Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

WHY DID UK SEIZE IRAN’S TANKER ?

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At its narrowest point, the Strait of Hormuz is just 21 miles wide – a thin, U-shaped stretch of water allowing access to the Persian Gulf, but which almost seals it off completely from the wider world. A fifth of all global oil and a third of the world’s liquefied natural gas passes through the strait.and it is amid these busy shipping lanes that the potentiall­y disastrous conflict between Iran and the United States

is playing out. Now Britain has been dragged in, too.

On Friday, the Iranians seized a British-flagged Swedish-owned ship, the Stena Impero, diverting it to their own waters on the eastern side of the channel. The circumstan­ces are murky.the Iranians claim the Stena Impero had been using the wrong lane in its journey to Saudi Arabia.

The ship’s location remains unknown and the crew have disappeare­d.the dangers presented by this latest

episode are all too clear, however: they are another step on the road to a crippling world recession if not a catastroph­ic military confrontat­ion.

The crisis in the Gulf is almost entirely the result of President Trump’s decision to sabotage the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran – a major achievemen­t not just of his predecesso­r President Obama but five major powers, including the UK, which were fellow signatorie­s .trump withdrew even though Iran had scrupulous­ly observed the letter of that accord.

In fact, according to leaked cables from Britain’s former Ambassador to Washington Sir Kim Darroch – reported in this newspaper – Trump pulled out largely to spite Obama.

The result is that America has re-imposed stringent sanctions on Iran, cutting it out of a banking system dominated by the dollar and making it almost impossible for Iran to sell its oil. Exports have collapsed from three million barrels a day to about 400,000, plunging the nation into a deep economic crisis. tehran is now in a race against time to force America to lift the sanctions before the economy collapses altogether.

There are several measures at Iran’s disposal. It has launched cyber-attacks against the computer systems used by Saudi Arabian companies to pump crude oil. Iran’s proxies in Yemen, the Houthi, have attacked an emergency land pipeline that the Saudia Arabians can use to bypass Gulf shipping lanes. But Iran’s hardline Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps (IRGC) commanders know that their most powerful card is the most direct: to threaten the passage of oil and gas through the busy Strait of Hormuz, where the shipping lanes are only two miles wide. As, day by day, the tension rises, so does the risk of armed conflict –perhaps as the result of a misunderst­anding or an accident. While Trump realises that his voters do not want another Americanle­d war in the Middle East– the recent ones in Iraq and Afghanista­n will have cost $5 trillion by about 2040 when the bills for injured veterans come in – some of the hawks around him do. trump has already felt obliged to bolster the US Navy in the region, to shoot down an Iranian drone and to move 500 troops to Saudi Arabia. Now, with the hijacking of the Stena Impero, Britain finds itself enmeshed, and here the story gets still stranger. Earlier this month, Royal Marines boarded a large Iranian tanker, the ‘Grace 1’ at Gibraltar, claiming it was transporti­ng crude oil to be refined in President Assad’s Syria. this delivery of oil was said to be in breach of EU sanctions.

The problem here is that Iran is not an EU member and so no EU sanctions apply to it. Did Britain act at the prompting of America?

It is a matter of urgency to discover which Minister in London took it upon themselves to order such an operation, since it was almost bound to elicit an Iranian response. On Tuesday , this crisis will drop into the lap of a completely new prime minister, almost certainly Boris Johnson, whose record of dealing with Iran as Foreign Secretary went no further than issuing illjudged remarks about jailed mother Nazanin Zagharirat-cliffe that have helped keep her behind bars.

A deal offering some sort of trade-off between the impounded Grace 1 and the Stena Impero is now an absolute priority for the new PM. While we are about it, the UK should reimburse Tehran the £400 million it owes for Chieftain tanks which Iran paid in the days of the Shah. We took the money but did not deliver the tanks.

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 ??  ?? The crisis in the Gulf is almost entirely the result of President Trump’s decision to sabotage the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran
The crisis in the Gulf is almost entirely the result of President Trump’s decision to sabotage the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran

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