Friday, April 19, 2024

 

As Israel-Iran Conflict Heats Up, Iranian Spy Ship Heads for Home

Behshahd
IRNA / Akbar Tavakkoll / RFE

PUBLISHED APR 18, 2024 10:12 PM BY THE MARITIME EXECUTIVE

 

 

The Iranian spy ship Behshad has departed the Gulf of Aden and headed for home, ending the vessel's alleged role in the Red Sea maritime security crisis.

Behshad deployed to the Red Sea in 2021, and analysts believe that the ship has served as a staging point and command post for the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps' operations in Yemen. The vessel is widely suspected of providing targeting information and intelligence to Yemen's Houthi rebels, who have been launching missile and drone attacks on merchant shipping since November. The intensity and location of Houthi attack activity has tracked Behshad's movements in the Gulf of Aden, increasing on her arrival and decreasing on her departure. 

Iran denies that Behshad has had any role in covert military operations, and insists that the ship's operations are purely for anti-piracy missions. 

Behshad's departure from the Yemeni theater of operations coincided with a sharp escalation in hostilities between Israel and Iran. Israeli forces may have killed seven officers of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in an airstrike in Damascus on April 1, and Iran retaliated by launching 300 drones and missiles at Israeli territory. Almost all failed or were shot down, thanks in part to extensive U.S. assistance, and only one injury was reported. Israel retaliated for this counterattack Thursday night with a strike on an Iranian military facility; Iran claims that the attack did not occur, and that there was no damage.

Meanwhile, Behshad has reached safety in Bandar Abbas, Iran, according to her AIS signal. The ship appears to have evaded the fate of its predecessor, the freighter Saviz, which was damaged in a suspected Israeli attack in the Red Sea in 2021.

First crewmember released from Iranian-held boxship

The government of India has secured the release of an Indian cadet, Ann Tessa Joseph, who was aboard the boxship MSC Aries when Iranian forces captured it on April 13. She told India's NDTV that her crewmates were being treated well in captivity, and that they were allowed to go to the galley for food and water. 

"They didn't have any intention to harm the crew. There were four Keralites, including me. Now 16 Indians are left there," she said. "When they spoke to the consulate yesterday, they were informed that there will be an early release."

India's embassy in Tehran is working to secure the safe return of the rest of the crew, including 16 Indian nationals. The International Transport Workers' Federation has also spoken with the crewmembers, and ITF confirms that they report reasonable treatment under the circumstances.

TankerTrackers.com has located MSC Aries at an anchorage in the Khuran Straits, right next to three hijacked tankers, St. Nikolas, Advantage Sweet and Niovi.  


Mysterious Iranian 'Spy' Ship Returns Home As Israel-Iran Conflict Worsens

A suspected Iranian spy ship that its own government calls an "intelligence and logistics" vessel returned home this week after a three-year mis, as well as more recently lingering near Yemen for months.

The MV Behshad entered the Strait of Hormuz on Wednesday and moored off Bandar Abbas, a port city located on the southern coast of Iran, on Thursday. 

Several reports, including one from The Wall Street Journal in December, suggest the vessel was directly assisting Yemen's Houthi forces with targeting commercial ships in the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait and the southern Red Sea. 

"Iran's paramilitary forces are providing real-time intelligence to Yemen's Houthis that the rebels are using to direct drones and missiles to target ships passing through the Red Sea, Western and regional security officials said," WSJ wrote in the report, citing Western intelligence sources. 

In March, we pointed out that Behshad moored near the area where undersea data cables linking several continents were severed

Behshad's return to Iran comes as the Israel-Iran conflict deteriorated, with both countries volleying missiles and drones at each other in recent days.

"The ship is likely viewed as one of the targets Israel may hit in the future," said Michael Horowitz, the head of intelligence at Le Beck International, a security and risk management consultancy, in a post on X.

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