An exclusive in the Wall
Street Journal has confirmed that Russia has been providing details of
ship movements to enable Houthi attacks in the Red Sea.
The middlemen between
the Russians and the Houthis are the Iranians. A brigadier from the Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps Quds Force sits on the Houthi Jihad Council as deputy
to its leader, Abdulmalik al-Houthi. A second IRGC member also sits on the
Council, with particular responsibility for drones and missiles.
The IRGC gets the
intelligence to feed to the Houthis from its own sources, including long-range
drones and Iranian naval vessels permanently on station in the Red Sea
area. The Houthis also have their own reconnaissance drones and a fleet of
fishing boats acting as spotters as well.
The Russian feed of intelligence to the Iranians,
and thence to the Houthis, is well established.
In August 2022, a
Russian Soyuz 2.1b rocket launched an Iranian intelligence satellite from
Kazakhstan. The Khayyam satellite, jointly built and based on the Russian Kanopus-V
imagery satellite, was placed in a 500-kilometer low earth orbit, and is now
giving the Iranians access to one-meter resolution imagery, sufficiently
accurate to use for targeting an area of a ship.
The Khayyam’s orbit allows it to visit any specific
point of interest about four times a day, but then the satellite needs to be in
position to download the imagery back to Earth. This limits the utility of the system in
targeting moving targets such as ships. However, the Khayyam system is
almost certainly being used in an intelligence-swap arrangement alongside Russia’s own Kanopus-V
constellation of spy satellites, meaning that ship movement information available to the Iranians is likely to be
much more up to date.
The Khayyam satellite is
far more effective than the three satellites that the Iranians have built and
launched themselves. One of these, the size of a washing machine, was
described by US Space Command General John Raymond as “a tumbling webcam in
space, unable to generate any useful intelligence.” Even so, the Khayyam is significantly less responsive and accurate than
Western systems, and it is no surprise that the Houthis have attacked Russian
ships in error on several occasions.