Iran-Backed Houthis Suspected
Of Ballistic Missile Attack At Yemen
At Least 116 Dead In Attack
At Al-Estiqbal Military Camp In Marib
(New York, N.Y.) – On January 18, 2020, ballistic
missiles struck a mosque at the al-Estiqbal military camp in Marib,
killing at least 116 people in what was reportedly one of the
deadliest attacks in Yemen’s civil war. Although there was no
immediate claim by the Houthi rebels, Yemen’s government condemned the
Iran-backed extremist group for the attack. Two days later, government
forces engaged Houthi rebels east of Marib and killed senior Houthi
commander Jaber Al Muwaed. Attempts at any conflict resolution have
made little progress since the Houthis began invading the country in
2014. Iran has historically supported the Houthi rebels with funding,
training, and weapons, with some Yemeni officials believing Iran’s
support has been ongoing since the Houthi uprising in 2004.
Violent activity by the Houthis
has consisted mainly of armed rebellion against the Yemeni government,
leading to clashes with security forces. The Houthis have also
repeatedly attacked Saudi Arabia with missiles and drones since 2017,
and have ramped up strikes in the spring and summer of last year. In
October 2016, the Houthis took direct action against the United States
by conducting a series of failed missile attacks against the U.S. Navy
presence in the region. The Houthis have also engaged in kidnapping,
taking hostage several American citizens including a teacher,
journalist, and a humanitarian aid worker. Thousands have been killed
and displaced across Yemen since the the conflict began in 2014.
Yemeni officials also assert the Houthis have traveled to Iran and
Lebanon for training and also received training in Yemen
by a “few hundred” members of the Quds Force of Iran’s Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). In 2013, Yemeni security forces
intercepted the Iranian vessel Jihan 1 off Yemen’s coast, which was
reportedly bound for Houthi-controlled territory carrying several tons
of Iranian arms, munitions, equipment, and explosives. Yemeni
authorities impounded the ship and arrested its crew, which included
eight Yemeni nationals and two members of Hezbollah. Iran denied any
connection to the shipment. In February 2017, Qasem Soleimani, then
the commander of the Quds Force, reportedly met with senior IRGC
commanders to discuss increasing Iranian support to the Houthis.
Though Iran denies providing military or financial aid to the Houthis,
a senior Iranian official told
Reuters in March 2017 that the IRGC “agreed to increase the amount
of help, through training, arms and financial support” to the Houthis
after meeting with Soleimani.
To read CEP’s Houthis resource, please click here.
To read CEP’s Yemen resource, please click here.
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