U.K. sailors captured by Iranian navy

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
Mar 23, 2007 10:03 AM
Associated press

LONDON – Fifteen Royal Navy sailors and marines who had boarded a ship suspected of smuggling cars in the Persian Gulf were seized by Iranian naval vessels off the Iraqi coast on Friday, Defence Ministry officials said.

The British government demanded "the immediate and safe return of our people and equipment."

The Defence Ministry said the Royal Navy personnel were "engaged in routine boarding operations of merchant shipping in Iraqi territorial waters," and had completed a ship inspection when they were accosted by Iranian vessels.

"We are urgently pursuing this matter with the Iranian authorities at the highest level and . . . the Iranian ambassador has been summoned to the Foreign Office," the ministry said.

The seizure comes at a time of rising tensions between Iran and the West, which accuses the Islamic republic of violating a UN calls for it to halt uranium enrichment and open its nuclear program for inspection.

It also comes amid U.S. accusations that Iran is funding and arming Shiite militias in Iraq, worsening sectarian tensions there.

The United States, Britain's chief ally, has built up its naval forces in the Gulf in a show of strength directed at Iran.

Two American carriers, including the USS John C. Stennis – backed by a strike group with more than 6,500 sailors and marines and with additional minesweeping ships – have arrived in the region in recent months, ratcheting up tensions with Iran.

The Britons were in two inflatable boats from the frigate HMS Cornwall during a routine smuggling investigation, said a Pentagon official, who spoke on condition on anonymity.

He said the confrontation happened as the British contingent was travelling along the boundary of territorial waters between Iran and Iraq. They were detained by the Revolutionary Guard's navy after inspecting a merchant ship believed to be smuggling cars, he said.

A fisherman who said he was with a group of Iraqis from the southern city of Basra fishing in Iraqi waters in the northern area of the Gulf said he saw the Iranian seizure. The fisherman declined to be identified because of security concerns.

"Two boats, each with a crew of six to eight multinational forces, were searching Iraqi and Iranian boats Friday morning in Ras al-Beesha area in the northern entrance of the Arab Gulf, but big Iranian boats came and took the two boats with their crews to the Iranian waters."

BBC reporter Ian Pannell on HMS Cornwall said the sailors had just boarded a dhow when they were accosted.

"While they were on board, a number of Iranian boats approached the waters in which they were operating – the Royal Navy are insistent that they were operating in Iraqi waters and not Iranian waters – and essentially captured the Royal Navy and Royal Marine personnel at gunpoint," Pannell said.

In June 2004, six British marines and two sailors were seized by Iran in the Shatt al-Arab between Iran and Iraq.

They were presented blindfolded on Iranian television and admitted entering Iranian waters illegally, then released unharmed after three days.
 

terryandrene

Veteran Expediter
Safety & Compliance
US Coast Guard
Reminiscent of the USS Pueblo detention by the North Koreans. Let us hope this is just a saber rattle by the Iranians
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
TEHRAN–Iran's military arrested 15 British sailors and marines yesterday, sparking a diplomatic incident ahead of a crucial vote on Iran's nuclear project at the United Nations Security Council expected today.

Iranian state television cited a foreign ministry official as saying the government summoned the British chargé d'affaires in Tehran to protest the British sailors' "blatant aggression into Iranian territorial waters."

But a British embassy spokesperson in Tehran insisted the arrests happened within Iraqi waters.

"We were doing absolutely nothing out of the ordinary and there was no reason to arrest them," the spoksesperson said. "I don't know why they've suddenly chosen now to pick these guys up."

Matters were further confused by a Western government source telling the Toronto Star the arrests took place in international waters.

In London, the British government summoned the Iranian ambassador to the Foreign Office, and British Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett said the ambassador "was left in no doubt that we want them (marines) back."

British and U.S. officials said two boatloads of servicemen from the frigate HMS Cornwall were seized near the disputed Shatt al-Arab waterway, which divides Iran and Iraq, after a routine inspection of a merchant ship.

Iranian gunboats encircled and captured the eight Royal Navy sailors and seven Royal Marines and seized two inflatable boats. The servicemen are part of a task force that protects Iraqi oil terminals and maintains security in Iraqi waters under authority of the UN Security Council.

The incident occurred in the same region of the Persian Gulf where Iranian navy war games are currently taking place. Small vessels carrying missile launchers and tactical submarines are being deployed in manoeuvres analysts described as a show of force by Tehran.

At the UN Security Council last night, members reached broad agreement on a resolution imposing new sanctions against Iran over its nuclear program, Reuters reports. The vote is scheduled for this afternoon barring any last minute changes to the latest text.

Meanwhile, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad cancelled his visit to address the Security Council in New York because U.S. visas for his team were issued too late, Iran's UN ambassador said yesterday. Western nations suspect Iran is trying to produce nuclear weapons. Iran denies that and insists it won't halt the program.

Former Iranian president Hashemi Rafsanjani, addressing Friday prayers in Tehran, said "the world's domineering powers and tyrants threaten us and wage psychological war and exert economic pressures on us. Thus, it is very clear that we are facing a serious challenge and this is a front where we need local unity and solidarity."

In the past, Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has threatened to "strike enemies that attack." He said Western countries "want to treat us with threats and enforcement of coercion and violence." His comments were interpreted as a threat to block the Straits of Hormuz, through which an estimated two-fifths of the world's oil supply passes daily.

Vali Nasr, a senior fellow for Middle East Studies at the Washington-based Council on Foreign Relations, suggested yesterday's detention could be connected to the arrest of five Iranians in a U.S.-led raid in northern Iraq in January. The U.S. said the five included a Revolutionary Guard general.

"I think Iran sees this as retaliation for the arrest of their own personnel. They have repeatedly said they want their personnel released," Nasr told Associated Press. "So they are either signalling that they can do the same thing or they are trying to bring attention to it.''

Iran is on a three-week holiday marking the Persian New Year, with all government offices closed until early April, and the Iranian media largely ignored yesterday's incident. But the conservative Raja news agency said the Pentagon is seeking to increase sales of weapons to its Arab allies in the Persian Gulf as part of "a new strategy to scare Arab countries away from Iran."

Pan-Arab news-media such as Al-Jazeera and Al-Arabiyah covered the story with live links to Tehran.

"This is perhaps a warning to the Americans and the British that Iran is powerful in the region and additional pressure should not be put on it on the nuclear file," said Melhel Riah, the Al-Jazeera correspondent in the Iranian capital. "In addition, the Iranians have accused the British of seeking to spread strife in the country's border areas."

There has been a spike in violent incidents along Iran's border areas since early 2006, which includes much of Iran's Sunni Muslim minority. Iranian officials have accused Sunni Arab states of sponsoring such activities and paying Shiite Iranians to convert to Sunni Islam.
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
The Iranian military has questioned 15 detained British soldiers and said they confessed to illegally entering the country's territorial waters.

Iran has accused Britain of "blatant aggression."

The tough comments came after Britain demanded the return of the sailors and denied they had strayed into Iranian waters while searching for smugglers off Iraq's coast.

The eight Royal Navy sailors and seven Royal Marines were taken to Tehran for questioning, and a top military official, Gen Ali Reza Afshar, said they "confessed to illegal entry into Iran's waters."

"The said personnel are being interrogated and have confessed to aggression into the Islamic Republic of Iran waters," Afshar was quoted as saying by the semi-official ISNA news agency.

The British sailors had just searched a merchant ship when they and their two inflatable boats were intercepted by Iranian vessels on Friday near the disputed Shatt al-Arab waterway, US and British officials said.

The Iranian vessels surrounded them and escorted them away at gunpoint.

The incident came at a time of heightened tensions over Tehran's nuclear ambitions and allegations that Iran is arming Shiite Muslim militias in Iraq.

Britain was treating it as a mistake rather than a provocation.
© Copyright Press Association Ltd 2007, All Rights Reserved.
 

arkjarhead

Veteran Expediter
we need to pull all of our men and women out of iraq. then carpet bomb all of iraq,syria,and iran for a good six months then the president should have an easier time getting the oil he wants. just call the whole place "New Texas". Has a good ring to it.}>
 

tallcal101

Veteran Expediter
Once again Ark calls it as he see's it.Love your honesty man,I wish more would tell it the way they REALLY see it.I try to,but get bashed for it.They leave you alone.Why is that?
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
Seriously Tallcal, what is your solution for the Middle East?

I am not trying to bash you for your answer but get a real answer that comes from your thoughts and knowledge of the situation in the Middle East.
 

arkjarhead

Veteran Expediter
tallcal,
i thought it was only obiouvos that W is over there in command and conquer mode and trying to get himself as much oil as possible? i mean if we pull our people out we can bomb the place to oblivian and he can have what he wants with less american deaths.
 
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