Iran reveals key details of Yemen Houthi attack on UAE - analysis
Iranian media claims ‘economic facilities and investments in the UAE are the Achilles heel of the UAE’s war in Yemen.’
Published:
JANUARY 19, 2022
Missiles of the kind used during Iran's retaliatory strike on the
U.S Ayn al-Asad military base in 2020 are seen on display at Imam
Khomeini Grand Mosalla in Tehran, Iran January 7, 2022.
(photo credit: MAJID ASGARIPOUR/WANA (WEST ASIA NEWS AGENCY) VIA REUTERS)
A recent drone and missile attack on Abu Dhabi has raised concerns across the Middle East about the increasing threat of
Iranian drone technology.
The Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen are alleged to be responsible
for the attack, but key details remain missing from many accounts about
how it was carried out.
A
long article at Iran’s Tasnim News, which is close to the Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps, has laid out a blow-by-blow account of the
attack; its background is likely the fullest explanation yet as to what
was behind it and Iran’s next steps.
Iran
backs the Houthis and reportedly had a high level IRGC officer in Yemen
last year, who was undercover as a diplomat. That ambassador died of
Covid, but it illustrates the close alliance between Iran and the
Houthis, and the high stakes that Tehran has placed in Yemen.
Iran
has used the Houthis to attack Saudi Arabia and last year positioned
Shahed 136 drones in Yemen. The drones have a range that can reach
Israel. The distance from Yemen to the UAE is around 1,300 km. from
where the rockets or drones might have been launched; the distance to
Israel is around 2,000 km. Iran coordinates closely with the Houthis.
Let’s
look at the Tasnim news piece that reveals the details about the attack
as if it were a file laying out a case for why and how the attack
happened.
It is
important to keep in mind that in September 2019, the Iranians used
drones and cruise missiles in a similar attack targeting Saudi Arabia’s
Abqaiq facility, which was initially blamed on the Houthis as well. It
is also important to look at how the Iranian account reveals the
regime's decision to use Yemen to threaten Saudi Arabia, Israel and US
forces in the region.
The
US has a base at Al Dhafra which is less than ten kilometers from the
Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) fuel facilities that were
targeted by the drones and missiles. The facilities are next to the
Al-Musaffah neighborhood.
According
to pro-Iran media, another fire broke out at Abu Dhabi International
Airport, “though damage in that attack was not documented by media
outlets,” Hezbollah’s Al-Manar has said. Emirati police described the
assault as a “suspected drone attack” at the time. Three people were
killed in the attacks and six wounded. Hezbollah’s media noted the
presence of US and French forces at the nearby air base which is part of
Central Command.
Iran's President Ebrahim Raisi meets with UAE's top national security
adviser Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan in Tehran, Iran, December 6,
2021. (credit: MAJID ASGARIPOUR/WANA (WEST ASIA NEWS AGENCY) VIA
REUTERS)
THE
TANSIM report says that “the role of the United Arab Emirates as Saudi
Arabia's main ally in the war in Yemen – in the destruction of the
country and the killing of innocent civilians – is not hidden from
anyone.” This is reason number one, in Iran’s view, that the attack was
justified. “It is quite clear that in every Saudi crime against humanity
in Yemen, there are traces of the UAE. For the past three years,
however, Abu Dhabi has tried to deceitfully distance itself from the
consequences of this devastating war.”
Saudi
Arabia intervened in Yemen in 2015 to stop the Houthis from taking
Aden. Riyadh was leading a coalition of Arab countries. It’s not the
first time Saudi fought in the West Asian country. In the 1960s Riyadh
and Cairo backed different sides in a conflict in Yemen; now they were
on the same side.
While
the UAE, which has positioned itself in recent years as an important
player in the region, played a role in the Yemen conflict, over the last
two years, Abu Dhabi’s policies have diverged from the Saudi’s role.
The kingdom has backed forces of the Southern Transitional Council. In
recent weeks, forces backed by the UAE made some impressive gains. The
Houthis threatened to escalate, seized a UAE ship off the coast and ran
cartoons showing Yemen targeting Dubai.
Iran’s
media claims that the UAE put in place a “deception in retreat from
Yemen.” This means that the Emirates had appeared to be leaving Yemen,
diverging from Saudi war efforts. The Biden administration has been
critical of Riyadh’s role and had taken away a Trump-era designation of
the Houthis as terrorists in February 2020.
US
Special Envoy for Yemen Tim Lenderking was sent to sort out the
conflict. Saudi Arabia seemed like it wasn’t getting enough defensive
munitions to stop Yemen drone and missile attacks. Lenderking was in
Saudi Arabia in November 2021. The Houthis sensed victory last year,
laying siege to Marib. If Riyadh-backed forces lost Marib the Saudis
would be humiliated.
“THE
UAE, which has been claiming a withdrawal from the Yemeni war since
mid-2019, has continued its plans to occupy the country, as evidenced by
its escalating greed in southern Yemen," Iran’s Tasnim says. "In
addition, the UAE is opening the Zionists to the Yemeni islands and
trying to change the demographics of the southern regions of Yemen,”
This
is part of an Iranian regime claim going back two years that alleges
Israel has a role on the Island of Socotra or other islands. The
Associated Press claimed last May that a new air base on Mayun island
had been built. Many alleged the UAE was linked to it.
Iran
believes the war shifted last year in favor of the Houthis, which it
calls the “Yemen army” and “Ansar Al-Islam.” Tehran says that, “since
2019, when the peak of Yemeni drone and missile attacks deep into Saudi
Arabia began, the UAE is deeply concerned about repeating this scenario
for itself.”
The
“scenario” here is the Abqaiq attack and other attacks on Saudi Arabia.
Iran put the Houthi drone program on steroids since 2017. The Houthis
upped their attacks on the kingdom. In fact, in 2019, Iran also
operationalized Kataib Hezbollah in Iraq to strike at Saudi Arabia using
drones. The drones would then be described as coming from Yemen.
“In
addition to Saudi Arabia's airports, bases and other internal
positions, the Aramco oil facility is one of the most critical Saudi
positions, which has never been safe from Yemeni missile and drone
strikes.” In reality, it was Iran targeting the Aramco facilities,
enabling the Houthis and other
Iranian-backed groups to carry out attacks.
Now
Iran claims the UAE is trying to “stay safe” from Houthi missiles. The
Emirates has been concerned since 2018, when the Houthis first targeted
them. They had already attacked Shaybah in August 2019 and threatened
the UAE in September 2019.
Iran’s
calculation here is clear. “The UAE, which earns most of its income
through tourism and huge foreign investments and its magnificent towers,
is well aware that any wrong move in Yemen will have unbearable
consequences. In fact, these economic facilities and investments in the
UAE are the Achilles heel of the country in the war in Yemen,” Tasnim
said.
IRAN
CONCLUDES that the UAE wants to continue its role in Yemen but that it
is “deeply concerned about the Sanaa government's move to target the
depths of the UAE.” The report says that the Emirates was concerned to
publicly “participate in the Saudi coalition's aggression against Yemen,
and has shifted its focus to the southern ports of the country. On this
basis, it can be said that there has been an unwritten and unofficial
ceasefire between Abu Dhabi and Sanaa during these years; provided, of
course, that the Emirati side does not take any aggressive action
against the Yemenis.”
This
is the key point. The Houthis have decided that the success of
UAE-backed forces in recent weeks was a violation and they believe that
with one blow, they can get the Emirates to withdraw or stop its
actions. “The UAE's suspicious movements in the Yemeni war have
increased, and as a result, the [Houthis]…. have re-targeted the UAE.”
The
Houthis call these “deterrent” operations and they likely get direct
guidance from Iran. They targeted Aramco in 2021 in Saudi Arabia and
they purposely targeted “sensitive” areas in the kingdom, Iran says.
Now
the Houthis have said they will increase the possibility of striking at
the UAE. The Iranian media calls this operation the eighth type of
“deterrence” and claim that it is designed to show that “the UAE would
not be immune to Ansar al-Islam strategic attacks.” The report warns the
Emirates against supporting any further offensives in Yemen.
The
report also notes that the Houthis seized a UAE ship off the coast.
They accuse the ship of “carrying military equipment in the Red Sea,
signaling the beginning of a new phase in the Yemeni war in the New
Year.” The Iran-backed terrorists in Yemen place great importance on
transferring the ship to Yemen after a raid. “By carrying out this
operation, the Houthis, who had inflicted heavy casualties on the Saudi
coalition in air and ground attacks in recent years, this time
demonstrated their capability to take the enemy by sea.”
NOW
COMES the justification for the “Storm of Yemen” attack on the UAE. The
report claims that the attack “targeted Dubai and Abu Dhabi airports,
the Abu Dhabi oil refinery in Al-Masfa (Musaffah), and a number of other
important and sensitive UAE positions and facilities.
The
operation was carried out successfully with five ballistic and cruise
missiles and a large number of UAVs.” This is a key detail. The Houthis
say “we warn foreign companies, citizens and citizens residing in the
UAE to stay away from sensitive sites and facilities in order to save
their lives. We declare that the UAE will be an insecure country if the
attacks on Yemen continue.”
This
is a “strategic message,” according to Iran. It shows they can strike
deep inside the UAE, right under the noses of US forces in Dhafra. The
Iranian media claims several successes in this recent attack. First they
claim that the UAE miscalculated and did not believe that the Houthis
“would not be able to carry out these threats. But yesterday's attack
showed that the Yemeni army and popular committees know no borders in
carrying out their threats to defend their country and [that they] have
become a great power.”
The
Iranians then claim that the “UAE has always made its security
dependent on US support and, more recently, the Zionist regime. Even one
of Abu Dhabi's biggest motivations for compromising with the occupiers
[Israel] was to receive more military support than Washington [was
providing], but Ansar al-Islam's recent operation showed that even the
United States could not protect the security of the UAE.”
Iran says the operation is the start of a new “dangerous phase for the UAE in the
Yemeni war;
Emirati people must constantly be concerned about protecting their
vital facilities.” The Islamic Republic is showing that it can
destabilize the UAE if it wants. This is a kind of blackmail and
leverage. Iran has done this before in attacks on ships off the Emirati
coast in May 2019. The Islamic Republic also used a drone to attack a
ship in the Gulf of Oman in July 2021, killing two people.
TEHRAN
SAYS that the recent attack “poses a major threat to the economy and
trade infrastructure, as well as foreign investment in the UAE. As
mentioned, most of the UAE's income comes from tourism and foreign
investment. But this operation could reduce the tourism and investment
situation in different parts of the UAE, especially Dubai, which is the
economic hub of the UAE.”
The
report also says that the Houthis attacked the Emirates to reduce its
operations in Yemen during their offensive on Marib. What this means is
that the Houthis need their forces to take the capital of Yemen's Marib
Governorate and don’t want to be concerned about UAE-backed offensives
on other fronts. This is designed to be a knock-out blow.
Iran’s
media says that the Houthis analyzed UAE targets and concluded that
“Al-Masfa Industrial Park in Abu Dhabi, which was targeted, is the most
important industrial area in the UAE. The oldest port of the UAE is
located in the same town, where large companies and factories of
construction and heavy industry, factories and companies of light and
semi-heavy industries, large international technical and industrial
engineering companies (usually American and European), and companies and
industries of ‘Hi-Tech’ are located.” This was designed to be a kind of
Pearl Harbor moment.
The
UAE has invested heavily in these areas, the report says, “especially
in the artificial intelligence [sector] in which the UAE has invested
extensively and recently the Zionists are also very active. Another part
of the region is home to large automotive companies such as Audi,
Mercedes-Benz, Bentley, Porsche, Volkswagen and Beam WWW, which also
hosts tens of thousands of luxury cars.”
IRAN'S
REPORT concludes that the targeting of the Iranian ship by the Houthis
marked a new phase of the war. Now they will strike increasingly at the
UAE unless they get what they want, which is for the operations to stop
on the Shabwa front, where the UAE is backing Yemen forces.
“The
UAE has recently transferred large numbers of terrorists to Shabwa and
Ma'rib provinces, in addition to increasing military activity in
southern Yemen and the occupied island of Socotra,” the report claims.
Iranian media claims that the Emirates backs “terrorists” or
“mercenaries” in Yemen, whereas the UAE and Saudi Arabia say they back
the government of the country and it is the Houthis who are terrorists.
The
point is that the Iranian advice for the Houthis is to use the attack
on the UAE to stop the battle of Shabwa so they can take Marib. It is a
strategic attack for a tactical goal.
The
Houthis assert that “if Abu Dhabi makes a mistake” it would be
targeted, according to the report. The claim that Dubai Airport was
targeted is interesting because it shows how large the planned attack
was. The Iran-backed Houthis allege that follow-up attacks will be worse
if the UAE doesn’t do what they want.
“Based
on this, it can be said that the Yemeni war has entered a new phase in
2022, and if the Yemeni conditions for the end of the war are not met,
all the member countries of the aggressor coalition will have to wait
for a new surprise from Ansarullah every day,” the report claims.
This
is the key point for Iran. It wants to remake the region and show that
any country can be targeted with Iranian-backed weapons or Iranian
proxies in Lebanon, Gaza, Yemen, Iraq and Syria. The attack on Abu Dhabi
was a message to the region and the US, as well as the UAE.