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US to Bolster ‘Defensive Posture’ in Gulf: White House

KABUL (BNA) The Pentagon will bolster its “defensive posture” in the Gulf, a White House spokesman has said, as Washington accused Tehran of carrying out increased attacks on commercial shipping in the strategic region of the Middle East.

During a news briefing on Friday, John Kirby accused Iran of harassing, attacking, or interfering with the navigational rights of 15 internationally-flagged commercial vessels over the past two years.

“Today, the Department of Defense will be making a series of moves to bolster our defensive posture in the Arabian Gulf,” the White House spokesman told reporters.

It remains unclear what additional assets the US military will move to the region.

“We have seen repeated Iranian threats, armed seizures, and attacks against commercial shippers who are exercising their navigational rights and freedoms in international waterways,” Kirby added.

Iran seized two international oil tankers in the strait of Hormuz, including one headed to us, in late April and early May.

Iranian officials said one of the tankers collided with an Iranian vessel and tried to flee, while the other was taken into Iranian territorial waters as the result of a judicial order following a legal complaint.

But the Reuters news agency reported that the seizures followed the confiscation of an Iranian oil tanker by us days earlier that had not been publicly announced.

US authorities have tried to seize Iranian oil ships in international waters in the past to enforce unilateral sanctions on Iran’s nuclear program, often sparking retaliation from the Iranian authorities in the Gulf.

The US Navy’s Fifth Fleet said on Wednesday that it was pushing to deter threats and “working with regional allies and partners to increase the rotation of ships and aircraft patrolling in and around the Strait of Hormuz following Iran’s recent unlawful merchant vessel seizures”.

It accused Iran of violating international law. “Iran’s unwarranted, irresponsible, and unlawful seizure and harassment of merchant’s vessels must stop,” Vice Admiral Brad Cooper, who heads the Bahrain-based US fleet, said in a statement.

Meanwhile, Iran signed a Chinese-brokered pact with Saudi Arabia in March to re-establish diplomatic relations with the Gulf kingdom. US officials have vaguely welcomed the agreement, saying it could lead to curbing Iran’s “destabilizing actions”.

Bakhtar

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