UAE says 'sophisticated' tanker attacks likely the work of a state actor

The United Arab Emirates told United Nations
Security Council members on Thursday that attacks on four tankers off its coast
on May 12 bore the hallmarks of a “sophisticated and coordinated operation,”
most likely by a state actor.
In a document on the briefing to Security Council
members, the UAE, joined by Norway and Saudi Arabia, did not say who it
believed was behind the attacks and did not mention Iran, which has been
accused by the United States of being directly responsible.
The attacks required expert navigation of fast boats
and trained divers who likely placed limpet mines with a high degree of
precision on the vessels under the waterline to incapacitate but not sink them,
according to the preliminary findings of the countries’ joint investigation.
“While investigations are still ongoing, these facts
are strong indications that the four attacks were part of a sophisticated and
coordinated operation carried out by an actor with significant operational
capacity, most likely a state actor,” the three countries said in the document.
They believe it was the work of several teams of
operatives, which coordinated the timed detonation of all four explosive
charges within less than an hour.
The May 12 attacks targeted two Saudi tankers, an
Emirati vessel and a Norwegian tanker, causing no casualties but fueling
tensions between the United States and Iran during weeks of escalating
rhetoric.
U.S. national security adviser John Bolton said on
May 29 that the attacks were the work of “naval mines almost certainly from
Iran.” Tehran denied the accusations.
A few days earlier in May, at the Pentagon, U.S.
Rear Admiral Michael Gilday accused Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps
(IRGC) of being directly responsible for the attacks.
While the briefing document did not mention Iran, a
Saudi diplomat in New York laid the blame squarely on the country.
“We believe that the responsibility for this action
lies on the shoulders of Iran. We have no hesitation in making this statement,”
said the Saudi ambassador to the United Nations, Abdallah Y. Al-Mouallimi.
U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration, acting
on concerns of a potential attack by Iran on U.S. interests, has deployed 1,500
more troops to the Middle East, accelerated the movement of an aircraft carrier
strike group to the region and sent bombers and additional Patriot missiles.
The tanker attacks occurred off the UAE emirate of
Fujairah, which lies just outside the Strait of Hormuz, a vital global oil and
gas shipping route that separates the Gulf Arab states - allies of the United
States - and Iran.
The three countries said the attacks endangered
commercial navigation and the security of global energy supplies. They planned
to share the findings of their probe with the London-based International
Maritime Organization.
In the weeks before the attacks, the Trump
administration hardened its policy against Iran by fully reimposing sanctions
on Iranian oil exports and designating the IRGC as a foreign terrorist
organization.
Trump reiterated this week that he wants to sit down
with Iran’s leaders to negotiate a new deal, a year after Washington pulled out
of an accord between Iran and global powers to curb Tehran’s nuclear program in
return for lifting international sanctions.
Irani Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said on
Tuesday that Tehran would not be “deceived” by Trump’s offer.