Iran holds naval exercise near sensitive Strait of Hormuz
The Iranian navy began a three-day exercise in the
Sea of Oman near the strategic Strait of Hormuz on Thursday, deploying an array
of warships, drones and missiles.
One of the exercise's objectives is to devise
"tactical offensive and defensive strategies for safeguarding the
country's territorial waters and shipping lanes," the military said on its
website.
The navy will test-fire surface-to-surface and
shore-to-sea cruise missiles and torpedoes, and rocket-launching systems fitted
on warships, submarines, aircraft and drones, it added.
Dubbed "Zolfaghar 99", the exercise will
be held over two million square kilometres (772,000 square miles) of sea
stretching from the northern part of the Indian Ocean to the eastern end of the
Strait of Hormuz, the sensitive shipping lane from the Gulf through which a
fifth of world oil output passes.
The exercise's spokesman, Commodore Shahram Irani,
said that foreign aircraft, especially US drones, had been warned to steer
clear of the area.
"We saw focused activities by American UAVs
(unmanned aerial vehicles) to gather information" on the exercise, he told
the armed forces' website, adding that the US aircraft had since left the area.
In July, Iran's ideological force, the Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps, blasted a mock-up of a US aircraft carrier with
missiles during an exercise near the Strait of Hormuz.
The US Navy condemned those manoeuvres as
"irresponsible and reckless", and an attempt "to intimidate and
coerce".
Tensions between Iran and the United States have
soared since President Donald Trump withdrew from a landmark nuclear agreement
with Tehran in 2018 and unilaterally reimposed crippling economic sanctions.
Their animosity deepened after a US drone strike killed
top Iranian general Qasem Soleimani outside Baghdad airport in January,
prompting Iran to retaliate with missile strikes against bases used by the US
military in neighbouring Iraq.



