Yemeni Forces Seize Massive Iranian Arms Shipment
Yemeni National Resistance forces seized 750 tons of Iranian weapons, including chemical munitions, exposing a complex smuggling network involving IRGC and Hezbollah operatives.

Yemeni National Resistance forces have intercepted a 750-ton shipment of weapons bound for the Houthi rebel group, including chemical munitions reportedly supplied by Iran, according to Sky News Arabia.
The operation revealed a complex smuggling network involving Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and Hezbollah, utilizing air and sea routes from Africa and Asia to Houthi-controlled areas in Yemen. Interrogations of the intercepted crew exposed the scale of the operation and the involvement of multiple foreign nationals.
The shipment, arriving via Djibouti under the guise of “generators, electrical transformers, air pumps, and hydraulic columns,” is part of a series of at least 12 similar smuggling attempts targeting the Houthis. Four of the seven individuals detained were Iranian nationals, while the others came from Somalia and India. Reports indicate that these individuals were often recruited from impoverished regions, with Iranian and Houthi operatives exploiting their economic vulnerabilities to facilitate the trafficking of conventional and chemical weapons.
Yemeni authorities outlined the smuggling routes, which span multiple countries: arms and chemical materials traveled through Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, Oman, and finally Iran before reaching Houthi-controlled territory. Three primary ports were identified for shipping weapons from Tehran: directly from Bandar Abbas, along the Somali coast, and via Djibouti to Yemen’s al-Shalif port.
The seizure underscores the ongoing challenge of monitoring and disrupting Iranian arms flows to proxy groups in the region, as well as the Houthis’ reliance on foreign support to sustain their military capabilities.