by Uzi Rubin
The Yemeni civil war has received scant attention in Israel, but its outcome could significantly affect Israel’s national security and the stability of the Middle East.
BESA Center Perspectives Paper No. 662, November 29, 2017
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: Since the onset of the
so-called “Arab Spring” in 2011, there has been a continuous upheaval in
Yemen, which has escalated into full scale civil war between the
Houthis (a Shiite political-religious movement), supported by Iran, and
the internationally recognized Government of Yemen, supported by Saudi
Arabia. The recent missile attack on Riyadh International Airport, which
originated in Yemen and triggered a Saudi-Lebanese confrontation, is
the fourth such attack this year. The Yemeni civil war has received
scant attention in Israel, but its outcome could significantly affect
Israel’s national security and the stability of the Middle East.
In a CNN interview on November 6, Saudi Arabia’s
foreign minister Adel Jubair asserted that “Lebanon has declared war” on
his country. This accusation was made following the launch of a
ballistic missile from Yemen towards Riyadh International Airport (it
was shot down harmlessly by Saudi Arabia’s Patriot defense system).
“This was an Iranian missile…launched by Hezbollah,” Jubair said. “We
regard the Lebanese Government as a government that has declared war on
us.”
To most Israelis, this sounds like fake news. What
is Hezbollah – a Lebanese Shiite militia dedicated to fighting Israel –
doing in Yemen? And what has it got to do with ballistic missile
attacks on Saudi Arabia?
Yet this is not fake news. Hezbollah does indeed
have a presence in Yemen. For the past two years, it has been supporting
the Houthi insurgents in their war against the Saudi-led coalition. In
the course of that war, ballistic missiles have been regularly launched
against Saudi Arabia’s major cities.
As far as we know, the November missile attack on
Riyadh was not the first but rather the fourth such attack this year.
Moreover, ballistic missiles are being fired from Yemeni territory not
only at Riyadh but also at border towns and major cities across the
Saudi Kingdom. This missile campaign is part of a strategic move by Iran
to establish its hegemony in the Middle East. It is skillfully
exploiting the existence of Shiite-affiliated minorities throughout the
region.
Since the 2011 outbreak of what some still call
with macabre humor the “Arab Spring,” a bloody civil war has raged in
Yemen, a war that has cost the lives of 10,000 civilians to date. This
civil war – perhaps the least reported of all the upheavals to have
engulfed the Arab world in the past six years – is not the first of its
kind. Yemen is notoriously prone to civil war. The one that raged
between 1962 and 1970 saw the first use of chemical warfare in the
Middle East, when Nasser’s Egyptian army used it during its intervention
on the side of the rebels against the regime of Imam Yahiya.
The presence of a large Egyptian army contingent
in Yemen created a sense of relief in Israel and led to expectations in
early 1967 that there would be no war in the next year or so. Those
expectations were rudely shattered when Nasser closed the Straits of
Tiran to Israeli shipping and marched his army to the Sinai. The rest,
as they say, is history.
A shorter civil war raged in 1994 between South
Yemen (previously the British colony of Aden) and North Yemen
(historical Yemen). This too is one of the most forgotten conflicts in
history. It nevertheless saw high-intensity fighting, including
ballistic missile exchanges between the sides. The North launched
short-range, Soviet-supplied SS21 missiles against the city of Aden, and
the South launched Soviet-supplied Scud Bs against Sana’a, the national
capital. The South claimed that its air defense artillery managed to
shoot down Northern missiles, and the North reported dozens of deaths
and significant damage in Sana’s from Southern missiles. This war, like
its predecessors, warranted scarcely a mention in Western media and
military publications.
The current fighting in Yemen started with
non-violent protests against the incumbent President Ali Salah that
quickly escalated into armed clashes between tribes and factions across
the country. In 2015, these clashes grew to full-scale civil war between
the Houthi-led coalition (Houthis are a Shiite religious-political
movement) and the forces loyal to the current president and supported by
Saudi Arabia.
The Houthi coalition, which was already in control
of Yemen’s highland regions, quickly overran Sana’a and Aden
(previously the capital of the extinct People’s Democratic Republic of
Yemen, aka South Yemen). In response, Saudi Arabia assembled a coalition
of Sunni Arab states from the Gulf and from Africa (Sudan) that invaded
Yemen with the aim of defeating the Houthis.
Following initial Sunni successes, mainly the
liberation of Aden and its environs, the front line became static. Yemen
is now divided between the southern region, controlled by the Saudi-led
coalition, and the northern region, ruled by the Houthis. The two
regions roughly coincide with the former territories of North and South
Yemen.
While Iran has not officially joined the war, its
extensive support of the Houthi side includes supply of weapons,
dispatch of military advisers and auxiliary troops, and generous
financial support. Its involvement has transformed the Yemeni civil war
into a major arena in the struggle between Iran and Saudi Arabia over
the future of the Middle East.
When the North won the 1994 civil war, the
government of the then reunified Yemen replenished its ballistic missile
stockpiles, mainly by acquiring Scud C missiles from North Korea. When
the Houthis overran the missile depots near Sana’a, they were bombed by
the Saudi air force, which claimed it had managed to destroy all of
them.
This claim turned out to be premature when the
Houthis displayed Scuds and SS21s painted in their own colors,
presumably the same missiles “destroyed” by the Saudi bombing. The
Houthis also displayed rockets and short-range missiles that closely
resembled those of Iran.
In April 2015, the Houthis commenced a missile
campaign against Saudi-led coalition bases in Yemen and against Saudi
towns across the border. In one well-documented incident, a Houthi
ballistic missile – probably an SS21 – killed 45 United Arab Emirate
troops when it hit an ammunition dump inside a Saudi coalition forward
base near Sana’a. Other missiles hit the town of Khamis Mushait, which
abuts the giant King Haled Saudi Air Force Base (SAFB), and the towns of
Najran and Jazan (a port city and a Saudi Navy base, respectively).
There are no clear reports on casualties or damage from these attacks.
In September 2016, the Houthi regime in Sana’a
unveiled a new 800km ballistic missile dubbed the Burkan. Shortly
thereafter, missiles of that type were launched at Ta’if, Saudi Arabia’s
summer capital city, and at Jeddah, the Kingdom’s largest port, which
is 680 km from the Yemeni border.
In February 2017, the Houthis unveiled an even
longer-range missile dubbed the Burkan 2, which has a purported range of
1000km (or 1400km, according to one source, although this seems
unlikely). This newly acquired missile was used within the next couple
of months in three attacks on targets near the Saudi capital, Riyadh.
The November attack was thus the fourth on Riyadh.
Why did Saudi Arabia play down the earlier attacks? Perhaps because of
the specific targets. The Houthis claimed (and the Saudis did not deny)
that the three previous attacks targeted the King Salman SAFB, which is
about 40 km west of Riyadh. The recent attack, by contrast, targeted
Riyadh International Airport, a key civilian national asset. It stands
to reason that the Saudis regarded that attack as a game-changing
escalation, prompting their harsh response.
Saudi Arabia has acquired a substantial number of
Patriot missile batteries and is using them extensively to defend its
cities against Yemeni-launched missiles. The Saudis have disclosed few
details about the missile battles in the skies over the Kingdom, but the
Washington DC-based Center for Strategic and International Studies
(CSIS), which is tracking the conflict, reports numerous successful
interceptions of Saudi-bound missiles. (In Israel, the Patriot system is
still notorious for its failure during the Gulf War in defending Tel
Aviv and Haifa against Saddam Hussein’s ballistic missiles. The new
generation of Patriots deployed by the Saudi Air Defense forces are
advanced versions, however, that implement lessons learned from that
failure, so the CSIS reports are likely reliable.) The Saudi disclosure
about the attack on the airport is also substantiated by
smartphone-generated video clips uploaded to YouTube that record air
raid alarms in Riyadh and at the airport, as well as views of Patriot
missile launches and what seems to be a hit on an incoming Burkan 2
missile.
What is the provenance of the Houthis’ ballistic
missiles? Their unveiling was accompanied by a declaration that they had
been developed indigenously. Yemen is more famous for its khat industry
(khat is a narcotic shrub) than for its missile industry, to put it
mildly. That the Burkan missiles were supplied from abroad is beyond
doubt.
The Burkans look like Scud derivatives, so they
must have originated in a Scud derivative-producing country. There are
only two such countries today: North Korea and Iran.
The North Koreans currently deploy a 1,000km
version of the Scud, which was demonstrated in live firing twice this
year, in one case hitting targets in the Sea of Japan 990km from their
launching points. There is no evidence of the existence of this
particular Scud in Iran. Instead, the Iranians developed a 700km range
Scud, the Qiam, which has unique features that allow it to be launched
from inside a tunnel. A 700km range is sufficient to hit Riyadh from the
Iranian shore of the Persian Gulf, but the Burkan 2 does bear some
resemblance to the Iranian Qiam.
The Saudi foreign minister said in his CNN
interview that the Riyadh-targeting missile was manufactured in Iran,
disassembled for smuggling into Yemen, and reassembled by Iranian
Revolutionary Guards and Hezbollah operatives. Perhaps Pyongyang
transferred the design of its 1,000km Scud derivative to Iran, or
transferred complete missiles that were subsequently fitted with Qiam
warheads. While the Burkan 2 missile bears the fingerprints of both
countries, the commander of the US Air Force Central Command confirmed
its Iranian pedigree, citing Iranian markings on the downed missile.
The participation of the Lebanese Hezbollah in the
Yemen civil war, and its role in supporting the Houthi forces, was
revealed more than a year and a half ago by the Saudi-supported
Government of Yemen. In a February 2016 press release, it disclosed that
Hezbollah operators were training Houthi troops and participating in
border skirmishes. The press release accused Tehran of trying to turn
the Houthis into a “Yemenite Hezbollah.”
Ever since the outbreak of the Syrian civil war,
Iran has been employing Hezbollah as its own version of the Foreign
Legion. Hezbollah troops are openly fighting in Syria and Iraq, and the
organization’s leaders have declared their support and committed to
“share their experience” with the Houthi regime in Sana’a. The Saudi
foreign minister’s accusations are therefore quite plausible.
While the Yemeni civil war draws scant attention
in Israel, it could have a significant impact on Israel’s security as
well as on the stability of the entire Middle East. Yemen is a key
country occupying a strategic location. It controls one of the seven
maritime choke points on the planet: the Bab el Mandab Straits. An Iran
in control of Yemen might outflank Saudi Arabia from the south, close
the Straits to Israeli shipping, and open the Red Sea to the Iranian
Navy, jeopardizing the security of Sudan and Egypt. This would be a
veritable tectonic shift in the Middle East balance of power – one that
could be another step towards a reincarnated Persian Empire, this time
under ayatollah management.
BESA Center Perspectives Papers are published through the generosity of the Greg Rosshandler Family
Source: https://besacenter.org/perspectives-papers/hezbollah-yemen-missiles/
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