US Navy ship fired warning shots at an Iranian boat in the Persian Gulf
A US Navy ship fired warning shots at an armed Iranian patrol
boat Tuesday in the northern end of the Persian Gulf, according to two US
defense officials.
The Iranian boat is believed to have been operated by the
Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, according to a defense official familiar
with details of the incident. The officials said the Iranian boat approached
and came within 150 yards of the USS Thunderbolt, a US Navy patrol ship. The USS Thunderbolt was accompanied by the USS Vella Gulf,
which is a Ticonderoga-class guided missile cruiser, and two other US Coast
guard vessels at the time.
The Iranians did not respond to any warnings from the US
ship, including radio calls, firing of flares and five short blasts from the US
Navy ship's whistle, which is the internationally recognized communications
signal for danger, the officials said. The Navy ship then fired warning shots into the water over
concerns about the possibility of a collision, one of the officials said.
The Iranian ship then ceased its provocative actions but
lingered in the area for some hours, one of the officials said. There were
several US Navy ships in the immediate vicinity at the time of the incident
conducting routine patrol operations in international waters, according to the
defense officials.
Iran's Revolutionary Guard is claiming that it "foiled
the US warship's provocative move against an Iranian Navy patrol boat in the
Persian Gulf," according to a statement published by Iran's official news
agency IRNA. The statement went on to say that the US warship aimed to
instigate and frighten the Iranian boat by firing two warning shots.
A Cyclone-class patrol ship, the 179-foot USS Thunderbolt is
armed with two 25mm Mk-38 machine guns, two .50-caliber machine guns and two
automatic grenade launchers, according to the Navy.
This isn't the first time the US and Iranian navies have had
a tense encounter in the Persian Gulf.
Officials said the Iranian vessel did have guns on board but
they were not manned and initially remained covered. Although it did uncover its guns after the warning shots were
fired, the weapons remained unmanned and by this point the ship had stopped,
the officials said.
The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps said in a statement
released via state news agency Fars that the boat was "on routine patrol
in the Persian gulf when the America vessel came along side it and fired
warning shots, the Iranian boat carried on course with its patr
The U.S. Navy and its Iranian counterparts frequently
encounter each other in the Persian Gulf.
The U.S. Navy recorded 35 instances of what it describes as
"unsafe and/or unprofessional" interactions with Iranians forces in
2016, compared to 23 in 2015, the Associated Press reports.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guard captured 10 U.S. sailors last year
in the Persian Gulf and held them overnight before releasing them.
A subsequentNavy investigation found the captured U.S. sailors had inappropriately
turned over sensitive information. At the time, a U.S. military official
also describedthe incident as "a calamity of errors." AP reported that Iranian officials and state run media in the
country did not immediately acknowledge Tuesday's incident.
In June, the US military labeled the actions of an Iranian
vessel "unsafe and unprofessional" after it trained a laser on a US
helicopter that was accompanying a formation of American ships transiting the
international waters of the Strait of Hormuz.
No
warning shots were fired during that encounter, but US defense officials
criticized the use of the Iranian laser.
In April, the US accused an Iranian Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps ship of acting in an "unprofessional but also
provocative" manner while approaching an American destroyer, the USS
Mahan, while it was sailing in the Persian Gulf.
The official said the Iranian vessel had its weapons manned
and came within approximately 1,000 yards of the US destroyer. The Mahan did
not fire any warning shots. However, the USS Mahan did fire warning shots in January
after five Iranian vessels approached the destroyer and two other US ships that
were entering the Strait of Hormuz, according to accounts from four sources.
Pentagon
spokesman US Navy Capt. Jeff Davis previously told reporters that there had
been 35 incidents of unsafe or unprofessional behavior by Iranian vessels in
2016, although the "vast majority" had occurred in the first half of
that year.
A second US official said at the time that the number of
unsafe and unprofessional encounters in 2017 was "way below" the
number that had occurred by the same point in 2016.
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