US Navy expert: Tanker attack mine resembles Iranian mines
The limpet mines used to attack a Japanese-owned oil
tanker near the Strait of Hormuz last week bore “a striking resemblance” to
similar mines displayed by Iran, a U.S. Navy explosives expert said Wednesday,
stopping short of directly blaming Tehran for the assault.
Iran has denied being involved in the attack last
Thursday that hit the Japanese tanker Kokuka Courageous and also the Norwegian-owned
Front Altair.
The comments by Cmdr. Sean Kido came as the Navy
showed reporters pieces of debris and a magnet they say Iran’s Revolutionary
Guard left behind when they spirited away an unexploded limpet mine after the
June 13 attack in the Gulf of Oman. Iran has also not acknowledged taking the
mine.
Kido also stressed that the damage done to the
Kokuka Courageous was “not consistent with an external flying object hitting
the ship,” despite the ship’s owner blaming “flying objects” for the damage in
the attack.
Meanwhile, a rocket hit an oil-drilling site in
Iraq’s southern Basra province early on Wednesday, striking inside a compound
housing energy giant Exxon Mobil and other foreign oil companies and wounding
three local workers, one seriously, Iraqi officials said.
The attack on the oil tankers came against the
backdrop of heightened tensions between the U.S. and Iran that take root in
President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw from Tehran’s nuclear deal with
world powers a year ago.
Iran recently has quadrupled its production of
low-enriched uranium and threatened to boost its enrichment closer to
weapons-grade levels, trying to pressure Europe for new terms to the 2015 deal.
In recent weeks, the U.S. has sped an aircraft
carrier to the Mideast and deployed additional troops to the tens of thousands
already here. Mysterious attacks also have targeted oil tankers as
Iranian-allied Houthi rebels launched bomb-laden drones into Saudi Arabia.
All this has raised fears that a miscalculation or
further rise in tensions could push the U.S. and Iran into an open conflict,
some 40 years after Tehran’s Islamic Revolution.
The U.S. Navy briefed foreign journalists on
Wednesday at a 5th Fleet base near Fujairah, an Emirati port city some 210 kilometers
(130 miles) northeast of the capital, Abu Dhabi. There, they showed journalists
debris recovered from the Kokuka Courageous, which they described as including
aluminum and composite metals.
They also showed a magnet they described as being
left behind by the Revolutionary Guard — one of six apparently used to stick
the unexploded limpet mine to the ship’s hull. Sailors said it took two of them
and a crowbar to pry it off the ship.
Those pieces put together have U.S. sailors
suspecting the limpet mine came from Iran.
They showed a picture previously shared among
weapons experts of a limpet mine on display in Iran, which they said resembled
the one they suspected was used on the ship. That picture showed a conical
mine, some 42 kilograms (90 pounds) in weight, on display with a sign next to
it identifying it as being produced by a research company affiliated with the
Revolutionary Guard.
“The limpet mine that was used does bear a striking
resemblance to that which has been publicly displayed in Iranian military
parades,” Kido said. “There are distinguishing features.”
Kido declined to elaborate. Iran’s mission to the
U.N. declined to comment, referring reporters instead to remarks by Iranian
Defense Minister Gen. Amir Hatami, who said allegations about Tehran’s
involvement in the tanker attacks was an unfair accusation and “totally a lie”
meant to tarnish Iran’s image.
According to the semi-official Fars news agency,
Hatami questioned the authenticity of a grainy video released by the U.S.
following the attack and purporting to show Iranian Revolutionary Guard forces
removing an unexploded limpet mine from one of the tankers.
“The date and the location shown in the footage have
not been authenticated,” he said. The Americans “can show any footage ... but
it cannot be used as evidence.”
The mines were placed above the vessel’s water line.
One exploded, punching through the double-hulled ship and sparking a brief
fire. The placement of the mines on the vessel makes it “not appear that the
intention was to sink the vessel,” Kido said.
“The damage we observed is consistent with a limpet
mine attack; it is not consistent with an external flying object hitting the
ship,” Kido said.
Authorities also recovered a hand print and
fingerprints, he said. “We recovered biometric information ... which can be
used to build a criminal case to hold the individuals responsible accountable.”
He did not offer more details.
The second vessel involved in the attack, the
Norwegian-owned Front Altair, caught fire and sent black smoke up into the air
that was visible from space by satellites. Kido did not explain why the U.S.
had no immediate evidence from that vessel. Both are now anchored off the
eastern coast of the United Arab Emirates.
He also declined to discuss an earlier, May 12
attack on four oil tankers off the coast of Fujairah near the U.S. base, which
America similarly blames on an Iranian limpet mine attack. Analysts also
believe those attacks came from limpet mines.
In Iraq on Wednesday, a Katyusha rocket landed at
dawn in the Zubair and Rumeila oil fields camp, operated by the Iraqi Drilling
company, where Exxon Mobil and other companies have caravans housing their
workers, security official Mahdi Raykan said.
Exxon Mobil, based in Irving, Texas, did not
immediately respond to a request for comment. In May, it evacuated staff from
the West Qurna 1 oil field in Basra province.
As Washington-Tehran tensions escalated, there have
been concerns that Iraq could once again get caught in the middle between its
two top allies. The country hosts more than 5,000 U.S. troops, and is home to
powerful Iranian-backed militias, some of whom want those U.S. forces to leave.
In May, the U.S. evacuated nonessential diplomatic
staff from Iraq. That came before a missile landed in Baghdad’s Green Zone,
near the sprawling U.S. Embassy.
No one claimed responsibility for Wednesday’s attack
and Iraqi oil exports were unaffected.