Shipping mysteries grow: Is Israel really attacking Iranian vessels?
if(window.location.pathname.indexOf(“656089”) != -1){console.log(“hedva connatix”);document.getElementsByClassName(“divConnatix”)[0].style.display =”none”;}What is the context of the latest reports? The timing of the Iranian accusation that one of its ships was struck this week seemed uniquely timed to come after the report in the US media about Israel’s alleged targeting of ships going to Syria.Iran’s Press TV clarified that “last month, an Israeli-owned cargo ship said it had come under attack while it was in the Sea of Oman.” The Israel-owned Helios Ray was struck by a mysterious explosion on February 26 and sent to the UAE for repairs. Israel blamed Iran on March 1 but Iran denied its involvement.Now, Iran appears to be claiming that on March 9 or 10, its ship was attacked while going to Syria. Iran’s ship did appear to drift around on March 10 in the waters about 150 km. off the coast of Haifa, according to analysis of the ship’s route posted online.Then, the WSJ published its article on March 11. Considering the time it takes to research and run an article of this depth on historic shipping incidents, it would seem incredibly difficult for the article to have been written with any confirmed knowledge of the March 10 incident.Photos of a damaged Iranian ship that relate to the article show the Sabiti, damaged in 2019. This leaves a mystery about the timing of the WSJ article’s appearance and Iran’s immediate subsequent claims that its ship was struck the same week.All of this leads to a lack of clarity about what is happening at sea. In August 2020, for instance, the US said it seized four shipments of Iranian petroleum headed for Venezuela. Then, there were the four ships tracked heading to Venezuela from Iran in May 2020.The Shahr E Kord and its route, as well as previous allegations about the ship moving illicit cargo are now of interest to those who track ships. Reports in 2019 indicate the same ship was involved in shipments to Libya in the midst of the civil war there.The strange timing of Iran’s claims about the ship, which is named after a city in Iran, illustrate the murky world of shipping, especially when such shipping is linked to Iran or Iranian attacks, and now, Israel-Iran tensions. Is it a coincidence that one day, a US newspaper reports on alleged Israeli attacks, and the next day, Iran says that a ship widely known to be involved in other shipments to conflict zones, is targeted in an attack?Many mysteries remain about the May and June 2019 attacks on ships, as well as Iran’s illicit use of ships to conduct trade with Syria and other countries amid US sanctions. Mysteries also surround an oil spill off the coast of Israel last month that turned into an ecological disaster which Israel’s environmental protection minister blamed on Iran.And then, there are cases like that of the Gulf Sky ship which disappeared in July 2020 off the coast of the UAE and ended up off the coast of Iran, allegedly hijacked. The crew remains unpaid. That ship now appears back in business.
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