U.S. Navy ships
in the Arabian Sea intercepted and seized an arms shipment from Iran
likely bound for Houthi fighters in Yemen, the military said in a
statement on Monday. The
weapons seized last week by the warships Sirocco and Gravely were hidden
on a small dhow and included 1,500 AK-47 rifles, 200 rocket-propelled
grenade (RPG) launchers, and 21 .50-caliber machine guns, according to
the Navy statement. The weapons
were seized on March 28 and are now in U.S. custody. The boat, which the
Navy described as stateless, and its crew were allowed to leave once
the weapons were taken. "This
seizure is the latest in a string of illicit weapons shipments assessed
by the U.S. to have originated in Iran that were seized in the region by
naval forces," the military said in the statement. It
cited a Feb. 27 incident in which the Australian Navy intercepted a
dhow in late February and confiscated nearly 2,000 AK-47s, 100 RPG
launchers, and other weapons. On March 20, a French destroyer seized
almost 2,000 AK-47s, dozens of Dragunov sniper rifles, nine antitank
missiles, and other equipment. Houthi forces
seized Yemen's capital Sanaa in 2014, stoking concern in Saudi Arabia
that Iran was exploiting turmoil in the region and extending its
influence to the Saudi border. The Houthis, whose home territory is in
northern Yemen, practice Shi'ite Islam, the majority faith in Iran. White
House spokesman Josh Earnest said on Monday that Iran's support for the
Houthis is an example of its "destabilizing activities" in the region,
and that the weapons shipment could be raised at the United Nations
Security Council. "We obviously are
concerned about this development, because offering up support to the
rebels in Yemen is something that is not at all consistent with U.N.
Security Council resolutions," Earnest said. U.S. officials
have said in the past that Iran's direct involvement with the Houthis is
limited, but that Iranian military personnel were training and
equipping Houthi units. A Saudi-led
Arab coalition has been fighting to restore Yemen's President Abd-Rabbu
Mansour Hadi to power since last year, including via air strikes on
Sanaa. U.N.-sponsored peace talks are scheduled to start in Kuwait on April 18. The
two sides have confirmed a truce starting at midnight on April 10 ahead
of the peace talks, scheduled to follow a week later.
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