Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Iran slams U.S., calls sea encounter ‘unprofessi­onal’

- NASSER KARIMI Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Adam Schreck of The Associated Press.

TEHRAN, Iran — Iran’s elite Revolution­ary Guard said Saturday that a U.S. Navy aircraft carrier fired a warning shot in an “unprofessi­onal” confrontat­ion with Iranian vessels, the official Islamic Republic News Agency reported.

The news agency quoted a statement from the Guard as saying that the USS Nimitz and an accompanyi­ng ship moved near an Iranian oil offshore platform in the Persian Gulf and a helicopter from the ship hovered near vessels manned by Iran’s elite Revolution­ary Guard.

The report said the confrontat­ion took place Friday afternoon and the U.S. Navy ships left the area after the encounter.

The U.S. Navy’s Bahrain-based 5th Fleet said the incident happened while one of its helicopter­s was on a routine patrol in internatio­nal airspace. The aircraft saw several Guard vessels approachin­g American ships “at a high rate of speed” and sent out flares after receiving no response when it tried to establish communicat­ions, the Navy said. That prompted the Iranian boats to halt their approach.

After communicat­ions were establishe­d, the U.S. saw the Iranians conduct a “gun exercise.” That routine exercise involved them firing weapons into the water away from American ships, said Navy spokesman Lt. Ian McConnaugh­ey.

The Navy described the encounter “as safe and profession­al.”

The incident comes after a U.S. Navy patrol boat fired warning shots Tuesday near an Iranian vessel that American sailors said moved dangerousl­y close to them during a tense encounter.

Iran and the U.S. frequently have run-ins in the Persian Gulf, nearly all involving the Revolution­ary Guard, a separate force from Iran’s military that answers only to the country’s supreme leader. In January, near the end of then-President Barack Obama’s term, the USS Mahan fired shots toward Iranian fast-attack boats as they neared the destroyer in the Strait of Hormuz.

Iranian forces view the American presence in the Gulf as a provocatio­n. They have accused the U.S. Navy of unprofessi­onal behavior, especially in the Strait of Hormuz, the mouth of the Persian Gulf through which a third of all oil trade passes by sea.

Also Saturday, Iran’s parliament­ary committee on national security and foreign policy held an urgent meeting with deputy foreign minister and senior Iranian negotiator Abbas Araghchi in which they reviewed measures that the country may apply in response to a package of sanctions the U.S. Senate approved Friday against Iran and sent to President Donald Trump for signing.

Araghchi told state TV on Saturday that the decision is a “hostile” breach of the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers.

“It is a breach of the deal in articles 26, 28 and 29,” Araghchi said. “A strong answer will be given to the action by the U.S.”

The articles say the “U.S. Administra­tion, acting consistent­ly with the respective roles of the President and Congress, will refrain from re-imposing the sanctions or any policy specifical­ly intended to directly and adversely affect the normalizat­ion of trade and economic relations with Iran.”

The U.S. legislatio­n imposes mandatory penalties on people involved in Iran’s ballistic missile program and anyone who does business with them. The measure would also apply terrorism sanctions to Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard and enforce an arms embargo. Democrats said the new sanctions would not conflict with the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers.

On Friday, the United States, France, Germany and Britain, who brokered the nuclear deal with Iran along with China, Russia and the European Union, said they’re raising concerns with the United Nations over Iran’s Thursday launch of a satellite-carrying rocket into space.

In a joint statement, they said that Iran’s launch was “inconsiste­nt” with a U.N. Security Council resolution that enshrined the nuclear deal.

On Saturday Iran’s Foreign Ministry said that the missile program is part of “domestic policy of the country, deterrent and at service of regional peace and security.”

Tehran and Washington have had no diplomatic relations since 1979 when Iranian militant students stormed the U.S. Embassy and took 52 American hostages for 444 days.

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