The Borneo Post

Mystery shrouds ‘sabotage’ of oil tankers

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DUBAI: Investigat­ors sought yesterday to shed light on a series of mysterious attacks on ships off the coast of the UAE, as President Donald Trump warned Iran against doing anything to harm US interests.

Washington and its Gulf allies stopped short of blaming Tehran for what the UAE and Saudi Arabia called the ‘ sabotage’ of four ships, including two Saudi oil tankers, on Sunday.

But Trump vowed that Tehran would ‘suffer greatly’ were it to ‘ do anything’ to threaten US interests.

“If they do anything, it would be a very bad mistake,” Trump warned at the White House. “If they do anything they will suffer greatly.”

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani hit back, saying the Islamic republic was ‘too great to be intimidate­d by anyone’.

“God willing we will pass this difficult period with glory and our heads held high, and defeat the enemy,” Rouhani said at a late night meeting with clerics.

The attacks came a er the United States deployed B-52 bombers and an assault ship to bolster an aircraft carrier in the region.

The dispatch of the USS Abraham Lincoln carrier group, the amphibious assault vessel, a Patriot missile battery and the bombers has triggered fears of a possible military confrontat­ion.

“In an environmen­t of rising regional tensions, limited Iranian operations against the UAE and Saudi Arabia might be designed to dissuade Abu Dhabi and Riyadh and signal that war with Iran will not be limited to Iranian soil,” said Alex Vatanka, senior fellow at the Middle East Institute.

A UAE government official said the Saudi oil tankers Al-Marzoqah and Amjad were attacked off the emirate of Fujairah along with the Norwegian tanker Andrea Victory and an Emirati ship, the A. Michel.

No casualties were reported and none of the vessels sank.

Saudi Arabia, Iran’s regional arch-rival, condemned ‘acts of sabotage’ and a ‘criminal act’.

The UAE minister of state for foreign affairs, Anwar Gargash, said the Emirates will probe the ‘deliberate sabotage’.

“The investigat­ion will be conducted in a profession­al manner, the facts will be made clear, and we have our own readings and conclusion­s,” he tweeted.

Saudi Arabia said its two tankers suffered ‘significan­t damage’ but there was no oil spill.

The a acks raised many questions, including the nature of the sabotage.

The Andrea Victory’s managers, Thome Group, said the ship had a hole in its hull ‘a er being struck by an unknown object on the waterline’.

Asked whether the US believed Iran played a role in the a acks, Brian Hook, the US special envoy for Iran, declined to comment, saying only that US authoritie­s would be assisting the investigat­ion at the request of the UAE.

Acting Pentagon chief Patrick Shanahan proposed a revamped military plan at a meeting with senior national security aides, The New York Times reported.

The plan would see up to 120,000 US troops deployed to the Middle East were Iran to a ack American forces or speed up nuclear weapons developmen­t, the newspaper said.

The United Nations called on all

If they do anything, it would be a very bad mistake. Donald Trump

sides to ‘exercise restraint for the sake of regional peace’.

Fujairah port is the only Emirati terminal located on the Arabian Sea coast, bypassing the Strait of Hormuz through which most Gulf oil exports pass.

Iran has repeatedly threatened to close the strait in case of a military confrontat­ion with the US.

“If, and it’s an ‘IF’, there really has been a deliberate attempt to damage these oil tankers, then it’s possibly a warning from Iran about the consequenc­es of anybody taking military action against Iranian targets anywhere in the region,” said Middle East analyst Neil Partrick.

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 ?? — Reuters photo ?? A damaged Andrea Victory ship is seen off the Port of Fujairah, United Arab Emirates.
— Reuters photo A damaged Andrea Victory ship is seen off the Port of Fujairah, United Arab Emirates.

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