Ship tied to Israeli billionaire attacked off Oman, 2 killed
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — An attack on an oil tanker linked to
an Israeli billionaire killed two crew members off Oman in the Arabian Sea,
authorities said Friday, marking the first fatalities after years of assaults
targeting shipping in the region.
No one immediately claimed responsibility for the Thursday night raid on
the Liberian-flagged tanker Mercer Street. However, a U.S. official said it
appears a so-called suicide drone was used in the attack, raising the
possibility that a government or a militia group was behind it. Without
providing any evidence, an Israeli security official said that Israel believes
Iran was behind the attack on the ship, citing similar attacks in the past.
The U.S. Navy rushed to the scene following the attack and was escorting
the tanker to a safe harbor, a London-based ship management company said Friday.
The assault represented the worst-known maritime violence so far in
regional attacks on shipping since 2019. The U.S., Israel and others have
blamed the attacks on Iran amid the unraveling of Tehran’s nuclear deal with
world powers. Iran now appears poised to take an even tougher approach with the
West as the country prepares to inaugurate a hard-line protégé of Supreme
Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei as president next week.
The attack on Thursday night targeted the tanker just northeast of the
Omani island of Masirah, over 300 kilometers (185 miles) southeast of Oman’s
capital, Muscat.
London-based Zodiac Maritime, part of Israeli billionaire Eyal Ofer’s
Zodiac Group, said the attack killed two crew members, one from the United
Kingdom and the other from Romania. It did not name them, nor did it describe
what happened in the assault. It said it believed no other crew members on
board were harmed.
The U.K. government later confirmed that a British national “has died
following an incident on a tanker off the coast of Oman.”
The statement from Zodiac Maritime said that “at the time of the
incident the vessel was in the northern Indian Ocean, traveling from Dar es
Salaam to Fujairah with no cargo onboard,” naming ports in Tanzania and the
United Arab Emirates.
Satellite tracking data from MarineTraffic.com showed the vessel had
been near where British officials said the attack occurred. However, the last
signal the ship sent came early Friday morning.
Zodiac Maritime described the Mercer Street’s owners as Japanese,
without naming them. Shipping authority Lloyd’s List identified the vessel’s
ultimate owner as Taihei Kaiun Co., which belongs to the Tokyo-based Nippon
Yusen Group.
Late Friday, Zodiac Maritime said the tanker was sailing under the control of her crew “to a safe location with a U.S. naval escort.” The company did not elaborate. The U.S. Navy’s 5th Fleet, which patrols the Mideast, did not respond to a request for comment.
British military’s United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations said an
investigation was underway into the attack and that coalition forces were
taking part.
A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the
ongoing investigation, told The Associated Press that the attack appeared to
have been carried out by a “one-way” drone and that other drones took part. The
official said it wasn’t immediately known who launched the attack and declined
to elaborate.
The Israeli official, who similarly spoke on condition of anonymity as
they weren’t authorized to brief the media, blamed Iran for the attack and
confirmed other public details of the incident. Israel considers Iran to be its
biggest threat, citing Tehran’s hostile rhetoric, support for anti-Israeli
militant groups and growing influence in the region.
The remarks came after an earlier report from private maritime
intelligence firm Dryad Global referred to a drone sighting involving the
vessel prior to the attack. Iran and Yemen’s Tehran-backed Houthi rebels have
in the past employed suicide drones — unmanned aircraft loaded with explosives
that detonate on impact with a target.
In a separate development, the Saudi-led military coalition battling the
rebel Houthis in Yemen claimed later Friday that it had thwarted an attempted
“enemy drone” attack on a Saudi merchant ship, Saudi Arabia’s state TV
reported, without offering further details. The coalition blamed the
Iran-backed Houthis for threatening maritime security in the southern Red Sea
near the crucial Bab al-Mandeb Strait. The strait is used for oil shipments
from the Persian Gulf to Europe, as well as goods from Asia to Europe.
British maritime security firm Ambrey said the attack on Mercer Street
had killed one of its team members, along with a member of the tanker’s crew.
The intelligence firm said it was working with authorities and offering support
to the victim’s family “at this incredibly sad time.”
Omani officials did not respond to requests for comment. The sultanate
sits on the eastern edge of the Arabian Peninsula and is along vital shipping
routes for cargo and energy moving through the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow
mouth of the Persian Gulf.
Israel did not publicly acknowledge the attack. Other Israel-linked
ships have been targeted in recent months as well amid a shadow war between the
two nations, with Israeli officials blaming the Islamic Republic for the
assaults.
Israel meanwhile has been suspected in a series of major attacks
targeting Iran’s nuclear program. Also, Iran saw its largest warship recently
sink under mysterious circumstances in the nearby Gulf of Oman.
Thursday’s attack comes amid heightened tensions over Iran’s tattered
nuclear deal and as negotiations over restoring the accord have stalled in
Vienna. The series of ship attacks suspected to have been carried out by Iran
began a year after then-President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew America
from the accord in 2018.
Iranian media quoted foreign press reports on Thursday’s attack but did
not offer anything more. The attack came the night after U.S. Secretary of
State Antony Blinken, speaking from Kuwait, warned Iran that talks in Vienna
over the nuclear deal “cannot go on indefinitely.”