an increase in smuggled weapons reaching the Houthis via Oman but could not say definitively whether the weapons were Iranian.

Yemen's army chief of staff, Mohammed al-Maqdishi, said in a recent interview on state television that Oman should be “a lot stricter” on smuggling. “We are now in the process of heavily guarding the border points more and more."

A senior Yemeni military source told Reuters that one of the smuggling routes is through Shehen, a sort of no-man’s land and entry point in Mahra province along the 288-km (179-mile) long Yemeni-Omani border. Although formally under government control, the region is a well known haven for smuggling and central authority is weak.

In addition to smuggling via secondary ports along Yemen’s coastline, the source said the frequency had also increased “because Iran feels the Houthis are in a difficult situation and want to show them they’re with them till the end.”

(Additional reporting by Mark Hosenball and Warren Strobel in Washington and Fatma al-Arimi in Muscat; Writing by Yara Bayoumy; editing by Stuart Grudgings.)
 
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The Story Changes: The Pentagon Is No Longer Sure Yemen Fired Missiles At A US Ship

by Tyler Durden
Oct 17, 2016 3:42 PM


Last Thursday, after two consecutive missile attacks on the US Navy ship USS Mason, which allegedly were launched by Houthi rebel forces in Yemen, the US entered its latest military engagement in the middle east, when the USS Nitze launched several Tomahawk cruise missiles aimed at radar installations located by the Bab el-Mandab straight, and which enabled the launch of at least three missiles against the U.S. ship.

uss%20mason%202_0.jpg

The USS Mason (DDG 87), a guided missile destroyer

As Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook said, "these limited self-defense strikes were conducted to protect our personnel, our ships and our freedom of navigation," adding that "these radars were active during previous attacks and attempted attacks on ships in the Red Sea," including the USS Mason, one of the officials said, adding the targeted radar sites were in remote areas where the risk of civilian casualties was low. That said, as we highlighted, the U.S. said while there growing indications, there was no official proof that Houthi fighters, or forces aligned with them, were responsible for the attempted strikes which targeted US ships. Still, the lack of concrete proof did not bother the US which, cavalier as usual, unleashed the missile assault on Yemeni territory, breaching the country's sovereignty and potentially killing an unknown number of people.

However, today - four days after the US "counterattack" - the story changes. According to Reuters earlier today the Pentagon declined to say whether the USS Mason destroyer was targeted by multiple inbound missiles fired from Yemen on Saturday, as initially thought, saying a review was underway to determine what happened.

"We are still assessing the situation. There are still some aspects to this that we are trying to clarify for ourselves given the threat -- the potential threat -- to our people," Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook told a news briefing."So this is still a situation that we're assessing closely."

And yet, the US had no problem with "clarifying" the source of the threat on Thursday when it fired American cruise missiles at Yemeni targets.

At this point we refer readers to what we said on Thursday, when we once again put on the cynical hat, and voiced what those who have not been brainwashed by US media thought, to wit:



In retrospect one now wonders if the "cruise missiles" that fell close to the US ships were merely the latest false flag providing the US cover to launch another foreign intervention.To be sure, the Houthis, who are battling the internationally-recognized government of Yemen President Abd Rabbu Mansour al-Hadi, denied any involvement in Sunday's attempt to strike the USS Mason.

A few days later, we have the closest thing possible to a confirmation that, even as the Pentagon itself admits, the "open and closed" case that Yemeni rebel fighters would, for some unknown reason, provoke the US and fire unperforming cruise missiles at a US ship, has just been significantly weakened. Of course, it if it wasn't Yemen rebels, the only logical alternative is the adversary of Yemen's rebels: Saudi Arabia. Although with the Saudis in the press so much as of late, almost exclusively in a negative light, we doubt that the Pentagon's "assessment" would ever get to the point where it would admit that America's Saudi allies launched missiles at US ships in a false flag attempt to get the US involved in the Yemen conflict by attacking the Saudi opponents and in the process aiding and abetting the Saudi execution of even more "war crimes."
 
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US intelligence is well aware who have carried out missile attacks on UAE ship as well as US Navy ship.
 
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http://www.reuters.com/article/us-yemen-security-iran-idUSKCN12K0CX

By Yara Bayoumy and Phil Stewart | WASHINGTON

Iran has stepped up weapons transfers to the Houthis, the militia fighting the Saudi-backed government in Yemen, U.S., Western and Iranian officials tell Reuters, a development that threatens to prolong and intensify the 19-month-old war.

The increased pace of transfers in recent months, which officials said include missiles and small arms, could exacerbate a security headache for the United States, which last week struck Houthi targets with cruise missiles in retaliation for failed missile attacks on a U.S. Navy destroyer.

Much of the recent smuggling activity has been through Oman, which neighbors Yemen, including via overland routes that take advantage of porous borders between the two countries, the officials said.

That raises a further quandary for Washington, which views the tiny Gulf state as a strategic interlocutor and ally in the conflict-ridden region. A senior U.S. administration official said that Washington had informed Oman of its concerns, without specifying when.

"We have been concerned about the recent flow of weapons from Iran into Yemen and have conveyed those concerns to those who maintain relations with the Houthis, including the Omani government," the official told Reuters.

Oman denies any weapons smuggling across its border, and its officials could not be reached for comment. Yemeni and senior regional officials say the Omanis are not actively involved with the transfers, but rather turning a blind eye and failing to aggressively crack down on the flow.


In an interview with Saudi newspaper Okaz last week, Omani Foreign Minister Yousef bin Alwi said:

"There is no truth to this. No weapons have crossed our border and we are ready to clarify any suspicions if they arise."


The Iran-allied Houthis gained a trove of weapons when whole divisions allied to former Yemen President Ali Abdullah Saleh sided with them at the start of the war last year. But Saudi Arabia and Yemen’s exiled government say they also receive substantial amounts of weapons and ammunition from Iran. Tehran views the Houthis as the legitimate authority in Yemen, but denies it supplies them with weapons.

Some Western officials have been more skeptical of the view that the Houthis are receiving large-scale support from Iran.

The U.S. and Western officials who spoke to Reuters about the recent trend in arms transfers said it was based on intelligence they had seen but did not elaborate on its nature. They said the frequency of transfers on known overland smuggling routes had increased notably, though the scale of the shipments was unclear.

Even U.S. officials warning of Iran's support for the Houthis acknowledge intelligence gaps in Yemen, where the U.S. posture has been sharply reduced since the start of the conflict. The sources all declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the issue.

"We are aware of a recent increased frequency of weapons shipments supplied by Iran, which are reaching the Houthis via the Omani border," a Western diplomat familiar with the conflict told Reuters.

Three U.S. officials confirmed that assertion.

One of those officials, who is familiar with Yemen, said that in the past few months there had been a noticeable increase in weapons-smuggling activity.

"What they're bringing in via Oman are anti-ship missiles, explosives..., money and personnel," the official said.

Another regional security source said the transfers included surface-to-surface short-range missiles and small arms.

A senior Iranian diplomat confirmed there had been a "sharp surge in Iran's help to the Houthis in Yemen" since May, referring to weapons, training and money.

"The nuclear deal gave Iran an upper hand in its rivalry with Saudi Arabia, but it needs to be preserved," the diplomat said.

Washington's Gulf allies have warned that U.S. President Barack Obama's rapprochement with Tehran through the landmark nuclear deal signed last year will only embolden Iran in conflicts in Syria, Lebanon, Yemen and elsewhere.



U.S. LOOKING INTO MISSILE ORIGIN

The increase in transfers comes as the civil war drags on and threatens to pull the United States deeper into a conflict that has killed 10,000 people and which pits two regional powers, Saudi Arabia and Iran, against each other. A U.N.-brokered 72-hour ceasefire went into effect on Wednesday.

Since the beginning of the war, the Houthis have used short-range Scud missiles, and the United Nations says they have also used surface-to-air missiles, improvised to operate as surface-to-surface rockets against Saudi Arabia.

But a suspected Houthi missile attack against a United Arab Emirates vessel in a strategic Red Sea shipping lane this month, as well as the attempted strikes against the U.S. warship, raise worries about the rebels' capability to launch bolder attacks.

The Houthis have denied attacking the USS Mason.


Two officials said the United States was looking into whether components of the missiles, including the warhead, might have benefited from Iranian parts or come from Iran but acknowledged the assessment was so far inconclusive.

General Joseph Votel, the commander of the U.S. military's Central Command, said he suspected an Iranian role in arming the Houthis and noted that Iran was one of the possible suppliers of the kinds of shore-based missile technology seen in Yemen.

"I do think Iran is playing a role in some of this. They do have a relationship with the Houthis," he told a forum in Washington.

A senior Western diplomat told Reuters that Iran's role in helping the Houthis had increased substantially since March 2015, when the Saudis intervened to restore President Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi to office.

The diplomat said there was concern Oman had not tackled Iranian smuggling as strongly as it should have done.

"In my mind, the level of Iranian arms smuggling probably doesn’t get the attention it deserves.”

Washington has generally shied away from being too publicly critical of Muscat, especially as it played a historic role in brokering the nuclear deal.

A senior Yemeni official told Reuters there had been an increase in smuggled weapons reaching the Houthis via Oman but could not say definitively whether the weapons were Iranian.

Yemen's army chief of staff, Mohammed al-Maqdishi, said in a recent interview on state television that Oman should be “a lot stricter” on smuggling. “We are now in the process of heavily guarding the border points more and more."

A senior Yemeni military source told Reuters that one of the smuggling routes is through Shehen, a sort of no-man’s land and entry point in Mahra province along the 288-km (179-mile) long Yemeni-Omani border. Although formally under government control, the region is a well known haven for smuggling and central authority is weak.

In addition to smuggling via secondary ports along Yemen’s coastline, the source said the frequency had also increased “because Iran feels the Houthis are in a difficult situation and want to show them they’re with them till the end.”

(Additional reporting by Mark Hosenball and Warren Strobel in Washington and Fatma al-Arimi in Muscat; Writing by Yara Bayoumy; editing by Stuart Grudgings.)
Nonsense that denied by both Iran and Oman , the funny part is they tried to put Oman name there and everyone with an epsilon knowledge about middle east now its easier for Iran to convince Saudi prince to smuggle weapon into Yemen than convincing Oman government as they are neutral in their foreign policy.

US intelligence is well aware who have carried out missile attacks on UAE ship as well as US Navy ship.
Nobody needs us intelligence to know who attacked UAE ship , hothis themselves announced the attack. About the American ship well they yet to show part of the crashed missiles.
 
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Nonsense that denied by both Iran and Oman , the funny part is they tried to put Oman name there and everyone with an epsilon knowledge about middle east now its easier for Iran to convince Saudi prince to smuggle weapon into Yemen than convincing Oman government as they are neutral in their foreign policy.

Houthis have claimed about targetting UAE ship and by the way Oman is part of GCC Alliance.
 
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Houthis have claimed about targetting UAE ship and by the way Oman is part of GCC Alliance.
So it make it more unlikely for them to smuggle those weapons that are claimed here.

By the way not all PGCC members have the same view on the matters. Oman government is the most neutral Governor in all the middleest perhaps all Asia.
 
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So it make it more unlikely for them to smuggle those weapons that are claimed here.

By the way not all PGCC members have the same view on the matters. Oman government is the most neutral Governor in all the middleest perhaps all Asia.

Omani Foreign Minister Yousef bin Alwi said:

“There is no truth to this. No weapons have crossed our border and we are ready to clarify any suspicions if they arise.”

The US and Western officials who spoke to Reuters about the recent trend in arms transfers said it was based on intelligence they had seen but did not elaborate on its nature. They said the frequency of transfers on known overland smuggling routes had increased notably, though the scale of the shipments was unclear.

Two officials said the United States was looking into whether components of the missiles, including the warhead, might have benefited from Iranian parts or come from Iran but acknowledged the assessment was so far inconclusive.

General Joseph Votel, the commander of the US military’s Central Command, said he suspected an Iranian role in arming the Houthis and noted that Iran was one of the possible suppliers of the kinds of shore-based missile technology seen in Yemen.

“I do think Iran is playing a role in some of this. They do have a relationship with the Houthis,” he told a forum in Washington.



Have you seen the Arabian sea map ? Who are in control of Dahlak Islands ?

 
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Omani Foreign Minister Yousef bin Alwi said:

“There is no truth to this. No weapons have crossed our border and we are ready to clarify any suspicions if they arise.”

The US and Western officials who spoke to Reuters about the recent trend in arms transfers said it was based on intelligence they had seen but did not elaborate on its nature. They said the frequency of transfers on known overland smuggling routes had increased notably, though the scale of the shipments was unclear.

Two officials said the United States was looking into whether components of the missiles, including the warhead, might have benefited from Iranian parts or come from Iran but acknowledged the assessment was so far inconclusive.

General Joseph Votel, the commander of the US military’s Central Command, said he suspected an Iranian role in arming the Houthis and noted that Iran was one of the possible suppliers of the kinds of shore-based missile technology seen in Yemen.

“I do think Iran is playing a role in some of this. They do have a relationship with the Houthis,” he told a forum in Washington.



Have you seen the Arabian sea map ? Who are in control of Dahlak Islands ?

So as usual it come down to suspicion and thinking without any proof to back it , the usual american way.

And I don't knew be go control those islands but certainly neither Iran and nor houthis. And its not important Yemen is under bargo and noone can send anything there by that route .

Well if looked it up those island in route d see are controlled by Eritrea. Which nobody blame for smuggling anything to Yemen .
 
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So as usual it come down to suspicion and thinking without any proof to back it , the usual american way.

And I don't knew be go control those islands but certainly neither Iran and nor houthis. And its not important Yemen is under bargo and noone can send anything there by that route .

Well if looked it up those island in route d see are controlled by Eritrea. Which nobody blame for smuggling anything to Yemen .


Yes, there are UN sanctions placed on Eritrea , possible that Dahlak Islands can be even the smuggling route for weapons to Yeman .

 
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Yes, there are UN sanctions placed on Eritrea , possible that Dahlak Islands can be even the smuggling route for weapons to Yeman .

Well if somebody use that route to smuggle weapon then you can't blame Oman for that.
And honestly the route is not impossible but then you must doubt competence of the coalition navy on enforcing their own embargo.
 
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Well if somebody use that route to smuggle weapon then you can't blame Oman for that.
And honestly the route is not impossible but then you must doubt competence of the coalition navy on enforcing their own embargo.


Houthis do get weapons from different routes and more or less all this seems to be linked to the wars in the region.

Iraq, Syria, Yeman, Afghanistan, Somalia etc.
 
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Nonsense if houthis had that much of antiship missile already they sanked all KSA and Co. Navy.

This nonsense news have become boring. These guys even could not show remain of a single missile. They could not even target a single launcher. And from such attack only one benefits and its the incompetent alliance.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1003366/saudi-arabia

US Vice Admiral Kevin Donegan told reporters at an undisclosed military base in Southwest Asia: “Either US ships or coalition ships... intercepted four weapon shipments from Iran to Yemen. We know they came from Iran and we know the destination.”
Donegal said the shipments contained thousands of AK-47 assault rifles, anti-tank missiles, sniper rifles and “other pieces of equipment (and) higher-end weapons systems.”

Naval officials were able to determine the destination of the boats by analyzing GPS settings and interviewing the crew. One of the shipments had been declared an illegal weapon shipment by the UN, said Donegal.

“We believe that Iran is connected to this in some way,” Donegan said.

Given the heavy traffic around the Strait of Hormuz and the Gulf, the three-star admiral said “plenty” of other shipments would have gone through to Yemen.

In April 2015, Iran tried to send a convoy of seven ships, guarded by two Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps vessels, to Yemen.

Donegan said these were filled with coastal-defense cruise missiles, explosives and other weapons.
 
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