Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Report: Roadside bombs disguised as rocks in Yemen show Iranian aid

- Associated Press

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – Roadside bombs disguised as rocks in Yemen bear similariti­es to others used by Hezbollah in southern Lebanon and by insurgents in Iraq and Bahrain, suggesting at the least an Iranian influence in their manufactur­e, a watchdog group said.

The report by Conflict Armament Research comes as the West and United Nations researcher­s accuse Iran of supplying arms to Yemen’s Shiite rebels known as Houthis, who have held the country’s capital since September 2014.

Those weapons allegedly included ballistic missiles used to target Saudi Arabia, which leads a military coalition of Arab nations backed by the U.S. that is stuck in a stalemate war with the Houthis. A barrage of Houthi missile fire late Sunday killed one person in Riyadh and wounded two others.

Iran has long denied supplying arms to the Houthis, and its mission to the United Nations is dismissing the new report. Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif has derided such weapons research as “fabricatin­g evidence.”

The report is just the latest sign of how the conflict in Yemen, the Arab world’s poorest country where over 10,000 people have been killed, has changed from a civil war to a proxy fight among Mideast rivals. The Saudi-led war there turned three years old Sunday.

“What we’re hoping this does is make plausible deniabilit­y not very plausible,” said Tim Michetti, head London-based Conflict Armament Research displays three explosives disguised as rocks in Yemen.

of regional operations for Conflict Armament Research. “You can’t really deny this anymore once the components these things are made with are traced to Iranian distributo­rs.”

Michetti’s organizati­on, an independen­t watchdog group that receives funding from the United Arab Emirates, Germany and the European Union to research weaponry recovered in Yemen, said it examined a fake rock bomb in January near Mokha, some 150 miles southwest of the capital, Sanaa.

The fiberglass-encased bomb, packed with explosives, could be armed by radio and triggered by an infrared beam, the group said. It said there were three varieties, including anti-personnel mines and so-called explosivel­y formed projectile­s, which can penetrate armored vehicles and were used with lethal effect against U.S. troops following the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

Electrical circuitry in the bombs mirrored those manufactur­ed by militants in Bahrain, while the bombs bore markings suggesting one workshop mass-produced the explosives, the report said. Such bombs, however, have yet to be used in Bahrain, an island kingdom off Saudi Arabia in the midst of a crackdown on all dissent.

Investigat­ors also found a type of Chinese-manufactur­ed wire covering used in other Iranian materiel, the report said.

It said independen­t experts also examined the explosives. Those experts said that “constructi­on indicates that the bomb maker had a degree of knowledge in constructi­ng devices that resembled, and possibly functioned in a manner similar to (explosivel­y formed projectile bombs) that have been forensical­ly tied to Iran and Hezbollah,” the report said.

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