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WSWS : News
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East : Iran
Iran: escalating tensions behind capture of British sailors
By Chris Marsden
24 June 2004
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Though it appears that they will be released shortly, the capture
and detention of eight British sailors in the southern Shatt al-Arab
waterway border with Iraq has focused attention on the sharp tensions
that have developed between Iran, the United Kingdom, Europe and
the United States.
An Iranian armed forces spokesman, Ali Reza
Afshar, said the order for the release of the vessels and
their military crew was issued after UK forces said they
had made a mistake.
Iranian Foreign Minister Kamal Kharrazi said the British sailors
will be freed today [June 23].
The immediate circumstances leading up to the capture of the
eight are unclear. It appeared that the six Royal Marines and
two Royal Navy sailors were detained on Monday, June 21, while
on a mission to train an Iraqi river patrol crew.
Their three vessels were apparently captured a long way over
the border that runs down the middle of the Shatt al-Arab, 120
miles of tidal waterway formed by the Tigris and Euphrates rivers.
A vital trade route for both countries, it is Iraqs only
access to the Persian Gulf. Control of Shatt al-Arab was one of
the major disputes involved in the ruinous Iran-Iraq war of 1980-1988,
and it is extraordinary that the sailors were apparently so careless.
A British military spokesman acknowledged, The waterway
runs over a mile wide. The border runs pretty much down the middle
of it.
It may be that the flotilla was involved in some kind of reconnaissance
operation. Although the Ministry of Defence has refused to elaborate,
reports have stated that the eight crewmen were armed with American
special services weapons. The Iraqi patrols are meant to clamp
down on smugglers dealing in oil and weapons from Iran bound for
Islamic resistance groups in Iraq, as well as militants seeking
access to the country.
But Iran appears to have accepted that the incursion was accidental.
An Iranian spokesman said the army command was satisfied that
the arms and equipment carried in the three British launches had
been for use during their patrolling duties.
In any event, the encounter itself may be accidental, but the
tensions that provoked it are real.
The arrests came at a time of strained relations between the
UK and Iran, which is due to Britains key role in the US
war against Iraq, the subsequent occupation of the country, and
the part London is also playing in supporting various diplomatic
efforts by Washington attacking Iran itself.
In past weeks, there have been angry demonstrations outside
the British embassy in Tehran to protest the occupation of Iraq
and invasions and attacks on Shia holy places, such as Najaf and
Karballah, which are centres of resistance to the occupation.
Forces within the Iranian ruling elite have connections
to some of the groups now operating in Iraq, although the regime
itself has largely acceded to Washingtons demands that it
stay clear of Iraqi affairs.
The role being played by the Royal Navy in training Iraqi personnel
on the Shatt al-Arab is itself provocative, particularly to members
of Irans Republican Guard, for whom it is a special area
of interest.
Conflict with Britain has been worsened by the readiness of
Prime Minister Tony Blair to risk his previous efforts to cultivate
relations with the reform wing around President Khatamielements
more amenable to direct collaboration with the Western powersby
backing the threatening posture taken by Washington toward the
Iranian regime.
President George W. Bush has included Tehran prominently on
his list of states accused of backing terrorism that make up the
so-called axis of evil. Recent months have been dominated
by the drive of the US to utilise the United Nations International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) as a mechanism for placing maximum
pressure on Iran.
Iran was forced to agree to allow IAEA inspectors into the
country to investigate claims that its nuclear power programme
concealed a covert nuclear weapons programme. Since then it has
variously been accused of a failure to cooperate fully with inspectors,
of possessing small amounts of weapons grade plutonium, and of
making attempts to buy equipment for nuclear weapons production
from China in return for oil.
On June 18, the IAEA passed a resolution that had been endorsed
by Britain, France and Germany, as well as the US, condemning
Iran for its failure to cooperate with inspectors.
Just one day later, the European Union issued a statement strongly
criticising Iran for human rights abuses. The statement warned
Iran that if it failed to correct its human rights record, the
EU would block the signing of a proposed Trade and Cooperation
Agreement.
This elicited a sharp response from Tehran, with the chief
of the Iranian judiciary, Ayatollah Mahmud Hashemi Shahrudi, condemning
the EUs failure to denounce the crimes being perpetrated
in Iraq, Afghanistan and Palestine. He stated that the EUs
double standards were due to what the Tehran Times described
as the pressure exerted on them by hegemonic powers.
On this at least, the Ayatollah is correct. The Bush administration
does not at this time contemplate a direct challenge to Iran,
particularly in the run-up to the US presidential elections. But
sections of the Republican far right have gone as far as to advocate
military intervention, or at the very least economic warfare.
And the administration itself has taken a very bellicose stance.
Asked on June 21 whether the US is considering imposing sanctions
on Iran, Secretary of State Colin Powell answered that Tehran
had been put on notice by the IAEA resolution and
that we will have a chance to examine their response in
September and at that time judgements can be made as to what action
might be appropriate.
The US position is in part an attempt to cut across the efforts
of Britain and the other European powers to cultivate relations
with Iran and secure their own controlling interest in its trade
in oil.
Following Khatamis election as president in May 1997,
the EU opened what it described as a comprehensive dialogue
with Tehran that continued until the start of the Iraq war. Its
eventual aim was the securing of a Trade and Cooperation Agreement
first proposed in November 2001 and adopted as policy in the summer
of 2002.
The EU is Irans main trading partner. According to its
own figures, in 2001 EU imports from Iran totalled 6.7 billion
euros, and EU exports to Iran amounted to 6.6 billion euros. More
than 80 percent of EU imports consist of oil products, but its
exports to Iran largely consist of heavy machinery.
However, the offensive by Washington is not only detrimental
to the interests of the European powers but also to those of the
US bourgeoisie and its Arab allies.
The war against Iraq has destabilised the entire Middle East.
One manifestation of this is that it has inevitably strengthened
Irans specific weight in Middle Eastern affairs. The previous
policy of the US depended heavily on its ability to play off Iraq
against Iran, which is no longer possible. Moreover, its occupation
of Iraq has fuelled the growth of fundamentalist forces within
Iraq supportive of Iran, while undermining the more overtly pro-Western
forces around Khatami in Iran itself and strengthening more hardline
elements amongst the mullahs and the military.
An editorial in Britains the Times called the
arrest of the eight sailors a shot across the coalitions
bow, a clear warning that Tehran intends to play a dominant role
in the Gulf after the new Iraqi government takes over in eight
days time.
Urging caution on Britains part, it predicted that subsequent
events would be determined by who wins out in a power struggle
between Khatami and Irans supreme religious leader, Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei .
An accompanying opinion column by Vanora Bennett warned of
a resurgent Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps. It
noted that 90 out of 209 deputies in the Iranian parliament were
members and ex-members of this ideological branch of the
Armed Forces.
See Also:
Iran: Elections show political
bankruptcy of the reformers
[25 February 2004]
Social tensions escalate
conflicts within Iranian regime
[6 September 2002]
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