
Iran is moving to rearm its militia allies
Forces allied with Yemen's internationally recognized government this week intercepted a major shipment of missiles, drone parts and other military gear sent to Houthi rebels on the Red Sea coast. Syria's new government says it has seized a number of weapons cargoes, including Grad rockets—for use in multiple-launch systems mounted on trucks—along its borders with Iraq and Lebanon.
The Lebanese army, meanwhile, has seized shipments brought in across its border with Syria that include Russian antitank missiles favored by Hezbollah.
'Iran is rebuilding its presence in the Levant by sending missiles to Hezbollah and weapons from Iraq to Syria," said Michael Knights, a senior fellow at the U.S.-based Washington Institute for Near East Policy with expertise in Iran's militia allies.
Yemeni forces said Wednesday they had seized a record number of Iranian missiles destined for the Houthis. The shipment was intercepted by the National Resistance Force, a military coalition aligned with the Yemeni government. The U.S. Central Command, which is responsible for America's military operations in the Middle East, said it was the National Resistance Force's largest seizure of advanced Iranian conventional weapons—750 tons of cruise missiles, antiship and antiaircraft missiles, warheads, targeting components and drone engines.
The shipments were hidden aboard a ship called a dhow, beneath declared cargoes of air conditioners. They included Iranian-developed Qader antiship missiles and components for the Saqr air-defense system, which the Houthis have used to bring down U.S. MQ-9 Reaper drones.
Previous seizures by the Yemeni and U.S. governments generally yielded small arms or spare parts rather than fully assembled missiles.
The seizure comes just weeks after a cease-fire stopped Israel's 12-day air campaign against Iran—a series of attacks that demonstrated Iran's vulnerability despite the arsenal of missiles and militia allies it had built up to protect itself.
The U.S. joined in the attack by bombing key Iranian nuclear facilities. This spring, the U.S. pounded Houthi positions for nearly two months in an effort that ended with a cease-fire and left the Houthis looking for more high-end hardware.
'The timing and scale of this shipment strongly suggest Iran is moving quickly to replenish Houthi stockpiles depleted by U.S. airstrikes," said Mohammed al-Basha, founder of U.S.-based Middle East security advisory Basha Report. It shows Tehran wants to 'sustain their high operational tempo targeting Israel and commercial maritime traffic," he said.
Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baqaei on Thursday said any claim Tehran had sent weapons to Yemen was baseless.
The resupply effort might already be yielding results.
Last week, Houthi fighters used rocket-propelled grenades, missiles and drones to sink two merchant ships in the Red Sea, killing at least three crew members and taking others hostage. The militant group has also been lobbing ballistic missiles at Israel for weeks, though most are intercepted.
While the seized cargoes transited through the East African country of Djibouti, which sits across the mouth of the Red Sea from Yemen, the National Resistance Force found multiple documents in Farsi indicating their origin was Iran. The documents included a manual for cameras used to guide antiaircraft missiles and a quality certificate attached to a missile fin manufactured by an Iranian company.
Iran's efforts to move weapons to Hezbollah have been extensive as well. The militant group was forced into a cease-fire last fall after an Israeli campaign of covert operations, airstrikes and a ground incursion wiped out most of its arsenal and leadership.
There has been 'an intensifying trend in recent months of smuggling attempts via or originating from Syria" to Lebanon's Hezbollah, said Michael Cardash, the former deputy head of the bomb disposal division at Israel's national police.
The arms pipeline has been crimped by the fall of the Bashar al-Assad regime, which was aligned with Iran, and its replacement by a hostile government. Traffickers now have to bring in arms in small shipments after previously sending truckloads, said Cardash, who is now in charge of explosives research at Israeli security consulting firm Terrogence.
In one example in June, the Interior Ministry of the new Syrian government announced it had seized Russian-made Kornet antitank missiles en route to Lebanon in a truck transporting cucumbers. In May, the General Security branch intercepted Iranian-made air-defense missiles near the Lebanese border, according to media outlets affiliated with the new Syrian government.
Despite extensive efforts to keep Hezbollah from restocking its battered arsenal, the militant group, like the Houthis, has had some success. It manufactures its own drones and medium-range rockets, and has managed to restructure its smuggling networks to a degree and smuggle in some Kornets and other sophisticated weaponry, a person familiar with the group's operations said.
Write to Benoit Faucon at benoit.faucon@wsj.com
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Houthi Hypersonic Missile ‘SUCCESSFULLY HITS' Israel; Watch Ben Gurion Airport Under Attack
In a dramatic escalation, Yemen's Houthi rebels claimed responsibility for launching a 'Palestine 2' hypersonic ballistic missile at Israel's Ben Gurion Airport on August 5. In a televised address, Houthi military spokesperson Brig. Gen. Yahya Saree confirmed the operation, vowing that attacks would continue until the war in Gaza ends. The missile attack triggered sirens across central Israel and Jerusalem, sending thousands into bomb shelters. The Israeli military later stated that air defence systems intercepted the incoming projectile. Watch. Read More


The Hindu
an hour ago
- The Hindu
Russian strikes kill six across Ukraine
Russian strikes across eastern Ukraine killed six people, including a mechanic at a railway station, and wounded at least a dozen people, authorities said on Tuesday (August 5, 2025). "Russian terrorists inflicted a massive strike on the railway infrastructure of Lozova," the Ukrainian Railways company posted on Telegram. Ukraine's railways have been heavily targeted by Russia's army throughout its invasion, launched in February 2022. Moscow has escalated aerial attacks ahead of a Friday deadline by U.S. President Donald Trump to make progress towards peace or face massive new sanctions. The nighttime strikes on Lozova in the eastern Kharkiv region left a passenger train mangled and charred and damaged the station building, with a pile of rubble on the platform. Two people were killed in Lozova, Kharkiv's Governor Oleg Synegubov said on Telegram. Among them was "a duty mechanic of one of the units", Ukrainian Railways said, adding that several trains had been rerouted. President Volodymyr Zelensky said Russia had launched more than 25 Iranian-designed Shahed drones at the city, striking civilian infrastructure. "The railway was damaged, including a depot and a station," he said on social media, adding that 10 people were wounded in the attack. Ukraine's air force said Russia fired 46 attack drones and one ballistic missile in the barrage, down from the several hundred that Moscow has launched in previous nighttime attacks. A separate Russian strike on Ukraine's northeast Sumy region killed two people at an "agricultural enterprise" and wounded three employees, authorities said. In the southeastern Zaporizhzhia region, two more people died after "the Russian army hit a house with an FPV drone," said its governor, Ivan Fedorov. In the Russian-occupied Lugansk region, four water utility workers were killed on duty in a Ukrainian drone attack on the city of Svatovo, Moscow-installed officials said.


India Today
an hour ago
- India Today
Don't burn ties with India: Nikki Haley on Trump's tariff threat over Russian oil
Former US Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley has delivered a sharp rebuke of President Donald Trump's proposal to impose high tariffs on Indian exports, warning that the move could strain the US-India relationship at a crucial time. She warned Trump not to give a pass to "adversary" China and "burn" relations with an ally like Republican leader also called out the Trump administration's duplicity, highlighting a soft-handling of trade with China in which the US paused the tariffs for 90 a post on social media platform X, Haley wrote, "India should not be buying oil from Russia. But China, an adversary and the number one buyer of Russian and Iranian oil, got a 90-day tariff pause". "Don't give China a pass and burn a relationship with a strong ally like India," she who has long supported stronger ties between the US and India, has often emphasised the need to counter China's global influence by building closer partnerships with democratic nations in the Indo-Pacific — particularly comments followed Trump's recent interview with CNBC, where he announced plans to drastically raise tariffs, already at 25 per cent effective from August 1, on Indian goods within 24 hours. He linked the proposed move to India's continued purchase of Russian oil, stating that New Delhi was "fuelling the war machine"."India has the highest tariffs of any country," Trump said during the interview. "They do a lot of business with us. We don't do much with them. We agreed on 25 per cent tariffs, but I'm going to raise that very substantially now because of their Russian oil trade," Trump said, seeking to press the panic button for also acknowledged that India had offered to lower tariffs on US goods to zero under a new deal but dismissed the proposal as inadequate. "Zero tariffs aren't enough when they're helping fund a war we oppose," he has consistently defended its energy policy, arguing that its oil imports are based on national interest and Ministry of External Affairs has also pointed out that Western countries, including the US and EU, continue to maintain their own trade and energy ties with Russia, despite publicly criticising others for doing so.- Ends