The Mercury News

UK: Iran can have oil tanker back if it agrees to not take oil to Syria

- By David D. Kirkpatric­k

Britain offered on Saturday to return a seized Iranian tanker if Tehran provided guarantees that the oil would not go to Syria.

The offer appeared to be an effort to cool down relations between the two countries at a time when tensions between Iran and Washington have raised fears of a military conflict and threatened to unravel a 2015 deal constraini­ng Iran’s nuclear program.

A parallel dispute between Britain and Iran broke out a little more than a week ago when the British military seized an Iranian oil tanker off the coast of Gibraltar. Britain said it suspected the tanker was heading to Syria, in violation of European Union sanctions.

Iran called the seizure an act of piracy, accused Britain of acting at the behest of Washington and threatened to retaliate in kind.

Then on Thursday, Britain said that three Iranian vessels had tried to stop a British oil tanker passing through the Strait of Hormuz. A British warship escorting the tankers had threatened the Iranian ships and driven them away without exchanging fire, the British Defense Ministry said.

In an apparent attempt to forestall a further escalation, Jeremy Hunt, the British foreign minister, said on Twitter on Saturday that he had conducted a “constructi­ve call” with his Iranian counterpar­t.

“I reassured him our concern was destinatio­n, not origin, of the oil” on the seized ship, Hunt said. He added that he also had said Britain would “facilitate release” of the impounded ship “if we received guarantees that it would not be going to Syria, following due process” in the Gibraltar courts.

A court in Gibraltar on Friday authorized the detention of the ship for an additional 14 days, citing evidence that it may have been headed for Syria. Iran is one of the most important internatio­nal backers of the regime of Bashar Assad, the president of Syria.

Hunt said in a second tweet that Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif had responded “that Iran wants to resolve issue and is not seeking to escalate.”

It was unclear when or exactly how Iran might provide guarantees of the ship’s destinatio­n to the Gibraltar courts.

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