US Navy Fires At Armed Iranian Vessel : US Defense Officials
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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.
No warning shots were fired during that encounter, but US defense officials criticized the use of the Iranian laser.
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 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.
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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.
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.
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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