Los Angeles Times

U.S. and Iran have tense encounter at sea

As a boat heads right for it, an American Navy ship fires a flare. South of Tehran, new nuclear gear is set up.

- By Jon Gambrell Gambrell writes for the Associated Press. AP writer Amir Vahdat in Tehran contribute­d to this report.

DUBAI — A U.S. Navy warship fired a warning flare to wave off an Iranian Islamic Revolution­ary Guard speedboat coming straight at it during a tense encounter in the strategic Strait of Hormuz, officials said Tuesday.

The incident on Monday involving the Revolution­ary Guard and the Navy comes as tensions remain high over stalled negotiatio­ns over Iran’s tattered nuclear deal with world powers and as Tehran enriches uranium closer than ever to weaponsgra­de levels under decreasing internatio­nal oversight.

Meanwhile, the United Nations’ nuclear watchdog said Iran now plans to enrich uranium through a second set of advanced centrifuge­s at its undergroun­d Fordo facility amid the standoff.

The Cyclone-class patrol ship USS Sirocco and Spearhead-class expedition­ary fast transport Choctaw County found themselves in the close encounter with three Iranian fast boats while coming through the Strait of Hormuz to enter the Persian Gulf, the Navy said.

In a video released by the Navy’s Bahrain-based 5th Fleet, a high-speed Revolution­ary Guard Boghammar is seen turning head-on toward the Sirocco. The Sirocco repeatedly blows its horn at the Boghammar, which turns away as it closes in. The flare shot can be heard, but not seen, as the Boghammar passes the Sirocco with the Iranian flag flying above it.

The Navy said the Boghammar came within 50 yards of the Sirocco, raising the risk of the vessels running into each other. The overall encounter lasted about an hour, the Navy said.

The Revolution­ary Guard’s “actions did not meet internatio­nal standards of profession­al or safe maritime behavior, increasing the risk of miscalcula­tion and collision,” the Navy said.

Iran did not immediatel­y acknowledg­e the incident in the strategic waterway. A fifth of all traded oil passes through the strait.

The Navy separately told the Associated Press that this marked the second “unsafe and unprofessi­onal” incident it has had with Iran in recent months.

On March 4, three Revolution­ary Guard ships had a tense encounter for over two hours with Navy and U.S. Coast Guard vessels as they traveled out of the Persian Gulf through the strait, the Navy said. In that incident, the Revolution­ary Guard’s catamaran Shahid Nazeri came within 25 yards of the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Robert Goldman, the Navy said.

“The two U.S. Coast Guard cutters issued multiple warnings via bridge-tobridge radio and deployed warning flares,” the Navy said.

The Navy did not elaborate on why it did not announce the previous incident. The encounter occurred just as an agreement on restoring the nuclear deal looked possible, before talks in Vienna broke down.

Iran and world powers agreed in 2015 to the nuclear deal, which saw Tehran drasticall­y limit its enrichment of uranium in exchange for the lifting of economic sanctions. In 2018, then-President Trump unilateral­ly withdrew the U.S. from the accord, raising tensions across the wider Middle East and sparking a series of attacks and incidents.

Talks in Vienna about reviving the deal have been on “pause” since March. Since the deal’s collapse, Iran has been running advanced centrifuge­s and rapidly growing a stockpile of enriched uranium. This month, Iran also removed 27 surveillan­ce cameras of the U.N.’s Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency. The agency’s head warned those moves could deal a “fatal blow” to the nuclear deal.

On Tuesday, the IAEA said its inspectors verified Iran was preparing to enrich uranium through a new cascade of 166 advanced IR-6 centrifuge­s at its undergroun­d Fordo facility. Already, Iran has one cascade of IR-6s operating at Fordo, near the holy Shiite city of Qom. They enrich up to 20% purity.

The IAEA said Iran has not told it yet the level at which the second cascade will be enriching. Iran has yet to publicly acknowledg­e the new cascade.

The 2015 nuclear deal prohibited all enrichment at Fordo. Shielded by mountains, the facility is ringed by antiaircra­ft guns and other fortificat­ions. It is about the size of a football field, large enough to house 3,000 centrifuge­s, but small and hardened enough to lead U.S. officials to suspect it had a military purpose when they exposed the site publicly in 2009.

Amid the tensions, Israel is suspected of carrying out a series of attacks targeting Iran in and outside of the country, including the killing of the architect of its onetime military nuclear program with a remote-controlled machine gun.

On Tuesday, the staterun IRNA news agency quoted the prosecutor of Iran’s southeaste­rn Sistan and Baluchista­n province as alleging three people arrested in April there on suspicion of working with Israel’s Mossad intelligen­ce agency wanted to kill Iranian nuclear scientists.

It’s unclear why the three would have been in Sistan and Baluchista­n, which has no known nuclear sites. The restive province that borders Afghanista­n and Pakistan faces sporadic attacks from insurgent groups.

Meanwhile, a Revolution­ary Guard brigadier general acknowledg­ed that a fatal May explosion at a weapons developmen­t facility in Parchin, east of Tehran, came from “industrial sabotage.” Mohammadre­za Hassani Ahangar, the head of the Revolution­ary Guard’s Imam Hossein University, said in comments quoted Monday night by a state TV affiliate that an unnamed enemy launched the sabotage that killed an engineer and wounded another worker amid the suspected Israeli assaults.

 ?? U.S. Navy ?? AN IRANIAN boat in the Strait of Hormuz, where it came into close proximity to the USS Sirocco and a second U.S. vessel Monday. The encounter took place as the U.S. ships entered the Persian Gulf, the Navy said.
U.S. Navy AN IRANIAN boat in the Strait of Hormuz, where it came into close proximity to the USS Sirocco and a second U.S. vessel Monday. The encounter took place as the U.S. ships entered the Persian Gulf, the Navy said.

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