Commander-in-Chief of Iran's Republican Guard Mohammed Ali Ja'aferi has asked Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to OK a plan for attacking the Yemeni and Saudi embassies in Tehran.
The plan comes in an effort to pressure the two neighbors to relax as the war on the Houthi insurgents, Shiite rebels, on their common border continued to intensify.
It appears to be similar to the attack on the U.S. embassy in the Islamic Republic of Iran in the wake of the 1979 Revolution.
The Marebpress website citing the Third Force Website reported that sources familiar with the plan had said it should be implemented under orders from Khamenei, who asked to find the ways in which Iran can push Yemen and Saudi Arabia to stop fighting the rebels.
The plan is also aimed at sending a clear message that Iran will not stay hand-tied towards supporting the Shiite in the region.
Khamenei, however, has asked not to rush with the plan, until consequences it may reflect are thrashed out, the sources said.
Under the plan, specialized troops of the Iranian Republican Guards will disguise in public uniforms and break into the two embassies, revolting and expressing their view about the war in north Yemen.
Initially, they would fuel violence near the two compounds gradually through staging daily protests, besieging them and harassing Yemeni and Saudi diplomats.
While the main goal lies in holding as many diplomats as possible until a compromise is reached for stopping the fight on the Shiite rebels.
The plan would be announced once Yemen and Saudi Arabia declare they have won the war, according to the sources.
The Houthi rebels have been fighting the Yemeni army since 2004 in Saada on the border with Saudi Kingdom.
The fresh confrontations erupted on August this year, and more recently, the Saudi army was brought into the conflict when the rebels took a Saudi border region.
So far, the two countries have said their armies advanced on the insurgents, cleansing many areas of them and killing and arresting other dozens.
Yemen accuses Iranian religious authorities and Hezbollah militants aided the rebels, urging Iran to block such aid and show that it is already keen on its security and stability.