Before losing control: Accusations against Tehran of targeting international navigation
With
negotiations faltering between Tehran and the P5+1 group, which includes the
United States, Russia, China, Germany, France and Britain, on returning to the
nuclear agreement, tension is escalating in the Gulf region near the Strait of
Hormuz, through which nearly a third of the world's seaborne oil shipments
pass.
Against
ships
The region
witnessed several attacks against merchant ships passing through there, with
accusations of Tehran carrying out the attacks, amid conflicting statements
between the Iranian authorities about their responsibility.
Under
control
According to
Sky News, the Commercial Maritime Operations Control Center in Britain
announced on Wednesday, August 4, the end of the attack that occurred on a
tanker in the Arabian Sea on Tuesday evening, after the hijackers left the
tanker.
Reuters
quoted the center as saying, “The end of the attack took place after the
intruders left the ship,” noting that the tanker was in safe condition.
Warnings
The UK
Maritime Trade Operations Agency (UKMTO) announced on Tuesday a possible
hijacking of the Asphalt Princess tanker, which is flying the Panamanian flag
in the Gulf of Oman, calling on ships to exercise extreme caution in the
region, while the British newspaper The Times accused “Iran and its allied
militias” of being behind the attack.
The website
Marine Traffic, which specializes in monitoring maritime transport, stated that
the ship was heading to the port of Sohar in the Sultanate of Oman. The website
of British magazine Lloyd's List, which is a reference in marine navigation
data, indicated that the ship headed to the coast of Iran under the supervision
of armed men.
Meanwhile,
five ships off the coast of the UAE broadcast warnings that they “lost control
of the leadership and could not continue their activities.”
This attack,
which took place about sixty nautical miles from the UAE city of Fujairah, came
five days after an attack on an oil tanker in the Gulf of Oman, which resulted
in two deaths. Israel and the United States accused Iran.
Iranian
television claimed responsibility for the attack, while the Iranian Foreign
Ministry denied any connection to the attack on the tanker operated by a
company owned by Israeli businessman Eyal Ofer.
The United
States and Israel said their intelligence services had concluded that an
Iranian drone carried out the attack.
“The first
information is of great concern,” White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki said
Tuesday, commenting on what was reported by the UKMTO, and State Department
spokesman Ned Price said, “We have observed hostile behavior of great concern
on the part of Iran.”
For his
part, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh warned on Tuesday
that “publishing information about successive attacks related to ships...
raises great suspicion.”
Khatibzadeh
warned in a tweet against “creating a wrong situation to serve political goals,
and displaying Tehran's willingness to provide any assistance in the event of
maritime attacks.”