A US aircraft carrier entered a zone near the Strait of Hormuz being used by the Iranian navy for wargames, an Iranian official said yesterday amid rising tensions over the key oil-transit channel.
“A US aircraft carrier was spotted inside the maneuver zone ... by a navy reconnaissance aircraft,” Commodore Mahmoud Mousavi, the spokesman for the Iranian exercises, told the official IRNA news agency.
Iranian planes and vessels took video and photos of the US ship and the weaponry and aircraft it was carrying, he added, according to a report carried by state television.
Photo: AFP
“We are prepared, in accordance with international law, to confront offenders who do not respect our security perimeters during the manoeuvres,” the IRIB network quoted Mousavi as saying.
“We suggest that trans-regional forces completely and seriously take any warning issued by any unit of [Iran’s] naval forces,” he said.
The US aircraft carrier was believed to the USS John C. Stennis, one of the US Navy’s biggest warships.
US officials announced on Wednesday that the ship and its accompanying carrier strike group moved through the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow stretch at the entrance to the Gulf that is the world’s most important choke point for oil shipments.
After warnings from the Iranian government and navy this week that Iran could close the strait if threatened by further Western sanctions, the US Department of Defence warned on Wednesday that such actions “will not be tolerated.”
The US maintains a navy presence in the Gulf in large part to ensure oil traffic there is unhindered.
Iran, which is already subject to several rounds of sanctions over its nuclear program, has repeatedly said it could target the Strait of Hormuz if attacked or its economy is strangled.
Such a move could cause havoc in world oil markets, disrupting the fragile global economy.
The Islamic republic is halfway through 10 days of navy exercises in international waters to the east of the strait that have included the laying of mines and the use of aerial drones, Iranian media have reported.
Missiles and torpedoes were to be test fired in coming days.
The wargames zone covers an area of 2,000km2 in the Gulf of Oman into the Gulf of Aden, Iranian media reported.
So far, Iran and the US have limited themselves to rhetoric and naval manoeuvres. However, analysts and the oil market are watching the situation carefully, fearing a spark that could ignite open -confrontation between the longtime foes.
The US had proposed a military hotline between Tehran and Washington to defuse any “miscalculations” that could occur as their navies brush against each other. However, Iran rejected that offer in September.
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