From Reuters
Two oil tankers were damaged on Thursday in a suspected attack near the entrance to the Persian Gulf, stoking fears that high-stakes diplomatic efforts won’t avert a military confrontation between the U.S. and Iran. Oil prices surged.
The
incidents, including an attack on a Japanese-operated vessel, were the
second in a month to hit ships near the Strait of Hormuz chokepoint,
through which about 40% of the world’s seaborne oil travels. They come
as Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, a rare ally of both Donald Trump
and Iranian leaders, visits Tehran in an effort to ease tensions. “Even
in the absence of ironclad evidence, the U.S. and its allies will point
the finger at Iran,” said Fawaz A. Gerges, professor of Middle Eastern
politics at the London School of Economics. “These incidents are a bad
omen because they point to a calculated escalation that tells us both
sides are hunkering down.” The
prospects of a conflict have spiked since the Trump administration
tightened in early May its sanctions on Iranian oil exports. Trump
abandoned a year ago the 2015 deal that was meant to prevent Iran from
developing a nuclear bomb and reimposed sanctions in a bid to force the
Islamic Republic to rein in its military program and proxy militias. Facing
economic catastrophe, Iran has threatened to retreat from the accord
itself unless European parties throw it an lifeline. Its supreme leader,
Ali Khamenei, told Abe on Thursday that his country would not repeat
the “bitter experience” of talks with the U.S. High-Stakes Diplomacy
The Bahrain-based Fifth Fleet said it received two separate distress
signals at 6:12 a.m. and about 7:00 a.m. local time. “U.S. Navy ships
are in the area and are rendering assistance,” Commander Josh Frey, a
spokesman, said. He couldn’t confirm reports that one of the vessels was
struck by a torpedo. Iran said it has rescued 44 sailors. The
manager of one tanker, the Norwegian-owned Front Altair, said it was
sailing in international waters when it was damaged by an explosion,
whose cause “is as yet unknown.” The Norway Maritime Authority said
there were three detonations on board. The ship had loaded a cargo of
naphtha in Abu Dhabi and was bound for Taiwan, a company official said. A
distress call over VHF radio from the Front Altair said the ship was
“under attack and on fire,” said Donald MacLeod, a navigation officer on
a vessel about 45 miles away on the Oman Sea. “They had to abandon
ship.” Kokuka
Sangyo, the Japanese operator of the other ship, said it was attacked
twice, three hours apart, forcing the crew to evacuate. The tanker was
carrying 25,000 tons of methanol from Saudi Arabia to Asia. Brent
oil crude soared as much as 4.5% and was trading at $62.07 a barrel at
10:42 a.m. in London. Stocks in Saudi Arabia and Dubai were down more
than 1%. Read: Yemeni Missile Attack on Saudi Airport Wounds 26 in Escalation The
incidents come a day after Iran-backed rebels in Yemen fired a missile
at a Saudi airport, wounding 26 people. The projectile crashed into the
arrivals hall, damaging ceilings and windows and causing a fire, though
the airport was able to keep functioning with only two flights
cancelled. Houthi rebels last month hit oil infrastructure hundreds of
kilometers inside Saudi Arabia, forcing it to temporarily close an oil
pipeline. Iran distanced itself from any attack. “Iran
is concerned by the suspicious events around commercial tankers related
to Japan,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Abbas Mousavi, was quoted as
saying on Fars news agency. “We see this as going against efforts from
within the region and beyond to reduce tensions.” Oil
tankers last became a target in the Persian Gulf and Arabian Sea during
the so-called “Tanker War” in the 1980s — a sideshow of the Iran-Iraq
conflict. Between 1981 and 1988, a total of 451 ships suffered some sort
of attack in the region from Iraqi or Iranian forces, according to a
report from the U.S. Naval Institute. Read: U.A.E.-Led Probe of Oil Tanker Attacks Points to ‘State Actor’ –With assistance from Abbas Al Lawati, Bruce Stanley, Ann Koh, Zainab Fattah, Donna Abu-Nasr, Javier Blas and Ladane Nasseri. DM