The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

What Iran crisis means for the world

With more than 10,000 Scots living in the region and after tanker explosions, seized boats, and ramped-up rhetoric, what does the future hold?

- By Craig McDonald cmcdonald@sundaypost.com

It’s 5,000 miles and a sevenhour flight from Scotland. But the Gulf region is home to 10,000 ex-pat Scots and acts as a gateway to the world for thousands more.

Rising tensions involving neighbouri­ng Iran have threatened to escalate into a full-blown crisis and have cast a shadow over the area.

Add in the fact that a fifth of the world’s oil exports pass through the area and it’s clear why further escalation of conflict is a cause of huge alarm.

The immediate future of shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, at the entrance to the Gulf, the world’s most important oil and gas shipping lane, is at stake.

Iran has threatened to close the strait if its vessels are blocked from trading oil as a result of the Trump administra­tion’s decision to reimpose tight sanctions.

On Thursday, in another flashpoint, Iranian boats tried to impede a British oil tanker near the Gulf before being driven off by a Royal Navy ship.

Yesterday it was announced HMS Duncan, one of the UK’s state-of-the-art destroyer fleet, was also being deployed to boost the security presence in the Gulf.

An estimated 10,000 Scots live in Dubai alone – working across petrochemi­cals, constructi­on, retail and PR-related sectors.

More than 1.5 million British visitors also travel to the UAE every year and thousands transit through the region’s airports which have become major internatio­nal travel hubs.

Aviation security analyst Tim Ripley said: “The area is a tinderbox at the moment and matters are approachin­g a crisis situation.

“There is potential for escalation of this crisis.

“If the situation gets out of hand, it could draw in many

of the neighbouri­ng countries around the Strait of Hormuz.

“This could place at risk British citizens who live there and travel through these areas. Iran has surface-to-air missiles which easily have the range to engage targets over much of the Arabian Gulf including Dubai.

“It also has ballistic missiles which could target these areas and has naval forces which are harassing maritime traffic. Any kind of escalation which reaches that level of conflict is clearly very dangerous. The Foreign Office will be looking very closely at the safety and security of Scots living in the region.”

Dr Martin Navias, a defence analyst at King’s College London, and author of Tanker Wars which analysed attacks on merchant shipping in the Gulf during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s, said: “The Gulf remains a flashpoint.

“If the situation escalates the locus will be the Gulf. There are expat Scots all over the United Arab Emirates, in Dubai, and in Saudi Arabia. If it becomes a total regional conflagrat­ion then the outcome remains to be seen.”

He said: “Iran is under real economic pressure because of US sanctions. Oil exports are significan­tly down, incomes have reduced and the population is beginning to feel it.

“The deteriorat­ing economic situation in Iran is giving rise to domestic political tension which may manifest itself in a deteriorat­ion of the region including, for example, the Gulf and Iraq – and that is very dangerous.

“Iran is too weak to take on the US and its allies directly but what it seems to be doing is escalating in an anonymous way. There have been various attacks on shipping where we suspect it was Iran but we don’t know for sure. The gap in power is too great and the Americans, if the crisis escalated, could do serious damage to the Iranian naval and land forces as well as taking the chance to attack Iranian nuclear targets.

“The balance of forces is such that while the

Iranians may try to target shipping or close the choke point at the Strait of Hormuz, they don’t have the strength to keep this up for a sustained period.

“I don’t think either side want this kind of action but in a crisis situation, things can escalate.”

Tensions have risen this year

 ??  ?? Analyst Tim Ripley
Analyst Tim Ripley

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