USA TODAY International Edition

Navy fires shots near Iranian ship

Vessel broke maritime rules and didn’t respond to warnings, U. S. says

- John Bacon @ jmbacon USA TODAY

The Iranian vessel failed to respect maritime “rules of the road” and internatio­nally recognized maritime customs. U. S. Navy

A Navy patrol boat fired warning shots near an Iranian naval ship that was conducting “an unsafe and unprofessi­onal interactio­n” with a U. S. ship in internatio­nal waters of the Persian Gulf on Tuesday, the Navy said.

Iran’s Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps viewed the incident differentl­y, claiming a U. S. warship moved toward its patrol boat in an attempt to “instigate and frighten” its crew.

The USS Thunderbol­t was involved in coalition exercises when the Iranian ship came within 150 yards, Navy Central Command said in a statement. The Iranian ship did not respond to repeated attempts to establish radio communicat­ions, and warning flares and blasts of the ship’s whistle also were ignored, the Navy said.

“As the Iranian vessel proceeded toward the U. S. ship, Thunderbol­t again sounded five short blasts prior to firing warning shots in front of the Iranian vessel,” the Navy said. “After the warning shots were fired, the Iranian vessel halted its unsafe approach.”

The Iranian vessel failed to respect maritime “rules of the road” and internatio­nally recognized maritime customs, “creating a risk for collision,” the statement said.

Not so, the Revolution­ary Guard countered.

“IRGC navy patrol boat continued its mission, ignoring the unprofessi­onal and provocativ­e move by the U. S. warship,” the Revolution­ary Guard said in a statement. “The ( U. S.) warship left the zone after a while.”

The incident took place a week after the Trump administra­tion certified to Congress that Iran is complying with a complex nuclear deal cut with the West under the Obama administra­tion. But the administra­tion also added sanctions against the Persian Gulf nation for breaching the nuclear deal’s “spirit.”

Naval conflicts with Iran are nothing new. In January, a U. S. Navy destroyer fired three warning shots with a .50 caliber machine gun at four Iranian fast- attack vessels near the Strait of Hormuz. In that incident, the Iranian Islamic Revolution­ary Guard boats ignored an order to halt issued via radio communicat­ion by the USS Mahan, defense officials said.

The most controvers­ial U. S.-Iran naval clash in recent years came in January 2016 when two U. S. Navy patrol boats inadverten­tly crossed into Iranian territoria­l waters and were seized along with 10 sailors.

The boats surrendere­d without any shots fired. The Iranians boarded them, forced the sailors to kneel with their hands behind their heads and replaced at least one U. S. flag with an Iranian flag.

The incident was an embarrassm­ent for the Obama administra­tion at a time when it was aggressive­ly defending the nuclear agreement. The sailors were freed after 15 hours, but Iran used the incident for propaganda purposes, releasing videos of the sailors kneeling with their hands on their heads.

The Iranians even videotaped a crew member making an apology scripted by the Iranians, who said the crew would not be released unless he read the script. The report said his actions violated the code of conduct for servicemen who are held captive.

A Navy investigat­ion concluded the sailors were “derelict” in their duties the day they were captured when they took an unauthoriz­ed shortcut through Iranian waters and were ill- prepared to resist or evade the Iranian ships that pursued them.

The Navy report also chastised the Iranians, accusing them of violating maritime practices. The report said the Iranians were justified in their investigat­ion of the boats but should not have taken the boats and sailors into custody.

 ?? U. S. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ?? USS Thunderbol­t was involved in coalition exercises when an Iranian ship came within 150 yards, Navy Central Command said.
U. S. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE USS Thunderbol­t was involved in coalition exercises when an Iranian ship came within 150 yards, Navy Central Command said.

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