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WSWS : News
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East : Iran
Britain heightens confrontation with Iran over detained sailors
By Peter Symonds
29 March 2007
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The Blair government, backed by the Bush administration, yesterday
stepped up diplomatic pressure for the release of 15 British sailors
and marines detained by the Iranian Revolutionary Guards (IRG)
last Friday. In an already tense situation in the Persian Gulf,
US aircraft carrier battle groups have held a major military exercise
over the past two days, while British ministers in London called
for Iran to be further diplomatically isolated.
In a statement to parliament, Prime Minister Tony Blair condemned
Irans detention of the British naval personnel as completely
unacceptable, wrong and illegal. He warned: It is
now time to ratchet up international and diplomatic pressure in
order to make sure that the Iranian government understands their
total isolation on this issue.
British Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett announced that Britain
had frozen bilateral talks with Iran on all other issues until
the sailors were returned. The Foreign Office denounced footage
shown on Iranian television of some of the detainees as completely
unacceptable. During the TV segment, female sailor Faye
Turney acknowledged that the British boats had trespassed
into Iranian waters and said the detainees were being well-treated.
Vice Admiral Charles Style told a press conference that Britain
unambiguously contests Iranian assertions that the
sailors were inside Iranian waters. He produced charts, photographs
and previously undisclosed navigational coordinates, purportedly
showing that the sailors were about 3 kilometres inside Iraqi
waters. He claimed that Iran had produced two conflicting sets
of coordinates during secret diplomatic discussions.
British proof that its sailors were ambushed
inside Iraqi territorial waters cannot be taken at face value
any more than Irans substantial evidence to
the contrary. The area of the Persian Gulf near the Shatt al-Arab
waterwaythe confluence of the Tigris and Euphrates rivershas
long been the subject of dispute between Iraq and Iran. If
this happened south of where the river boundary ends, knowing
the coordinates wouldnt necessarily help us, Robert
Schofield of Kings College, an expert on the waterway, explained
to Associated Press.
More significant than the dispute over naval co-ordinates is
the political context. The incident took place as the US, with
British backing, intensified the pressure on Iran over its nuclear
programs, its alleged supply of weapons to anti-occupation insurgents
in Iraq and claims that Tehran is supporting terrorism
throughout the Middle East. The US navy has doubled the size of
its fleet, stationing two aircraft carrier groups in the area
for the first time since the 2003 invasion of Iraq. The Pentagon
has also sent Patriot anti-missile batteries to the Gulf States
and mine-sweepers to the Persian Gulf.
The British navy too has doubled its presence in the Gulf since
last October. The extra warships included the HMS Cornwall, which
dispatched the two light craft seized last Friday by Iranian forces.
The military build up is clearly aimed against Iran. Captain
Bradley Johanson, commander of the USS John C. Stennis, told the
press: If there is a strong [American] presence, then it
sends a clear message that you better be careful about trying
to intimidate others. Iran has adopted a very escalatory posture
with the things that they have done. The Bush administrations
own escalatory posture was evident during the past
two days of war games, as 15 warships and more than 100 warplanes
practiced manoeuvres and attacks not far from the Iranian coastline.
According to several press reports, the Pentagon may well have
accelerated the planned exercise in response to the detention
of the British sailors. A senior US military official in Bahrain
told ABC News that the huge show of force was a clear effort
to send a message to Iran. US naval officials said the operation
was hastily planned after the 15 Britons were seized
Friday. White House spokeswoman Dana Perino yesterday denied any
connection, saying: There is no escalation of tensions on
our part.
International investors are certainly concerned about the sharpening
tensions. As Reuters noted: US naval exercises in the Gulf
have rattled global financial markets, sending oil prices higher
and contributing to declines in stock prices. Markets got a jolt
late on Tuesday by a rumourwhich proved unfoundedof
a clash between Iran and the US navy.
The US and British naval build up in the Gulf is just one element
of the US administrations provocative stance against Iran,
which included the imposition of tougher UN sanctions last Saturday.
In January, President Bush declared that US forces in Iraq would
seek out and destroy Iranian networks providing arms
and other support to Shiite militias inside Iraq. On the same
day, US special forces conducted an early morning raid on an Iranian
diplomatic office in the northern Iraqi city of Irbil. The US
military has detained five Iranian officials without charge for
more than two months despite calls by the Iraqi government for
their release.
The Irbil raid was a calculated US provocation which, as Washington
was well aware, could produce a reaction. The British-based Telegraph
confirmed this week that the CIA warned British intelligence chiefs
that the arrests could result in reprisals, possibly against British
troops in southern Iraq. Although the CIA alert led to the
United States raising its official security threat throughout
the Middle East and elsewhere, Britain did not follow suit,
the article explained.
Several commentators have speculated that Iran may link the
fate of the British sailors to the release of its officials held
in Iraqa claim that Iranian officials have denied. While
the British and international media generally assume that the
detention of the sailors is a calculated plot by Tehran, it cannot
be ruled out that the incident was engineered in London or Washington.
Veteran American journalist Seymour Hersh, among others, has alleged
that US and Israeli intelligence agents are actively operating
inside Iran.
The US-based Stratfor think tank, which has close links to
the American intelligence and military establishment, headlined
its article on the incident Another step in the US-Iranian
Covert War. While uncertain about the motive for detaining
the British sailors, the article indicated that it may be linked
to Western intelligence operations inside Iran. It pointed to
the alleged defection of a senior Iranian Revolutionary Guard
general Ali Reza Asghari earlier this year. He is reportedly being
interrogated by US intelligence, including over Tehrans
knowledge of Western agents operating inside Iran.
According to Stratfor, With this in mind, there have
been recent indications from US and Israeli intelligence sources
that the British MI6 was engaged in an operation to extract one
of its agents from Iran, but a leak tipped MOIS [Iranian intelligence]
off to the plan. According to an unconfirmed source, the IRGC
[Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps] nabbed the British [MI6] personnel,
as well as the agent, to use as a bargaining chip to secure the
release of the five detained Iranians. If these negotiations go
poorly for Iran, the Britons could very well be tried for espionage.
Whatever the exact reasons for the seizure of the British sailors,
the chief responsibility for their predicament rests with the
Blair government and the Bush administration. The only reason
for the presence of the British warships in waters disputed by
Iraq and Iran is the illegal US-led invasion and occupation of
Iraq in 2003. Far from pulling out of Iraq, the White House is
now menacing neighbouring Iran as part of broader US ambitions
to dominate the oil-rich region.
It is in this dangerous political hothouse that a small incident
involving the detention of British sailors can spiral out of control.
Several right-wing British newspapers have already denounced the
Blair government for failing to take tougher action against Iran.
An editorial in the Times on Tuesday condemned the
pusillanimous timidity of British officials and politicians, who
have failed disgracefully to confront Iran with the ultimatum
this flagrant aggression demands.
The Telegraph argued for intensified sanctions against
Iran unless it stops lying to us about the details of its
nuclear program, to stop arming and directing insurgents in southern
Iraq, and to stop violating Iraqi territorial waters.... We wait
anxiously to see whether this weakened and discredited Prime Minister
has the necessary spine to do what is required, or whether Britain
will persist in presenting its weakest aspect to a potential enemy.
To date, the Bush administration has kept a relatively low
profile over the incident. However, Lieutenant Commander Erik
Horner, second-in command of the USS Underwood in the Gulf, left
no doubt about US reaction to a similar situation involving American
sailors. The unique US navy rules of engagement say we not
only have the right to self-defence, but also an obligation to
self-defence, he said. Asked if his men would have fired
on Iranian forces, he bluntly declared: Agreed. Yes.
In other words, the Bush administration has stationed a huge
US naval presence in the Persian Gulf with rules of engagement
that oblige US forces to respond to any incidentactual or
imagined. Any clash could of course become the pretext for unleashing
a devastating assault on Iran using the overwhelming US firepower
now in place.
See Also:
UN agrees to new Iran sanctions as military
tensions mount in Gulf
[26 March 2007]
Bush administration steps up economic
pressure on Iran
[22 March 2007]
Targetting Tehran: the case of the missing
Iranian general
[14 March 2007]
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