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WAR REPORT
Iran rejects UK claim of seizing Yemen-bound weapons
by AFP Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) July 8, 2022

Tehran on Friday rejected Britain's claim that it had seized advanced weaponry being smuggled from Iran towards Yemen, the Iranian foreign ministry said.

Britain's Ministry of Defence on Thursday said one of its warships on patrol in the Gulf earlier this year seized the arms shipment, which contravened a UN Security Council resolution to prevent support for Yemen's Huthis rebels.

Iran's foreign ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani rejected Britain's claim as "baseless", accusing the UK of being complicit in the war in Yemen.

London's past weapons sales to Saudi Arabia gave it no "moral authority to make a claim against the Islamic Republic of Iran", he said.

A Saudi-led military coalition intervened in 2015 to back Yemen's internationally recognised government after the Iran-backed Huthis seized the capital Sanaa the year before.

"By continuously selling advanced weapons to the self-proclaimed military coalition against the defenceless people of Yemen, Britain has been a partner in the war and aggression against Yemen," Kanani continued.

Britain's Ministry of Defence said the HMS Montrose intercepted speedboats carrying surface-to-air-missiles and engines for land attack cruise missiles while on routine patrols on two occasions in January and February.

The ministry added that the types of cruise missiles seized are regularly used by Huthi rebels in Yemen to strike targets in Saudi Arabia.

Those models were fired into Abu Dhabi in January, in an attack that killed three civilians, it said.

Iran has widely been reported to offer material support to the Huthi rebels during the seven-year war, a claim rejected by Tehran.

UK says it seized advanced weaponry smuggled from Iran
London (AFP) July 7, 2022 - Britain on Thursday said one of its warships on patrol in the Gulf earlier this year seized advanced weaponry being smuggled from Iran towards Yemen, contravening a UN Security Council resolution.

The ship, HMS Montrose, intercepted speedboats carrying surface-to-air-missiles and engines for land attack cruise missiles while on routine patrols on two occasions in January and February, the Ministry of Defence (MoD) said.

The speedboats were being operated by smugglers in international waters south of Iran, in the first instance of a UK warship interdicting vessels carrying such sophisticated weapons from the country, it added.

The illicit cargo was spotted by a Wildcat helicopter equipped with sophisticated radar systems launched from the Montrose, according to the MoD.

The second operation on February 25 also involved a United States Navy destroyer, the USS Gridley, which deployed a Seahawk helicopter "to provide critical overwatch", the ministry said.

The seizures were spearheaded by British Royal Marines, who approached the speedboats on two inflatable vessels and secured and searched them, it added.

The dozens of packages containing the advanced weaponry were discovered and confiscated to the Montrose, before being take to Britain for technical analysis.

That found they contained rocket engines for Iranian-produced land attack cruise missile and surface-to-air missiles, the MoD said.

The type of cruise missiles seized are regularly used by Houthi rebels in Yemen to strike targets in Saudi Arabia, it noted, and were fired into Abu Dhabi in January, killing three civilians.

The MoD added the shipment contravened United Nations Security Council Resolution 2216, adopted in 2015 to prevent support for the Houthis.

"The UK will continue to work in support of an enduring peace in Yemen and is committed to international maritime security so that commercial shipping can transit safely without threat of disruption," armed forces minister James Heappey added in a statement.


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