Confessions of the "Al-Sharwa" Ship Crew Expose Iran’s Transcontinental Smuggling Network Arming the Houthi Militia

The crew of the **"Al-Sharwa"** ship, recently seized by the National Resistance Forces with **750 tons of strategic weapons** onboard, revealed shocking details about an Iranian-run supply line operated by the **Revolutionary Guard (IRGC)** and **Hezbollah** to provide the Houthi militia with advanced weaponry—including sensitive chemical materials used in manufacturing missiles and drones.

 **The Smuggling Network**

According to **video and audio-recorded confessions**, the network consists of **seven operatives**, four of whom received **direct training and supervision in Iran**:

1. **Amer Ahmed Yahya Masawi**

2. **Ali Ahmed Abdo Qusayr**

3. **Issa Ahmed Abdo Qusayr**

4. **Abdullah Mohammed Maqbool Afifi**

They participated in smuggling multiple shipments from **Bandar Abbas Port (Iran)** to **Al-Salif Port (Hodeidah, Yemen)**, including **high-risk chemical materials**, as well as operations involving an **Iranian "boat"** off the **Somali coast**.

The other three operatives—**Mohammed Abdo Talhi, Mohammed Suleiman Mazjaji, and Ashraf Bakri Ahmed Zain Abdullah**—were active in a **separate smuggling route via Djibouti**.

 **Recruitment and Training**

The accused disclosed that the **Houthi militia recruited them**, exploiting their financial hardships. They were transported via **flights from Sana’a Airport to Jordan**, then to **Lebanon**, where **Hezbollah** facilitated their transfer to **Syria** and onward to **Tehran**. An **alternative route** passed through **Oman**.

In Iran, they underwent **training camps** supervised by IRGC commander **"Mohammed Jafar Al-Talabi"**, followed by deployment to smaller camps in **Bandar Abbas**.

 **Three Smuggling Routes**

1. **Direct Route**: Bandar Abbas → Al-Salif Port (Yemen).

2. **Somali Route**: Using IRGC-operated boats near Somali waters.

3. **Commercial Cover Route**: Via Djibouti under the guise of trade.

 **High-Tech Smuggling Tactics**

The crew admitted to smuggling **temperature-controlled refrigeration containers** carrying sensitive chemicals like **hydrazine and liquid nitrogen**. The **latest seized shipment** (their **12th operation**) was disguised as **industrial equipment** (generators, transformers, air pumps) but contained:

- **Dismantled missiles**

- **Drones**

- **Air defense systems**

- **Radars**

- **Strategic weapons falsely claimed by the Houthis as "locally produced"**

 **Evading International Patrols**

The smugglers revealed that their ships **faced no interception by international naval patrols**, avoiding surveillance in the **Bab el-Mandeb Strait** by navigating **night routes west of the international corridor near Eritrean waters**.

 **Houthi Commanders Named**

The confessions identified key Houthi leaders managing smuggling operations in Hodeidah:

- **Hussein Hamed Hamza Mohsen Al-Attas**

- **Mohammed Darham Qassim Al-Moayad** (aka "Ibrahim Al-Moayad")

- **Yahya Mohammed Hassan Qassim Al-Iraqi** (aka "Yahya Jinnah")

- **Faisal Ahmed Ghalib Al-Hamzi**

- Accomplices: **Iyad Mohammed Omar Maqbool Atini, Wael Mohammed Saeed Abdulwadoud, Omar Ahmed Omar Hajj**

 **Mocking Houthi Claims**

In their final statements, the crew **mocked the Houthis’ claims of "domestic military manufacturing"**, confirming that **all smuggled weapons originated directly from Iran or its proxies in Somalia and Djibouti**.