
A U.S. Navy guided-missile destroyer fired a warning flare toward an Iranian Revolutionary Guard vessel coming near it in the Persian Gulf, an American official said on Wednesday, the latest tense naval encounter between the two countries.
The incident happened Monday as the vessel attempted to draw closer to the Mahan despite the destroyer trying to turn away from it, said Lt. Ian McConnaughey, a spokesman for the Bahrain-based 5th Fleet.
The “Mahan made several attempts to contact the Iranian vessel by bridge-to-bridge radio, issuing warning messages and twice sounding the internationally recognized danger signal of five short blasts with the ship’s whistle, as well as deploying a flare to determine the Iranian vessel’s intentions,” McConnaughey said in a statement.
The Iranian vessel came within 1,100 yards of the Mahan during the incident, the lieutenant said. The vessel later turned and sailed away.
Iranian authorities did not immediately report the incident on Wednesday.
The U.S. and Iran routinely have tense encounters in the Persian Gulf and the nearby Strait of Hormuz, through which a third of all oil traded by sea passes. Iran views the American presence as a provocation, and its paramilitary Revolutionary Guard shadows U.S. Navy ships in the gulf, occasionally firing missiles or rockets nearby.
Since the nuclear deal with world powers, the hard-line Revolutionary Guard has stepped up its encounters with the Americans. The Navy recorded 35 instances of what it describes as “unsafe and/or unprofessional” interactions with Iranians forces in 2016, compared with 23 in 2015. With Monday’s event, there have been seven so far in 2017, McConnaughey said.
Of the incidents last year, the worst involved Iranian forces capturing 10 U.S. sailors and holding them overnight.
In another development Wednesday, Iran Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif told reporters at the sidelines of a Cabinet session in Tehran that they shouldn’t take President Trump’s comments seriously after Trump suggested that Iran had broken the “spirit” of a nuclear proliferation deal agreed under former President Barack Obama.
“Do not pay much attention to Trump’s words,” Zarif said, according to the semiofficial Tasnim news agency.
As a candidate, Trump repeatedly criticized the “horrible” nuclear deal, pledging to “tear up” the accord if elected. But while he has talked tough about Iran since taking office in January, he has taken little action against the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action approved in 2015.
In fact, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson sent a letter to Congress this month that clearly stated Iran was complying with the terms of the nuclear deal.
source: AFP
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